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  1. #16
    NBA All-star NBAGOAT's Avatar
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    Default Re: Are you generally in favor of the rules forcing great teams to break up?

    meh dynasties are more entertaining if you have a few teams that are close to that lvl. I get the downsides but its fun to see super stacked teams. that nets team with kd, harden, kyrie was amazing to watch for half a year and then you had really talented teams competing with them. hell the 2021 jazz team are a 2nd apron team in 2025. 2 30% max contracts with a 25% of cap contract for conley and a big mid tier contract for bojan with an expensive bench.

    Now you kind of have to go with the 2 stars and role player model like the pacers did unless you have guys on rookie deals like okc. having more than 1 elite role player even(they make 30+mil/yr now) is hard with 2 max guys. Tbf there are exceptions. cavs have 3 all stars are just gonna deal with 2nd apron with this roster. Magic are gonna have 2 max guys and another 2 making 70mil combined in 2026 they'll likely be in 2nd apron. Knicks will pay og and brigdes like 75 mil combined in 2027 they're really fortunate brunson took a huge paycut.

  2. #17
    Facts Are Misleading
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    Default Re: Are you generally in favor of the rules forcing great teams to break up?

    It sucks. Imagine being penalized for drafting your championship core and then having to dismantle them because of a 250 million dollar tax to keep them.

    Imagine being a Spurs fan in the Mid 2000s and you had to trade away Manu because of this repeater second apron tax....

    There was a different way to avoid "super teams"

    This was just the easiest, most simpleton way to do that.

  3. #18
    Cavs Fan ® 1997 Meticode's Avatar
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    Default Re: Are you generally in favor of the rules forcing great teams to break up?

    Yes, I like a random league where smaller markets are given a chance. I'm tired of the dynasty era where a few teams ruled the Finals. While I know those huge markets brought eyeballs to the television it becomes predictable to the point it's boring for me.

  4. #19
    Titles are overrated Kblaze8855's Avatar
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    Default Re: Are you generally in favor of the rules forcing great teams to break up?

    Quote Originally Posted by Carbine View Post
    It sucks. Imagine being penalized for drafting your championship core and then having to dismantle them because of a 250 million dollar tax to keep them.

    Imagine being a Spurs fan in the Mid 2000s and you had to trade away Manu because of this repeater second apron tax....

    There was a different way to avoid "super teams"

    This was just the easiest, most simpleton way to do that.
    I wouldn’t say I’m a fan of the thunder, but it does suck that you can just draft too well and be too intelligent to be allowed to keep your team. The easiest fix to me would be not having players you drafted count toward the luxury tax. Or maybe have a maximum of two who do?

    If you’re able to evaluate young players well enough that you draft three or four stars that were available to other teams the idea that you should lose them just because they’re too valuable after you develop them is pretty crazy to me.

    players you drafted should have at least a 25% savings against the luxury tax only. Not the salary cap. But you shouldn’t get charged for the entirety of what they take you over the cap if you drafted them.

  5. #20
    NBA All-star NBAGOAT's Avatar
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    Default Re: Are you generally in favor of the rules forcing great teams to break up?

    Quote Originally Posted by Kblaze8855 View Post
    I wouldn’t say I’m a fan of the thunder, but it does suck that you can just draft too well and be too intelligent to be allowed to keep your team. The easiest fix to me would be not having players you drafted count toward the luxury tax. Or maybe have a maximum of two who do?

    If you’re able to evaluate young players well enough that you draft three or four stars that were available to other teams the idea that you should lose them just because they’re too valuable after you develop them is pretty crazy to me.

    players you drafted should have at least a 25% savings against the luxury tax only. Not the salary cap. But you shouldn’t get charged for the entirety of what they take you over the cap if you drafted them.
    The counter is just because you drafted well doesn’t mean it’s good for the league if you dominate. Imagine say a richer guy like ballmer or Gilbert owned okc and there was no 2nd apron. They could be flipping Hartenstein Caruso every pick for Giannis in half a year. It be great to watch for a half year but other teams are basically dead for Giannis’ whole prime. Lot of fans wouldn’t be happy. 3/4 of the golden state super team also home grown.

    Can also argue it’s smart team building to put together a team that’s not drafted. Haliburton and siakam were traded for. Siakam trade wasn’t the obvious superstar trade most teams didn’t want to pay him a max. If there wasn’t a 2nd apron Indiana could’ve gone for a 3rd star too I think with nembard and turner making good money. Nembard other salary picks for Desmond bane for example like Orlando did.

    I get fans see okc current squad way differently than say the kd Kyrie harden nets where everyone forced their way there and the owner spends infinite money but Indiana was technically built the same way. They just feel way different because the names they got weren’t big.
    Last edited by NBAGOAT; 07-03-2025 at 03:57 AM.

  6. #21
    Titles are overrated Kblaze8855's Avatar
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    Default Re: Are you generally in favor of the rules forcing great teams to break up?

    Punishing Intelligence and good scouting because competent people being morons makes it easier on the incompetent isn’t much of an argument to me. Regardless of how they get them taking players from good teams always benefits the shit teams they are forced to play for instead, but that doesn’t make it right.

    People who know what they’re doing shouldn’t be undermined because competence being limited to the brilliant is bad for idiots. Red being willing to pay Bob Cousy $10,000 a year after the Hawks refused to give It to him and he was gonna quit the league to sell Insurance shouldn’t be punished just because he was also smart enough to trade them a scorer for Bill Russell because they were too stupid to realize defense was more important.

    And the stupid teams don’t deserve to break up birds Celtics because red was smart enough to draft Larry a year before he was actually gonna come out because he knew he was good enough to wait for and dumber teams didn’t have his patience. Just because he was able to flip a pick and a role player to get Parish and Mchale to play with him, doesn’t mean we should take pity on the Warriors and send one of them back because the Celtics became too good. They only had the pic to send because they traded Bob McAdoo to the Pistons for a couple picks years earlier. They only had Macado because the Celtics and Clippers essentially swapped their entire rosters in one of the weirdest moves in history that nobody seems to remember happening. The Celtics should be punished because the Warriors later thought Joe Barry Carroll would be such an upgrade over Robert Parish They traded Parish and the number three pick that ended up Mchale for the rights to get him?

    The Lakers traded an aging Hall of Famer for the pick that became magic when they already had Kareem then traded A role player and their first round pick in the same draft Mikhail was in to the Cavaliers for future first that became James worthy. Cleveland doesn’t deserve to still be good when they give away picks to draft bums.

    The 76ers only got to draft Barkley with such a high pic when they already had Moses and Dr. J(who the nets simply sold for cash) because 6 years earlier they sent World B Free to the clippers in an addition by subtraction move. Sure, the Clippers wouldn’t have been a laughing stock in the 80s if they got Barkley, but World B free was all NBA for them when they got him. They then added Walton by trading another good player and a future first that could’ve been used on a couple different All-Stars.

    The league changed the rules Around drafting players early and the rules governing future first round picks, but you don’t just keep the smart teams from having the players they outsmarted stupid teams to get.

    They didn’t steal them. They didn’t seduce them away with glitz and glamour.

    They were just smarter than stupid teams. And it feels like these days we outright want to punish it. Would the league have actually been better off without the Showtime Lakers birds, Celtics, or the 76ers being a powerhouse to oppose them?

    The built-in protection against your own incompetence is granting higher draft picks to the teams that suck. If you trade away or can’t take advantage of the built-in protection due to a skill issue or cheapness why should people smarter and harder working subsidize you with good players to counter your lack of intelligence?

  7. #22
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    Default Re: Are you generally in favor of the rules forcing great teams to break up?

    No. Like you already said OKC shouldn't be punished for being smart and stockpiling talent as a small market team.

    Dynasties are good for the league.

  8. #23
    NBA All-star NBAGOAT's Avatar
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    Default Re: Are you generally in favor of the rules forcing great teams to break up?

    Quote Originally Posted by Kblaze8855 View Post
    Punishing Intelligence and good scouting because competent people being morons makes it easier on the incompetent isn’t much of an argument to me. Regardless of how they get them taking players from good teams always benefits the shit teams they are forced to play for instead, but that doesn’t make it right.

    People who know what they’re doing shouldn’t be undermined because competence being limited to the brilliant is bad for idiots. Red being willing to pay Bob Cousy $10,000 a year after the Hawks refused to give It to him and he was gonna quit the league to sell Insurance shouldn’t be punished just because he was also smart enough to trade them a scorer for Bill Russell because they were too stupid to realize defense was more important.

    And the stupid teams don’t deserve to break up birds Celtics because red was smart enough to draft Larry a year before he was actually gonna come out because he knew he was good enough to wait for and dumber teams didn’t have his patience. Just because he was able to flip a pick and a role player to get Parish and Mchale to play with him, doesn’t mean we should take pity on the Warriors and send one of them back because the Celtics became too good. They only had the pic to send because they traded Bob McAdoo to the Pistons for a couple picks years earlier. They only had Macado because the Celtics and Clippers essentially swapped their entire rosters in one of the weirdest moves in history that nobody seems to remember happening. The Celtics should be punished because the Warriors later thought Joe Barry Carroll would be such an upgrade over Robert Parish They traded Parish and the number three pick that ended up Mchale for the rights to get him?

    The Lakers traded an aging Hall of Famer for the pick that became magic when they already had Kareem then traded A role player and their first round pick in the same draft Mikhail was in to the Cavaliers for future first that became James worthy. Cleveland doesn’t deserve to still be good when they give away picks to draft bums.

    The 76ers only got to draft Barkley with such a high pic when they already had Moses and Dr. J(who the nets simply sold for cash) because 6 years earlier they sent World B Free to the clippers in an addition by subtraction move. Sure, the Clippers wouldn’t have been a laughing stock in the 80s if they got Barkley, but World B free was all NBA for them when they got him. They then added Walton by trading another good player and a future first that could’ve been used on a couple different All-Stars.

    The league changed the rules Around drafting players early and the rules governing future first round picks, but you don’t just keep the smart teams from having the players they outsmarted stupid teams to get.

    They didn’t steal them. They didn’t seduce them away with glitz and glamour.

    They were just smarter than stupid teams. And it feels like these days we outright want to punish it. Would the league have actually been better off without the Showtime Lakers birds, Celtics, or the 76ers being a powerhouse to oppose them?

    The built-in protection against your own incompetence is granting higher draft picks to the teams that suck. If you trade away or can’t take advantage of the built-in protection due to a skill issue or cheapness why should people smarter and harder working subsidize you with good players to counter your lack of intelligence?
    I think my point was just if you count drafted players for 25% less against the cap you punish a smart team like Indiana or ny. None of nys current core was drafted but all of it came through smart trades and free agency moves. It wasn’t just throw money at a superstar because we have more money than others.

    They be “punished” compared to okc if that rule came in. Would be an even bigger emphasis on tanking because the draft is more valuable. The Jazz may have never blown it up with Mitchell and gobert because they drafted both guys

  9. #24
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    Default Re: Are you generally in favor of the rules forcing great teams to break up?

    Quote Originally Posted by Kblaze8855 View Post
    it’s only the end of the discussion if you think someone who started life poor and is trying to maximize the brief window of earning potential is the one who should be sacrificing instead of people like the guy who runs the Nuggets talking about possibly having to trade Jokic over money when his dad owns the Nuggets, the Rams, Arsenal and an NHL team and his mom is the daughter of the founder of Walmart.

    both sides could afford to make less money or to generally be less wealthy, but one side has quite a bit more wiggle room.

    People like Dan Gilbert have wealth that fluctuates by $20-$30 billion. He’s been from 20 billion up to 40 billion down to 30 up to 50 and now he’s around 27. And we’re talking about players who could afford to leave some on the table?

    Steve Ballmers worth like $150 billion. But it’s Kawhi Leonard’s fault if he doesn’t choose to simply pay the repeater luxury tax?

    The owners have made it cost prohibitive to build these teams and keep them, but quite a few of them are the kind of rich where nothing is truly cost prohibitive.

    The Cash poor NBA owners are actually people like the Buss family who were holding an asset worth $10 billion till they decided to cash it out.

    Blaming players because people who have virtually but not quite inexhaustible resources Choose to limit what they will spend for contention?

    Especially when even if everyone leaves something on the table teams like the Celtics would still get broken up? They got rid of their fourth and fifth options And saved 180,000,000. If their five best players all left something on the table? It wouldn’t be enough to keep the team together if ownership doesn’t feel like it paying to lose for at least a year.


    It’s bad business, so Owners choose not to do it even though they could. Knowing that I don’t know how you blame the players for doing good business when relatively speaking, they need the money a lot more.
    Dude obviously in a perfect world the owner oligarchs should take the pay cuts.

    And that goes for every industry. Even labor you don’t give a shit about. Sports unions and Hollywood unions are never on the picket line with other workers so miss me with this self righteous fighting against the rich act. People like Dan Gilbert could do a lot more than pay basketball players. Lmao.


    The bottom line though is players sell out. Just like everyone. They have a price, they sell out, and there goes the team. It’s not rocket science. lol.

  10. #25
    Titles are overrated Kblaze8855's Avatar
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    Default Re: Are you generally in favor of the rules forcing great teams to break up?

    Quote Originally Posted by Norcaliblunt View Post
    Dude obviously in a perfect world the owner oligarchs should take the pay cuts.

    And that goes for every industry. Even labor you don’t give a shit about. Sports unions and Hollywood unions are never on the picket line with other workers so miss me with this self righteous fighting against the rich act. People like Dan Gilbert could do a lot more than pay basketball players. Lmao.


    The bottom line though is players sell out. Just like everyone. They have a price, they sell out, and there goes the team. It’s not rocket science. lol.
    there’s nothing self-righteous about it. I don’t complain about players or owners wanting money. But you damn sure don’t make any sense blaming players for taking fair market value from someone worth billions. You said



    Players could sign for a little less to try keep these “dynasties” alive but don’t.

    Bottom line end of discussion.

    Putting every speck of the blame onto players then go back and say of course ownership should take the pay cut.

    So which is it?

    I responded to what you said. I didn’t assume you thought anything. You made it pretty clear it’s on the players.

  11. #26
    Titles are overrated Kblaze8855's Avatar
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    Default Re: Are you generally in favor of the rules forcing great teams to break up?

    Quote Originally Posted by NBAGOAT View Post
    I think my point was just if you count drafted players for 25% less against the cap you punish a smart team like Indiana or ny. None of nys current core was drafted but all of it came through smart trades and free agency moves. It wasn’t just throw money at a superstar because we have more money than others.

    They be “punished” compared to okc if that rule came in. Would be an even bigger emphasis on tanking because the draft is more valuable. The Jazz may have never blown it up with Mitchell and gobert because they drafted both guys

    they have already established and apparently many fans agree that an issue is the so-called small markets losing players To free agency. Half the moves seem to be based on giving the home team and advantage to keep their players it just seems they’ve missed an incredibly obvious one. They let the team you’re on pay more. But doing that while having a system that punishes you for paying them more just seems ridiculous.

  12. #27
    Titles are overrated Kblaze8855's Avatar
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    Default Re: Are you generally in favor of the rules forcing great teams to break up?

    Quote Originally Posted by NBAGOAT View Post
    I think my point was just if you count drafted players for 25% less against the cap you punish a smart team like Indiana or ny. None of nys current core was drafted but all of it came through smart trades and free agency moves. It wasn’t just throw money at a superstar because we have more money than others.

    They be “punished” compared to okc if that rule came in. Would be an even bigger emphasis on tanking because the draft is more valuable. The Jazz may have never blown it up with Mitchell and gobert because they drafted both guys

    they have already established and apparently many fans agree that an issue is the so-called small markets losing players To free agency. Half the moves seem to be based on giving the home team and advantage to keep their players it just seems they’ve missed an incredibly obvious one. They let the team you’re on pay more. But doing that while having a system that punishes you for paying them more just seems ridiculous.

  13. #28
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    Default Re: Are you generally in favor of the rules forcing great teams to break up?

    Quote Originally Posted by Kblaze8855 View Post
    there’s nothing self-righteous about it. I don’t complain about players or owners wanting money. But you damn sure don’t make any sense blaming players for taking fair market value from someone worth billions. You said





    Putting every speck of the blame onto players then go back and say of course ownership should take the pay cut.

    So which is it?

    I responded to what you said. I didn’t assume you thought anything. You made it pretty clear it’s on the players.
    At some point it has to be on the players. Just like workers at average jobs.

    You can blame the system all you want. The system ain’t changing. The players literally can control where they sign. So it’s on them.

    If generational wealth and billionaire status is your goal then I suggest not being a worker/employee and start a business or get into Wall Street. lol.

  14. #29
    Titles are overrated Kblaze8855's Avatar
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    Default Re: Are you generally in favor of the rules forcing great teams to break up?

    The system isn’t changing for the same reason players aren’t gonna start taking drastically less than fair market value. It’s ****ing stupid business. I don’t see how you blame one and not the other when they share the exact same motivation. You just choose to put less blame on the people who have more to spare for some reason.

    The system isn’t just one side. The system is both sides. You can’t blame one and not the other

  15. #30
    National High School Star game3524's Avatar
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    Default Re: Are you generally in favor of the rules forcing great teams to break up?

    It is bad for the league.

    Consistency is what makes the NBA great. No one likes randomness and frequant player movement. It cheapens the product.

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