It really bothered me when Karl Malone and Gary Payton went ring chasing with the LA Lakers back in the day...This allowed the Lakers to field a much stronger team than the salary cap would allow based on the quality of players and the amount they would command on the open market.
How to fix the problem.. If a free agent takes less money to join a team the team must be assigned the amount of money that reflects the free agent's true value on the open market.
That will put an end to the collusion.
This is an excellent idea.
In the interest of achieving greater parity and competitiveness, and improving the NBA product for everyone in the league, I propose these complementary changes:
1. If a player receives equal offers from multiple teams, that player must sign with the team that has the worst record. (Going to a better team would constitute ring-chasing).
2. To equalize pay for performance, each year all players on current contracts will be re-bid and have their contracts adjusted to reflect their value as players. So, if player X is slated to make $10 million and player Y is slated to make $2 million but they perform equally, their contracts are adjusted to be equal for the following year.
3. After each player's rookie year, all players are re-ranked by the GMs and then re-assigned based on teams' records. So, if a player was drafted 10th but ended up being the 3rd best player in the draft, that player gets re-assigned to the 3rd worst team in the league after his rookie season. This will ensure that teams do not possess rookies performing out of line with where they fall on the pay scale.
4. Because players often give up not only salary they could have earned elsewhere, but also time (because they train harder when they are on a winning team), the league shall mandate that all teams practice for precisely the same amount of time each week. Players on contending teams will not be allowed to show up early and get in extra shooting or weight work, in the interest of preserving competitive balance.
5. If a team wins more than one championship in any three-year period, that team must surrender its best player to the team with the worst record in the previous year. This will avoid incentives for players to game the system by destroying competitive balance.
6. "Perks" offered by winning/wealthy teams (better airplanes, food etc.) will be disallowed.
7. The restriction on perks will extend to geographical advantages. If a player plays the regular season for Miami, he must live in Minnesota during the off-season, and vice versa. This will reduce incentives for "weather-chasing" that destroys competitive balance.