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After years of being bad and getting shit on by the NBA lottery in 2011 when they should have had the #1 and Kyrie Irving, I think their moves lined up perfectly with the tanking strategy. They traded their only good player (Love) for all young guys. They threw the dice on supremely talented yet ultra raw college players like Lavine and Muhammad. They even traded a half decent veteran and like the 2nd best player on the team at the time for an overpriced Kevin Garnett, clearing the way for more losses. Sportscasters openly complained about them tanking all the time for the past couple years. Just because you're already bad to begin with doesn't mean you're not tanking. |
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Spurs signed Rudy Gay to 2-years, $17.2 Mill. Nice signing, if he can stay healthy this should give us some more firepower to keep up with the Warriors.
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Avery Bradley for Marcus Morris
Going to be fun to see if the Celtics can hide ITs lack of defense without Bradley on the perimeter. |
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Man I love this video. |
I've always thought Rudy Gay would work very well as a role player on a contender. Has all the tools necessary to be a great one. Time to see if that's true.
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How does Tim Hardaway Jr get 4 years, 72 million and Tyreke Evans only gets 1-yr 3 million. Tyreke Evans is waaaay more valuable of a player.
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Lonzo Ball 2-15, 5 pts, 3 TOs in his summer league debut. Ouch...
Also got sh*t on playing D. This kid has bust written all over him. |
So here's an asinine idea to address the talent gap across the NBA:
A "talent cap." Instead of forcing teams to make decisions based off a salary cap (which is also necessary), you could have a committee of guys every couple seasons designate "A" players (top 20 in the league), B players and so on. No team can sign more than two A guys. You can draft them and retain them, but if you've already got an A player, you can't bring a 2nd over in FA. That would have shut down the Heat from forming and Durant wouldn't be in GS. Meanwhile they can still get paid. Similar rules with B and C players. If you sign a B player and you turn him into an A player, he doesn't count as a 2nd A player. You get the idea. This would depend on somewhat arbitrary rulings from this hypothetical committee, but that's a hell of a lot better knowing exactly who your top 2 teams in the finals are going to be before the season starts. It will also force teams to draft better (though the draft needs its own reforms). If you can draft two A players, you can keep them both. It incentivizes players who respond to coaching, because everybody will be hunting for Bs and Cs and looking to turn them into A- and B-quality players. It's outside the box, but I'm just looking to bust up superteams, as they are ruining the NBA. |
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If you have an A, and acquire a B that turns into an A, you have "legally" obtained two A's. If all you had was a B, but later he was upgraded to an A, you do not get to sign an A free agent, as you would have two A's and would disrupt league balance. I know it's convoluted, but pretty much nothing you guys have suggested is a safeguard against superteams. This is a guarantee that could ostensibly land Players Association approval. |
Why don't you just ban free agency? LMAO
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