I was driving and thinking about this the other day.
Imagine a system where Playoff teams still drafted in reverse order of standings, but the non-playoff teams drafted in the order that they actually finished?
Hear me out:
Last years top 16 Playoff teams
Miami, OKC, Spurs, Nuggets, Clippers, Grizzlies, Pacers, Nets, Lakers, Hawks, Rockets, Celtics, and Bucks.
These teams would pick 16-30.
THEN
Instead of having the team that finishes last get the first overall pick, why not give that to the team who is just a few games away from being a Playoff team?
I understand that there are other teams that "deserve" it more. But do they actually? Why should the team who loses on purpose get the best young players, shouldn't the teams that are paying for good players and trying to get better deserve the player?
Imagine this scenario: Detroit and Washington are both mathematically eliminated, but are neck and neck in the standings. With 2-3 weeks left in the season, wouldn't you rather see them competing hard to get a better draft pick, instead of dumping their veteran players at the deadline because they know that in order to get better you HAVE TO give away all your good players and suck for a couple years?
And I could give to craps about "Orlando, New Orleans, Charlotte, and Phoenix deserve those picks!" No they don't, what have Charlotte and New Orleans done with all these talented young players that they "earned" from sucking? They still suck. You want to get better players? Sign them, then learn to play better together so that you can win more games and EARN top prospects.
Because:
1. Come playoff time most seeds are usually determined fairly well in advance, and it's usually only two or three teams who are still in the race in the last week or so. If GM's know the next draft is going to be a big one, then rather than battle for an 8th seed (only to know they will get knocked out in the first round), some teams will intentionally lose one or two games so that they only JUST miss the playoffs, hence guaranteeing them a top 3 pick in the next leaded draft.
2. Because bad teams have very little opportunity to improve themselves - free agents rarely want to sign for a bad team, and bad teams (being as they are, bad) rarely have any top shelf talent to make solid trades with. The draft is basically their one saving grace, the one avenue that allow bad teams to improve themselves very quickly and cheaply (if they choose wisely). It's justice. If all of the near-playoff teams get the top drft picks then you end up with a situation where the same 10 teams from each conference will be competing for playoff spots every single season, while all of the bad teams just keep getting forever worse. Bad for those teams, bad for the NBA.
What I do however believe in is another concept of not loading the draft at all. Keep using a "lottery" method, but don't load it so that the worst teams have better odds. Put the same number of balls in there for every lottery team (so that it truly is a lottery) and that way it's pure luck and any team could win the top picks.
This genuinely would eliminate tanking because why would you INTENTIONALLY be bad if doing so didn't change your odds of getting a high lottery pick? You wouldn't, there would be no point. There would be no benefit to losing so you would play to win, to increase ticket/merchandise sales, to rally more supporters, etc.
Plus it would save the league from situations where you have one team always getting high picks and wasting them on poor choices (i.e. Jordan/Bobcats). Instead of the Bobcats getting a top 5 pick every season based on the crappiness, that top 5 pick could just as easilly go to somebody like Phoenix, Milwalkee, Utah as it could to Orlando, New Orleans or Charlotte.
I think that is really the ONLY way to eliminate tanking, and it would remove any argument about fairness because all of those teams have the same shot at #1.