National Post

Change is in the wind for the NBA

A look at the three big ones proposed by silver

- Ben Golliver

After years of publicly toying with major changes to his league’s schedule and post-season format, NBA commission­er Adam Silver is reportedly eyeing three initiative­s that could be implemente­d in time for the 202122 season.

Silver and the National Basketball Players Associatio­n are discussing a playoff reseeding format, a new mid- season tournament and a play- in round for playoff bubble teams that, together, would reduce the length of the 82- game regular season to 78 or 79 games, according to an ESPN report.

The following is a look at how those changes, which reportedly need to be approved before a board of governors meeting in April, would work, why the NBA is interested in each and whether the league should move forward with any.

Reseeding the playoffs

❚ ❚ How it would work: The NBA would rank the four conference finalists one through four based on their regular season record, thereby setting its “Final Four” matchups based on performanc­e rather than conference designatio­n.

❚ ❚ Why pursue this change: Since Michael Jordan’s second retirement in 1998, the NBA has had a serious imbalance between the conference­s with the West primarily being far stronger than the East. This playoff reseeding proposal would maximize the chances that the two best teams would meet in the NBA Finals, the league’s premier showcase, rather than in either of the conference finals.

As one recent example, the Golden State Warriors ( 58 wins) needed seven games to defeat the Houston Rockets (65 wins) in the 2018 Western Conference final, then went on to sweep the Cleveland Cavaliers ( 50 wins) in the NBA Finals. If the new format had been implemente­d, Houston would have been the top seed, Golden State would have been the second seed, the Boston Celtics (55 wins) would have been the third seed and Cleveland would have been fourth. If the favourites had won, Houston and Golden State would have squared off in the final and the longer and more competitiv­e series would have almost certainly translated to greater interest and more television revenue.

This proposal is a clean compromise when compared to the more radical idea of reseeding all 16 playoff teams, regardless of conference, before the playoffs start. Silver has expressed concern about the travel logistics in such a scenario, given that the NBA’S post- season format consists of four best- of- seven rounds. Under this proposal, regional matchups with less burdensome travel would be preserved through the first two rounds.

❚ ❚ Verdict: The NBA should do this. Clinging to the West- versus- East tradition is not worth sacrificin­g the best possible final matchup. This is a minor alteration with a potentiall­y major payoff for all parties, including fans.

Mid- season tournament

❚ ❚ How it would work: The NBA would host an in-season tournament involving all 30 teams between Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas.

❚ ❚ Why pursue this change: Silver has devoted significan­t time and thought to positionin­g the NBA within the wider entertainm­ent landscape, especially as attention spans become shorter and viewing habits shift away from traditiona­l cable television subscripti­ons.

Sports Media Watch reported last week that the NBA’S early season television numbers were down on both ESPN and TNT. There are numerous possible explanatio­ns: many of the big- market teams in the East are not good this season, some viewers are choosing to follow the league solely through social media rather than watching full games and others may be tuning out because of the absence of major stars due to injuries or “load management” — strategica­lly resting players to preserve their long-term health.

While the NBA has made rule changes to shorten the length of its games and attempted to prevent teams from resting completely healthy players for games on national television, it is clearly seeking a more dramatic method of generating interest. The timing of the proposed tournament would avoid conflicts with major domestic competitor­s like the NCAA tournament and NFL playoffs and it would unfold well before all-star weekend and the trade deadline.

A mid- season tournament would give non- contenders the opportunit­y to win a meaningful prize. There are usually only a handful of teams that can reasonably expect to win a title and the NBA recently completed a run in which the same two teams — Golden State and Cleveland — met in the final four straight times. Bradley Beal and the Washington Wizards enter this season knowing they have no shot at the championsh­ip, but it’s conceivabl­e their high- scoring offence could get hot for a few weeks and prevail in a winter tournament.

In addition to offering a carrot to second- and third- tier teams, the tournament would provide a new method for monetizing regular season games through sponsorshi­p deals. Silver has long expressed his admiration for profession­al soccer’s ability to juggle league play with tournament­s and cups that create added visibility and revenue.

Verdict: Meh. It’s easy to envision many teams — especially veteran teams preparing for deep playoff runs — not taking the tournament seriously, which could turn the idea into a novelty. At the same time, there’s not much downside to rebranding a segment of regular season games as cup games.

Playoff play- in

❚ ❚ How it would work: At the end of the regular season, the seventh, eighth, ninth and 10th seeds in each conference would do battle for the final two playoff spots. The seventh seed would play the eighth seed with the winner claiming the seventh spot. Then, the ninth seed would play the 10th seed with the loser being eliminated. Finally, the loser of the first game would play the winner of the second game for the eighth spot.

❚ ❚ Why pursue this change: Tanking has been a long- standing eyesore for the NBA, which Silver has sought to address by flattening the league’s lottery odds to dissuade teams from racing to lose as many games as possible. The play- in tournament would support those efforts by encouragin­g teams on the playoff bubble to continue competing throughout the entire season rather than shutting down early, while adding intrigue to the launch of the post-season.

The sheer length of an 82- game schedule has left some teams eliminated from the playoffs with weeks or even months of games left to play. As a result, many of those teams have sought to rest their best players and develop their young prospects to improve their draft lottery positionin­g. In some cases, like “the process” orchestrat­ed by the Philadelph­ia 76ers, teams have undertaken multi- year efforts that disregarde­d winning in favour of competing for top draft talent. In others, respectabl­e teams come up short and were forced to play out the string with weeks of meaningles­s games.

Last year, the four play- in teams in the East would have been the Detroit Pistons, Charlotte Hornets, Miami Heat and Washington Wizards. In the West, they would have been the San Antonio Spurs, Los Angeles Clippers, Sacramento Kings and Los Angeles Lakers. The gap between the East teams was only a matter of three wins and a headline- grabbing upset easily could have occurred. In the West, the Lakers would have had the chance to salvage a season lost to Lebron James’ groin injury. Without the play-in tournament as a lure, L.A. rested its franchise player for the entire month of April.

Opponents of the play-in tournament have argued it devalues the regular season because the seventh and eighth seeds must jump through extra hoops to claim playoff spots they had earned. Should a six-month body of work really be overshadow­ed by two make- or- break contests? The NBA has apparently appeased those voices by building in a layer of protection for the seventh and eighth seeds: a team in one of those slots would need to lose both play-in games rather than just one to be bumped from the playoffs.

❚ ❚ Verdict: Sure, as long as it’s not the only change. It’s not worth scrapping the decades of history baked into the NBA’S traditiona­l 82- game schedule simply to add a play- in tournament. But if the NBA and NBPA can reach agreement on multiple schedule changes, this could be an effective way to shake up the tanking landscape and to give hope to fans of bubble teams.

 ?? Kyodo / via REUTERS ?? NBA commission­er Adam Silver is reportedly eyeing three major initiative­s that could be in place for the 2021-22 season.
Kyodo / via REUTERS NBA commission­er Adam Silver is reportedly eyeing three major initiative­s that could be in place for the 2021-22 season.

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