The schedule reduction won't work or happen for several reasons--the regional/national networks want all of those games. Also, the college basketball post-season is virtually destined to take longer to complete going forward--I just know they're going to expand it beyond 68 teams with CBS and Turner Sports signed to televise every game.KeithE4 said:The NBA needs to reduce their regular season to about 60 games - December thru March. Let the playoffs begin the first week of April, when baseball is just starting and the NCAA is done, but basketball is still on people's minds. They should also get rid of divisions (just East and West Conferences).
Contraction just ain't happenin' either, but you probably know that.KeithE4 said:They should also get out of Canada and the small US markets - contract down to 20-24 teams, with 4 teams per conference in the playoffs.
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Despite the on-court success of small-market teams like the Spurs and Jazz, they don't draw eyeballs to the NBA's urban-oriented advertisers, other than hard-core hoops fans.
I honestly don't mind the smaller market teams--if they're selling out their arenas and they're competitive, they belong. The fact that they don't bring the eyeballs if they advance to the NBA Finals? That's not something the league can worry about as an immediately 'fixable' problem, unless it keeps making boo-koo promises to media partners and advertisers. Really, how would the NBA fix things so that San Antonio and Utah are less competently run, and that New York and Philadelphia are more so?
I could get behind a psuedo-contraction via relegation of 2-4 teams to the D-League, but that would undoubtedly be skewed against poor performing small market teams.
You should read about how much the Golden State Warriors might fetch in a sale. As for the Kings? Trust me, the Maloofs will move to Las Vegas the instant the NBA lets go its worst gambling fears, regardless of any new facility in Sacramento.KeithE4 said:the Kings and Warriors could be combined, possibly playing games in both cities.
The Clippers shouldn't be contracted. If there were justice in the world, they would be sold to non-racist, non-slumlord owners and moved to Seattle as the new SuperSonics. This won't happen for the same reasons contraction wont--especially for a team calling Los Angeles home. Donald Sterling's franchise is a laughingstock, but it's a profitable one.KeithE4 said:The Clippers should also be contracted - does anybody in southern California care about this train-wreck of a franchise?