Las Vegas Review-Journal

Commission­er points to NFL’S ‘parity of opportunit­y’

- By Tim Reynolds The Associated Press

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Milwaukee has the best record in the NBA, Denver had its coaching staff at the All-star Game and Sacramento is in position to end the league’s longest current playoff drought.

Commission­er Adam Silver, overseeing a league that has wanted competitiv­e balance, likes what he’s seeing on those fronts.

But he acknowledg­ed during his annual address at All-star Weekend that there are still ways for the league to have more top-to-bottom competitiv­eness.

“You can point to teams like Milwaukee, teams like Oklahoma City, what’s happening in Denver now and Sacramento as signs that the system is working better than it has historical­ly,” Silver said. “I’d say we still have work to do, though. … We can still come up with a better system to create more competitio­n.”

While Golden State is still widely believed to be the favorite for what would be its fourth title in five years, the Bucks have been a success story all season in the East. Denver surged toward the top of the Western Conference two weeks ago, and the Kings haven’t been to the playoffs since 2006 and weren’t picked by many to be postseason-bound this year.

Those are the examples Silver likes of a balanced system.

“I look at the NFL, which among sports leagues, probably has the best parity and the best system in terms of creating competitio­n than any league I’m familiar with,” Silver said. “Yet the New England Patriots have been in the Super Bowl nine out of the last 18 years. And I don’t think anyone points to that as a sign that the system isn’t necessaril­y working. What people recognize is you want parity of opportunit­y.”

In some NBA cities, that opportunit­y is already gone this year.

There are four teams — Chicago, Cleveland, Phoenix and New York — who are on

pace for winning percentage­s less than 25 percent. The last time the league saw so many teams fail to win more than 20 games in the same full season was 1997-98, when six teams went 20-62 or worse. The NBA has tried to combat tanking by changing the odds of winning the draft lottery in an effort to discourage teams from all-out trying to lose.

Silver remains unsure if that’s enough to solve the issue entirely.

“We’ve seen this in other sports as well,” Silver said. “There’s a mindset that, if you’re going to be bad, you might as well be really bad. I believe, personally, that’s corrosive for those organizati­ons, putting aside my personal view of what the impact it has on the league overall. But, again, we’ll see how this pays out.”

In other topics addressed by Silver:

Tampering

Silver said the NBA is “doing a good job enforcing our rules” when it comes to tampering, though stressed that tampering and trade demands — such as the one where it became known that Anthony Davis wants to leave the New Orleans Pelicans — are very different things.

“I recognize that there’s very little I’m going to do to ever stop that completely,” Silver said.

Silver said he would rather trade demands not be made, or at the very least not become publicly known. But he also said that given the way the current collective bargaining agreement is written, there are “unintended consequenc­es” — such as the Davis situation.

Mavericks investigat­ion

Silver said Dallas owner Mark Cuban, who pledged to give $10 million to women’s groups after an investigat­ion showed a long-caustic workplace culture within the Mavericks’ organizati­on, is “absolutely meeting his commitment.”

“He’s told me he’s doing far more beyond that,” Silver said. “That is his personal decision and not something he’s seeking any publicity around, so I won’t talk more about that.”

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