Yail Bloor Wrote:
billy g Wrote:
Yail Bloor Wrote:
billy g Wrote:
harry Wrote:
I did think it was a great moment when a few moments after the Thunder lost the last game... after some polite applause, the OKC crowd began to roar their approval and thanks to the Thunder plays still on the floor. It was sweet... quaint.... old school.
That was great to watch. I had my tongue firmly in cheek in making that comment but I was half serious. The part of me that was being serious hates that it seems inevitable that OKC won't be able to keep that team together in the long run where maybe if they were in NY or some other major market, you could see a basketball equivalent of Jeter, Posada, Mo and Pettite playing together for 10 plus years winning multiple titles and playing basketball on a level that would be amazing to watch even as a fan of an opponent.
Basketball isn't baseball though so there is a good chance they can keep such a team together.
I doubt it. To the extent that NBA rules do a better job at encouraging parity between large market teams and small market teams, they do it by making it harder for anyone to keep such a core together.
I also think you underestimate the role of:
(a) Players of that calibur wanting to play on the biggest stages
(b) The added financial opportunities (advertising, etc) for star players playing in bigger markets
(c) Whether anyone would really want to spend that amount of time in OKC. I seriously considered going to a high school football game when I was there. There weren't a lot of options.
I understand the point you are trying to make and would point to the San Antonio Spurs as the counter (and the New York Knicks while we're at it). Between the six month offseason and private jets, not to mention the fact that every game is on TV and the internet, I'm not sure it's as important that you be in a big market.
C'mon...I know its not the same as the 50's but you're going to throw out the internet as an equalizer? How many people watch whole basketball games on the internet? I'm also not sure what the Knick's suckitude and mismanagement has to do with your point. The salary cap in basketball really penalizes teams that utterly refuse to rebuild like the Knicks have while the fact that half the teams make the playoffs encourages such a dumb decision.
San Antonio has had a nice run and they get a lot of national TV time as a result but it still doesn't compare to what a good, large market team gets. Only a couple of games a week get National coverage while the local channels broadcast practically every game. How many people watch the Spurs on their local fox sports channel vs. how many watch the Knicks, Lakers, Heat, Bulls, Celtics, Rockets, etc?
And what is this six month offseason that you refer to? The NBA regular season and playoffs run late October through the end of June. If a team goes all the way and you factor in pre-season and early workouts, what does a player get off? Is it more than July, August and part of September? That's a lot of time to spend in OKC no offense to any Oklahoma Obs.