Also, I'd guess that the fans of teams in the biggest, glitziest markets aren't especially bothered by players colluding. It's probably depressing for fans of teams in less exciting locations, because it means that no matter how well their team is managed, they will likely still be at a major disadvantage compared to teams that can just sign a bunch of really good players in free agency.
Yeah, I think that's fair, especially with 1-2 players being able to make a huge difference in a team's success. But players constantly leaving small markets for big is true of every league that's not the NFL, and the NFL has way too much parity for me. And unlike baseball, the salary rules make this much harder to do unless players take voluntary pay cuts.
But I also think a lot of people implicitly like the idea of the NBA working like a fantasy team, where players are just passive assets that you shuffle around. Players having minds of their own and the agency to act on it just muddles that picture.
I must admit, I do enjoy that idea.
I'd much rather see championship teams built with good drafting and trading.
Obviously, Miami didn't just get a title by default. The players, once they came together, still had to figure out how to work together. Now that they've reached that point, though, they're dominating the NBA.
I guess it's because I identify more with the people running the teams than with the players themselves, so I want to see championships as, in large part, an achievement of the people making strategic moves in the front office, rather than as the work of the players on the court.