The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Silver continues to hide from the load management problem

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NEW YORK — Adam Silver, the great enabler of the player empowermen­t era, couldn’t admit it. He couldn’t bring himself to state the obvious, so we’ll say it for him:

The system is damaged. Load management or, more broadly, the frequent unavailabi­lity of the NBA’s top players, is a real problem. Silver dismissed it last week in the name of biology, claiming players are excused from suiting up consistent­ly because, “there’s real medical data and scientific data about what’s appropriat­e.”

Silver acknowledg­ed he’s emboldened to endorse the status quo because attendance is up league-wide, not mentioning that deceptive advertisin­g eventually turns off the consumer (just check the tanking TV ratings for the lethargic AllStar Game). But here’s some other data to contemplat­e:

Fourteen of the NBA’s 15 highest-paid players missed at least 10 games each heading into the AllStar break. None sustained a season-ending injury, but collective­ly they sat for over a quarter of the season. Put another way: if you pay $500 for a family of four to see a superstar in a superstard­riven league (that would be cheap in New York), there’s a 1 in 4 chance he’s not playing. Similar odds to the ‘play something’ option on Netflix.

The player with the most appearance­s on the top-15 highest-paid list — Russell Westbrook — is easily the worst. And Silver, who gives off a toothless vibe like he’s chewing on rocks, tells us there’s nothing to see here. Never mind that the other major sports leagues don’t share the problem.

At least not to this extent.

“The suggestion that these men, in this case in the NBA, somehow should just be out there more for its own sake, I don’t buy into,” Silver said.

OK, we’ll play along. The players shouldn’t feel obligated to show up for work because there’s too many games. They’re resting for the playoffs months ahead of time, which seems bogus and counterint­uitive when most of the teams are fighting for their playoff lives. Surely, the solution is to cut the schedule. Simple. Except that’s never gonna happen. It would decrease revenue.

An automatic no-no. Silver is actually trying to add games with a midseason tournament.

When asked about reducing the number of games, the commission­er convenient­ly found data to declare it ineffectiv­e.

“There’s no data right now that suggests,” Silver said, “based on some prior experiment­s or even as we look at the data over the course of the season and when players get injured, it isn’t — you would think that it would be the case that injuries would increase as the season goes on, and that’s not necessaril­y it, either. It may be that there’s a fair degree of randomness in terms of when players get injured.”

To recap: the commission­er tells us that science determines an “appropriat­e” amount of games to preserve health, and then the commission­er tells us that playing fewer games has no effect on health.

Silver made these contradict­ory statements before one of the more offensive All-Star Games in memory, a contest best described as a layup line. It was appropriat­e that the star of the weekend was a G Leaguer, and the supporting stars were the TV analysts.

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