Everything in life is cyclical. What comes around goes around. History repeats itself. Etc, etc.
Well, now is the time for the NBA to recycle itself and how it portrays itself to the public. Now is the time for the NBA to move away from a tired old marketing philosophy and to move toward a new but also old one. It is now time for the NBA to de-emphasize the I and me in the NBA and to reemphasize the us and we.
The Boston Celtics are about to win their second championship in 3 years. No one is going to tell me different. Once they beat Cleveland, I knew it was just a forgone conclusion until banner 18 was going to be raised. It will, IMHO mark the 6th time in the last decade where the best team won the NBA Finals. And by team I mean best collection of players that played as a cohesive unit and won over other groups that may have had a superior player or two on the team.
The Spurs' championships, the Pistons' championship and the Celtics' championships are returning the NBA to a team first will win and not me first will win league. All to often over the last 20 years it has been the group of players that had the greatest player in the game and maybe a sidekick that won it all. The Jordanaires, the Hakeem Rockets, the Shaq/Kobe Lakers, the Kobe/Gasol Lakers and the Shaq/Wade Heat made up 13 of the last 19 NBA title winners.
To me, these were all teams based on the concept of the best player in the game paired with a sidekick player and a bunch of others. These "teams" were dominated on both ends of the court by one or two players only. It worked and the NBA front office saw it was working.
So they switched their marketing campaigns and made the NBA a game about superstars above teams. No longer was Sunday NBA basketball about the 76ers versus the Celtics or the Pistons versus the Lakers. It became Michael Jordan versus Charles Barkely, Shaq versus Hakeem, Kobe versus Lebron. The teams they played for became afterthoughts in the grand scheme of things.
And the NBA made sure when they released video of games to be played for highlights, that those highlights pushed the accomplishments of the individual over the accomplishments of the team. Rules of the game became ever more so relaxed to ensure individual star players prospered at the expense of the team game. Everything the NBA did was geared towards marketing and hoisting upon the basketball world the individual over the team. The name on the back of the jersey became way more important than the name on the front of the jersey.
And ultimately, I believe it has hurt the NBA in the long run. Players no longer practice the skills needed to become a great team player. They practice the skills needed to win dunk contests and three point contests. Players are now much less polished products when they get to the NBA and the NBA has to invest needless millions into players teaching them stuff they should have figured out in high school ball and before simply because they have made the idea of being a great NBA superstar more important than being an NBA player on a great NBA team.
But history does repeat itself and now we are beginning to understand that great teams will beat groups made up of a couple of individual great players almost all the time. The Spurs, Celtics and Pistons have relied on the concept of team and have shown that great teams are near impossible to beat with a great superstar or two. Lebron's failures to win an NBA title also illustrate the point as does the fact that it is now going to be looked upon that if the Celtics hadn't gone through an enormous amount of injuries last year, Kobe and Gasol wouldn't have gotten their rings last year.
I think it's time for the NBA to return to the time when the name on the front of the jersey mattered more than the name on the back of the jersey. It's time to remove the superstar calls and protection. It's time to advertise the Celtics versus the Lakers and the Bulls versus the Spurs and the Suns versus the Magic. The product on the floor is taking a swing back to the time before Jordan when teams got the job done and individuals were a part of the team. It is time for the NBA offices to see this and to adjust the way they do business. It's time to take the me out of team, Mr Stern, and it's time to do it across the board in the way you market, advertise, enforce the rules and highlight yourself.
That's because everything old is new again and you can thank your league's most successful franchise for that. The franchise who's best player ever ranks 131st on the all-time scoring list, not because he couldn't score a lot more, but because it wasn't in the best interest of the team.