It makes little sense to send the sport’s top prospects to the worst situations to start their careers.

If the goal is to promote parity around the league, just give the worst performing teams more money to spend, but allow league entrants to agree to terms with any team of their liking.

We can expect the median league entrant to have the goal of maximizing career earnings, which is a good proxy for the situation which best promotes their growth as a player, which is what’s best for the league and the sport. This will almost certainly lead to better outcomes than the status quo, which is just random with bad situations / dysfunctional franchises weighted more heavily.

If a franchise still can’t attract talent either via FA for existing players or new entrants, even despite the financial advantage, then they deserve to continue to be bad, and it will serve as a forcing function to remove the toxic culture more quickly, rather than the luck of the draft potentially shielding mismanagement from accountability.

It just gives both sides (players and teams) more optionality to achieve the best outcomes.

What’s the downside?

  • SchmidhuberDidItOPB
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    7 days ago

    the NBA doesn’t make accommodations for worse basketball players and they do the same for teams. if you make good decisions, win a lot of games, punishing you for doing well is anti-competitive.

    The draft does this.

    I imagined salary caps within an e.g. 20% bound and depending on your league position you just get some dollar amount slot. Wouldn’t compound, you’d just stay in the most advantageous spot if you were the worst team two years in a row.

    But yeah would probably need caveats for existing contracts but that seems doable.