Author Topic: League Unveils some Anti-Tanking Proposals  (Read 760 times)

SparzWizard and 0 Guests are viewing this topic.

Re: League Unveils some Anti-Tanking Proposals
« Reply #15 on: Today at 11:31:24 AM »

Online Donoghus

  • Global Moderator
  • James Naismith
  • *********************************
  • Posts: 33625
  • Tommy Points: 1773
  • What a Pub Should Be
From ESPN, more details on the third proposal:

Quote
The third proposal is a "five-by-five" method, sources told Charania. In this one, the same 18 teams from the first proposal -- the bottom 10 that miss the play-in, plus the eight that make it -- would be entered into the lottery. The teams with the five worst records would then all have the same odds, with them descending from there, and there would be a lottery drawing for each of the top five picks in the draft.

After those five picks are selected, there would be another lottery drawing for the remaining 13 teams. If any of the teams with the five worst records didn't land one of those top five spots -- like last season, when the teams with the first (the Utah Jazz), second (Washington Wizards) and fourth (New Orleans Pelicans) worst records all moved back to fifth, sixth and seventh, respectively -- the lowest they could wind up in the second lottery drawing would be 10th, preventing a bad team from falling too far down the draft board.

Holy crap.  Nick!


2010 CB Historical Draft - Best Overall Team

Re: League Unveils some Anti-Tanking Proposals
« Reply #16 on: Today at 11:35:08 AM »

Online nickagneta

  • James Naismith
  • *********************************
  • Posts: 48126
  • Tommy Points: 8902
  • President of Jaylen Brown Fan Club
From ESPN, more details on the third proposal:

Quote
The third proposal is a "five-by-five" method, sources told Charania. In this one, the same 18 teams from the first proposal -- the bottom 10 that miss the play-in, plus the eight that make it -- would be entered into the lottery. The teams with the five worst records would then all have the same odds, with them descending from there, and there would be a lottery drawing for each of the top five picks in the draft.

After those five picks are selected, there would be another lottery drawing for the remaining 13 teams. If any of the teams with the five worst records didn't land one of those top five spots -- like last season, when the teams with the first (the Utah Jazz), second (Washington Wizards) and fourth (New Orleans Pelicans) worst records all moved back to fifth, sixth and seventh, respectively -- the lowest they could wind up in the second lottery drawing would be 10th, preventing a bad team from falling too far down the draft board.

Holy crap.  Nick!
Hey, Dons!

Re: League Unveils some Anti-Tanking Proposals
« Reply #17 on: Today at 11:52:47 AM »

Online nickagneta

  • James Naismith
  • *********************************
  • Posts: 48126
  • Tommy Points: 8902
  • President of Jaylen Brown Fan Club
Something to think about in that third proposal....

There is a chance the top ten picks could end up like this:

#1 pick: Some team outside the bottom 5
#2:  Some team outside the bottom 5
#3:  Some team outside the bottom 5
#4:  Some team outside the bottom 5
#5:  Some team outside the bottom 5
#6: Team with 5th worst record
#7: Team with 4th worst record
#8: Team with 3rd worst record
#9: Team with 2nd worst record
#10: Team with the worst record.

Ugh. That would be disasterous for that team with the worst record. Luckily the chances of that has to be in the billions to 1. Which of course, knowing the NBA, would mean it would happen the third year after it goes into effect.

Re: League Unveils some Anti-Tanking Proposals
« Reply #18 on: Today at 11:58:15 AM »

Offline Goldstar88

  • Cedric Maxwell
  • **************
  • Posts: 14646
  • Tommy Points: 1792
From ESPN, more details on the third proposal:

Quote
The third proposal is a "five-by-five" method, sources told Charania. In this one, the same 18 teams from the first proposal -- the bottom 10 that miss the play-in, plus the eight that make it -- would be entered into the lottery. The teams with the five worst records would then all have the same odds, with them descending from there, and there would be a lottery drawing for each of the top five picks in the draft.

After those five picks are selected, there would be another lottery drawing for the remaining 13 teams. If any of the teams with the five worst records didn't land one of those top five spots -- like last season, when the teams with the first (the Utah Jazz), second (Washington Wizards) and fourth (New Orleans Pelicans) worst records all moved back to fifth, sixth and seventh, respectively -- the lowest they could wind up in the second lottery drawing would be 10th, preventing a bad team from falling too far down the draft board.

Nick, is that really you!? Welcome back!
It's really me. Been reading regularly while not logged in.

I read the Anti-tanking proposals and loved the subject so thought the extra info on the third proposal made it one I really liked. Wanted to share the extra info to see if it made a difference to anyone on that proposal

I hope you continue to post. You have been such a big part of the community over the years! We appreciate your perspective and thoughtful posts.
Quoting Nick from the now locked Ime thread:
Quote
At some point you have to blame the performance on the court on the players on the court. Every loss is not the coach's fault and every win isn't because of the players.

Re: League Unveils some Anti-Tanking Proposals
« Reply #19 on: Today at 12:38:20 PM »

Online nickagneta

  • James Naismith
  • *********************************
  • Posts: 48126
  • Tommy Points: 8902
  • President of Jaylen Brown Fan Club
From ESPN, more details on the third proposal:

Quote
The third proposal is a "five-by-five" method, sources told Charania. In this one, the same 18 teams from the first proposal -- the bottom 10 that miss the play-in, plus the eight that make it -- would be entered into the lottery. The teams with the five worst records would then all have the same odds, with them descending from there, and there would be a lottery drawing for each of the top five picks in the draft.

After those five picks are selected, there would be another lottery drawing for the remaining 13 teams. If any of the teams with the five worst records didn't land one of those top five spots -- like last season, when the teams with the first (the Utah Jazz), second (Washington Wizards) and fourth (New Orleans Pelicans) worst records all moved back to fifth, sixth and seventh, respectively -- the lowest they could wind up in the second lottery drawing would be 10th, preventing a bad team from falling too far down the draft board.

Nick, is that really you!? Welcome back!
It's really me. Been reading regularly while not logged in.

I read the Anti-tanking proposals and loved the subject so thought the extra info on the third proposal made it one I really liked. Wanted to share the extra info to see if it made a difference to anyone on that proposal

I hope you continue to post. You have been such a big part of the community over the years! We appreciate your perspective and thoughtful posts.
Thanks for the kind words!

Re: League Unveils some Anti-Tanking Proposals
« Reply #20 on: Today at 12:55:25 PM »

Offline slamtheking

  • NCE
  • James Naismith
  • *********************************
  • Posts: 33570
  • Tommy Points: 10315
From ESPN, more details on the third proposal:

Quote
The third proposal is a "five-by-five" method, sources told Charania. In this one, the same 18 teams from the first proposal -- the bottom 10 that miss the play-in, plus the eight that make it -- would be entered into the lottery. The teams with the five worst records would then all have the same odds, with them descending from there, and there would be a lottery drawing for each of the top five picks in the draft.

After those five picks are selected, there would be another lottery drawing for the remaining 13 teams. If any of the teams with the five worst records didn't land one of those top five spots -- like last season, when the teams with the first (the Utah Jazz), second (Washington Wizards) and fourth (New Orleans Pelicans) worst records all moved back to fifth, sixth and seventh, respectively -- the lowest they could wind up in the second lottery drawing would be 10th, preventing a bad team from falling too far down the draft board.

Nick, is that really you!? Welcome back!
It's really me. Been reading regularly while not logged in.

I read the Anti-tanking proposals and loved the subject so thought the extra info on the third proposal made it one I really liked. Wanted to share the extra info to see if it made a difference to anyone on that proposal

I hope you continue to post. You have been such a big part of the community over the years! We appreciate your perspective and thoughtful posts.
Thanks for the kind words!
saw you posted and almost had a heart attack.  glad to hear you're still poking around here.  hope to see you post more. threw you a TP as an incentive to keep coming back   ;)

Re: League Unveils some Anti-Tanking Proposals
« Reply #21 on: Today at 01:30:45 PM »

Offline aefgogreen

  • Jaylen Brown
  • Posts: 654
  • Tommy Points: 79
What about if they flatten the odds and let play-in teams in the lottery?  Flat odds prevent teams from losing out and maybe even fighting for a play-in spot.  I think teams that are around 5th or 6th in their conference would not want to tank into the play-in.  Of course people thought the play-in would incentivize teams near the mid-bottom to fight for a chance to go to the playoffs and that didn't work, so who knows?

It seems like this is what Shams is reporting in Option #1.  18 teams in the lottery, which I presume would go up to 20 after expansion.
I'd like flat odds across the board.  In addition, I'd give teams that underperform an easier schedule the next year - Everyone plays each team in the other conference twice (30 games total) and teams from their conference 3 times (total 42).  The final 10 games are determined by record.

Re: League Unveils some Anti-Tanking Proposals
« Reply #22 on: Today at 01:35:03 PM »

Offline Goldstar88

  • Cedric Maxwell
  • **************
  • Posts: 14646
  • Tommy Points: 1792
I think they should just do what they did last year. Let Silver and the gang decide behind closed doors who wins the lottery. Worked out really well for the league. Lakers will now be relevant post LeBron. The Mavs were rewarded the #1 pick with their 1% lottery odds, netting another generational talent, plus all the picks from the trades.  :)


Additionally, if a team, under new rules, was still found by NBA commissioner Adam Silver?s office to be tanking, the commissioner would either be able to take away that team?s draft pick, move it to the end of the lottery or first round and also increase fines into the millions of dollars.
New York Times
Quoting Nick from the now locked Ime thread:
Quote
At some point you have to blame the performance on the court on the players on the court. Every loss is not the coach's fault and every win isn't because of the players.

Re: League Unveils some Anti-Tanking Proposals
« Reply #23 on: Today at 02:17:18 PM »

Offline Csfan1984

  • Don Nelson
  • ********
  • Posts: 8963
  • Tommy Points: 295
Only way to stop tanking is by giving bad teams another way to aquire talent.

Give teams a player exception that doesn't count against the tax based on if they were bordering playoffs. Call it the "playoff push exemption".

Playoff push Exemption would be claimed once per three years if a team finishes 7-12 in conference. It's contract of up to 3 years with a dollar value twice the amount of the going Full MLE exemption. It is not taxed.

This will make bad to mediocre teams not want to fall out the top 12 as they know it's a good player they could add and they bypass the tax.

Only negative is Id stick a no trade clause for two years on who ever they sign with the exemption.

Re: League Unveils some Anti-Tanking Proposals
« Reply #24 on: Today at 02:21:51 PM »

Online Roy H.

  • Forums Manager
  • James Naismith
  • *********************************
  • Posts: 64223
  • Tommy Points: -25383
  • Bo Knows: Joe Don't Know Diddley
Only way to stop tanking is by giving bad teams another way to aquire talent.

Give teams a player exception that doesn't count against the tax based on if they were bordering playoffs. Call it the "playoff push exemption".

Playoff push Exemption would be claimed once per three years if a team finishes 7-12 in conference. It's contract of up to 3 years with a dollar value twice the amount of the going Full MLE exemption. It is not taxed.

This will make bad to mediocre teams not want to fall out the top 12 as they know it's a good player they could add and they bypass the tax.

Only negative is Id stick a no trade clause for two years on who ever they sign with the exemption.

I think that might, in certain circumstances, encourage teams to tank.  For instance, if the Celtics were somewhere between 4th and 6th in the standings, I'd absolutely want them to tank to finish in the 7th spot.  A $30 million tax-free salary slot would be game-changing.


I'M THE SILVERBACK GORILLA IN THIS MOTHER... AND DON'T NONE OF YA'LL EVER FORGET IT!

Re: League Unveils some Anti-Tanking Proposals
« Reply #25 on: Today at 02:23:54 PM »

Online Roy H.

  • Forums Manager
  • James Naismith
  • *********************************
  • Posts: 64223
  • Tommy Points: -25383
  • Bo Knows: Joe Don't Know Diddley
In terms of penalties:

Quote from: The Athletic
The possible changes to the lottery, which were introduced this week at the league?s Board of Governors meeting and will be voted on ? with likely amendments ? in May, widen the lottery from 14 to either 18 or 22 teams, those sources said.

Advertisement


Additionally, if a team, under new rules, was still found by NBA commissioner Adam Silver?s office to be tanking, the commissioner would either be able to take away that team?s draft pick, move it to the end of the lottery or first round and also increase fines into the millions of dollars.

Daily Pick'em
Can you call the winner?


?Without stricter penalties, you could still have crazy behavior,? said one league source, granted anonymity so they could freely discuss concepts under consideration. ?You have to have something in place that is so drastic, a team would actually think twice about tanking. And if a team tries it and gets caught, then the other teams need to see the penalties and realize it isn?t worth it to try.?

Of course, just like with tampering, flopping, etc., penalties don't mean much if there's no enforcement.  And with enforcement, the question is always proof. 


I'M THE SILVERBACK GORILLA IN THIS MOTHER... AND DON'T NONE OF YA'LL EVER FORGET IT!

Re: League Unveils some Anti-Tanking Proposals
« Reply #26 on: Today at 03:21:05 PM »

Online BitterJim

  • NGT
  • Satch Sanders
  • *********
  • Posts: 9230
  • Tommy Points: 1241
In terms of penalties:

Quote from: The Athletic
The possible changes to the lottery, which were introduced this week at the league?s Board of Governors meeting and will be voted on ? with likely amendments ? in May, widen the lottery from 14 to either 18 or 22 teams, those sources said.

Advertisement


Additionally, if a team, under new rules, was still found by NBA commissioner Adam Silver?s office to be tanking, the commissioner would either be able to take away that team?s draft pick, move it to the end of the lottery or first round and also increase fines into the millions of dollars.

Daily Pick'em
Can you call the winner?


?Without stricter penalties, you could still have crazy behavior,? said one league source, granted anonymity so they could freely discuss concepts under consideration. ?You have to have something in place that is so drastic, a team would actually think twice about tanking. And if a team tries it and gets caught, then the other teams need to see the penalties and realize it isn?t worth it to try.?

Of course, just like with tampering, flopping, etc., penalties don't mean much if there's no enforcement.  And with enforcement, the question is always proof.

If those penalties are implemented, then why is there any need for flattening odds or expanding the lottery? Just go back to the top 3 spots with the pre-flattening odds and penalties on tanking.

The entire point of these changes is to stop teams from tanking, but if they actually follow through on punishing tanking teams then that should accomplish it without the side effects of legitimately bad teams getting stuck in limbo because they keep losing the lottery.
I'm bitter.

"There's a reason you separate military and the police. One fights the enemies of the state. The other serves and protects the people. When the military becomes both, then the enemies of the state tend to become the people." - Commander Adams, Battlestar Galactica