Some of the awful teams have been bad for so long that they can't stand the idea of tearing their roster apart again to tank. If you're Cleveland, Detroit or Washington, could you really subject your fans to that?
Boston, so far, is absolutely NOT tanking. Ainge has accumulated assets but there's no way you can accuse him of blowing the team up to get really bad. If the Celtics struggle up to the trading deadline, Ainge might go for a full fledged tank but not right now.
Philly is the only team that's clearly tanking right now and they've started to do it earlier than any team ever has. We'll see who else joins in.
Mike
I think the term "tanking" should be reserved strictly for teams who don't play healthy players or whose players on the floor are not giving effort late in the season.
I don't think "tanking" should be applied to team's in transition from being highly competitive (Philly and Boston) to a year or two where they decide not to waste money on mediocre free agents but instead develop young players.
So I feel the term is over-used. There are so many variables in building a contender. Being bad is just one variable and often a weak one at that. Pity the bad teams of the NBA as most of them are bad year after year after year.
Philly traded an all-star for an injured player who everyone expects will take a few years to develop and a draft pick in 2014. That's tanking.
Maybe. But soon it might just be called an outstanding trade. Very likely so if Noel's knee is sturdy and the N.O. pick is lottery.
I think if that N.O. pick looks headed for the lottery, then the Pelicans will tank themselves. Like a freaking boat anchor.
That pick is top-5 protected. If the Pelicans get off to a strong start and the season goes well, such that they are likely in the playoffs, then fine. They'll probably be happy letting Philly take that pick in the mid-to-late first round.
But if things go sour at all, such as injuries, or just plain bad luck losing to a struggling record, their is no way they would want to see that pick turn into a 6-10 pick and go to the 76ers. Not in this draft!
I think in that scenario, the Pelicans would decide to tank in the most ugly way.
And, of course, since only 5 teams can end up in the bottom 5, it becomes in Philly's interest to take up one of those spots, leaving only 4 spots for N.O.
If that plays out and N.O. does tank and keep the pick, then they get to repeat the scenario in 2015.
If the pick still doesn't vest for Philly by 2015, it evaporates into 2nd rounders.
The nature of the protection on that pick basically sets up some ugly weird incentives for two teams to tank.