The NBA is about to destroy all the good work that has been done in the Lebron James, Kobe Bryant, Dirk Nowitzki, and Paul Pierce era by possibly canceling this season over a labor dispute between billionaires vs millionaires and tainting the legacy of the NBA, perhaps forever.
Previously, I have written about the threat of economic deflation and how it would impact the NBA. Right now I don't necessarily see the deflation except in housing which has greatly hurt the middle class in this country which could very well be keeping them out of NBA arenas. But according to the following article from Forbes
http://www.forbes.com/lists/2010/32/basketball-valuations-11_Boston-Celtics_326173.html the franchises have appreciated in land valuation. Besides, owners like Paul Allen treat their franchises like toys a kid plays with rather than having his entire net worth invested in the Portland Trailblazers. That is why I am not on the owners side of this dispute. What I have learned in my early days of supervision is that you are dependent on your employees to perform if you are going to get a good performance review and extra stock options because you exceeded expectations. You need to keep your employees morale up so they don't "Mark Blount" you. Yet the behavior of certain owners like Paul Allen is completely flabbergasting me.
Now that I have your attention, I present the problems I perceive to be in the NBA and my brainstormed solution for fixing those problems.
The fundamental solution besides getting rid of David Stern who by his ultimatum is to take $4 billion out of the US economy plus ancillary income such as NBA gambling, leisure travel by fans, tourism, etc., is to go to a Four tier system like the British Soccer leagues has. Teams are promoted and relegated by merit. The players salaries are higher in the Primier League which will start with Boston, LA Lakers, Dallas, Miami, Orlando, San Antonio, Chicago, and Orlando. My criteria is that these franchises have won a title or have won the most games and playoff series in the last five years and have the best players overall.
The Candidate Division has teams that regularly are above .500 and make the playoffs and make the 2nd round some years - Atlanta, Memphis, Denver, Phoenix, Utah, New Orleans, Portland, and Oklahoma City are included.
The Competitors Division include teams that are decently managed, play at or slightly below .500 ball and make the playoffs some years. But they don't have the financial resources (or their historical resume dictates being here) to compete with the big boys. I put Milwaukee, Detriot, New York Knicks,
Philadelphia, Houston, Golden State, Washington, and Charlotte here.
Lastly we have the NBA have nots here, plus two cities that need NBA franchises. They are the LA Clippers (if we had Donald Trump instead of Donald Sterling I would bump them up and put Washington here), Minnesota, Sacremento, Toronto, NJ Nets, and Cleveland here. Add in expansion teams Seattle and Kansas City to balance the divisions.
The NBA season would consist of 90 games:
6 games with all the teams in your division and 2 games with the teams outside your division.
The top 4 teams from each division qualify for divisional playoffs. One seed against Four seed, Two vs Three... All series are best of Seven.
The champion of the Premier Division is awarded the NBA World Championship.
The winners of the other divisions get promoted along with the best team over the last three seasons.
Two teams from the top three divisions get relegated each base on fewest wins over a three year period.
Salaries are better for the higher division teams. Getting promoted means higher salaries. Getting relegated means lower salaries.
Make it Team Merit Based.