It felt like the NBA used to be a lot more consistent. The teams that were good in the regular season also were good in the postseason, for the most part, and if you looked and/or played like a scrub, you were usually dismissed like one. During this era, itβs almost as if you should wait to lay future money until the first week of April.
I donβt even care about the load management aspect, thereβs so much variance outside of that itβs hard to get a feel for who is actually good. Obviously, that makes my job harder, but also those of gamblers and sportsbooks. However, I think the casual fan is equally affected because thereβs no rhythm to the season.
Itβs a scatter plot from day to day. There are a few reliable groups, yet on any given night any team could get beat by 30. That described the Bucks to a T until Doc Rivers showed up, and now they just lose by 15.
Boston, Minnesota, Oklahoma City, Cleveland, and the Clippers have the five best records in the NBA, and Iβm not sure if theyβre above average, or just trying. I think the Celtics might be contenders, at least Jayson Tatum certainly thinks so, but Cβs fans are as dubious of Joe Mazzulla as I am.
Half of the βcontendersβ are sandbagging so their stars make it through the season. The lone motivation for Phoenix, Golden State, Miami, and the Lakers is to earn a seat at the table while not being fined. While Adam Silver thought the play-in would keep the regular season interesting, itβs almost had the opposite impact. Good teams can wait longer to flip the switch, and hope some overzealous young squad goes all out for a two-seed.
Imagine the kind of shape Shaq wouldβve shown up in if given an extra month to work it off. Are we sure Draymond Green wasnβt trying to get suspended? I mean, it didnβt derail the Warriorsβ season, and he got an early season staycation.
It used to be that the regular season didnβt really matter from an interest standpoint. The best teams finished with the best records, but you could see why. You could watch the product, and form an opinion about who will be tough outs come April and May, and whoβs destined to get stepped on like a cigarette butt.
Give me a second to kick some kids off my lawn, and Iβll wrap this up. Load management, anger management, designated rest days, a shorter season, whatever needs to be done to deliver an iota of consistency, the NBA should do it.
If you think you have an inclination of how any franchise will look come the postseason β outside of Denver or Miami β youβre probably the kind of person who thinks he could solve global warming. A) Youβre bothering me, and B) Iβm just going to deal with the chaos when it gets deep.
In this edition of βFire Rob Manfredβ β¦
MLB executives and Rob Manfred can talk about the rigorous testing of the new βperformance-drivenβ uniforms as much as they want, but clearly, that was a lie. Because if they had inspected them, they wouldβve noticed this:
Tough out there, Rob, what with the truth swinging freely like Casey Schmittβs manhood.

