I tend to agree with footey. And while I haven't always been his biggest fan, he's certainly better than Selig, who ignored the performance enhancing drug problem, refused for years to update the game through instant replay, etc., and still hasn't managed to fix the huge economic gap in baseball that manages to make sure 1/2-2/3 of the teams in the league have no legitimate shot at making the playoffs each year.
And he's better than whatever clowns have run the NHL and made sure it went from the #4 sport in America to perhaps the 7th or 8th.
Two things to point out.
1) The NBA is STILL ingnoring PED's. Look no further than the league's biggest stars: Lebron, DHoward, Dwayne Wade - heck even Rondo; all sporting WWE-like physiques. Stern, to some extent, has also turned a blind eye to PED's.
2) Despite the inadequete salary structure, you've had teams like Detroit and Tampa Bay competing for titles in recent years, and this year other small market towns like Minnesota, San Diego & Cinncinati all in the mix. You could argue that the MLB actually has more parody than the NBA when you consider that 12 of the last 20 titles have gone to LA, Chicago or Boston.
True about PED's. However, I don't see PED's as the problems themselves, I see the farce that baseball went through as the true embarrassment. Everyone knew that it was going on, but Selig ignored it. At least with basketball, if it's going on, it's pretty well hidden.
As for parity, the problem with basketball is that it's a superstar's league. So if you don't have a one of the best players (or find a way to get 3-4 of the top 25), you don't have a shot. But that's more based on luck (see the Spurs winning the lottery the year David Robinson was hurt in the year Tim Duncan was coming out) than on money.
In baseball, salary is a problem. The Tigers have the 6th highest salary in baseball, so I don't know where you're going there. But in general, you're right, teams get lucky every one in a while. However, it's still not fair. The Yankees and Red Sox will be contenders EVERY year (I mean it took the Sox the worst injury luck of any team in recent memory to be where they are now, and they still would be in first place in other divisions), while other teams are lucky to be in contention 2 out of every 10 years.