Post by Macmoish on Feb 23, 2011 23:31:01 GMT
From today's Wall Street Journal
How the NBA Became English Soccer
As More Top Stars Flock to a Handful of Teams, the Disparity Grows; Lakers and Heat Meet Chelsea and Arsenal
By KEVIN CLARK
As more superstars defect to a few teams, the NBA may soon look like English soccer where only four teams have managed to finish in the top standings over the past seven seasons.
If there's a philosophical divide among sports fans that cleaves our ranks roughly down the middle, it's the question of what we consider more entertaining—a league where every team has a chance to win every season, or a league where the most popular teams are its perennial contenders.
Carmelo Anthony's trade to the New York Knicks Monday night is the latest sign that the NBA is drifting in one distinct direction. It's becoming a league where a handful of glamour-puss teams are attracting all the marquee players and where, if recent events are any indication, they may vacuum up championships for years to come. In fact, as more stars like Anthony defect to these few teams, the league may quickly come to resemble (gasp!) English soccer.
In England's Premier League, which is widely considered the world's deepest pro league, only four teams—Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, and Manchester United—have managed to finish No. 3 or better in the final league standings over the past seven seasons. Not coincidentally, these teams have also been the prime destinations for mid-career superstars who've taken a change of scenery. (Manchester City, a team that has spent lavishly on superstars, has also prospered. It's currently poised to take this season's No. 3 spot).
The NBA hasn't seen anything approaching that level of predictability. This season, teams like the San Antonio Spurs, Chicago Bulls and Oklahoma City Thunder, which have built their teams without skimming the basketball cream, continue to hold their own in the standings.
But the winds of change are clearly blowing. By switching teams to the big-market Knicks, Anthony (formerly of the Denver Nuggets) joins Amar'e Stoudemire (formerly of the Phoenix Suns), in making New York a prime player. LeBron James (Cleveland) and Chris Bosh (Toronto), have joined Dwyane Wade to make the Miami Heat a perennial power. This comes not long after the Los Angeles Lakers loaded up with Pau Gasol and Ron Artest and the Boston Celtics grabbed Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen to play alongside Paul Pierce.
"What started it was Boston, with Garnett, then Ray Allen," said Stoudemire. "Then the Lakers followed it up with Gasol and then Miami. I think Boston started it, won a championship right after that and that formula was working and everyone just kind of tagged along."
In the last three seasons, these talent centers have been changing the complexion of the league. The Lakers and Celtics have taken up five of six possible spots in the finals and are both in contention again this year. And since this summer, the Heat—and now the Knicks—have vaulted into the ranks of bonafide contenders.
This consolidation of talent has had another measurable effect on both leagues: the worst teams seem to be getting worse. This season, the James-less Cavaliers set an NBA record with 26 losses in a row, while last season, the New Jersey Nets became the fifth NBA team in 50 years to win just 12 or fewer games over a full season.
In the Premier League, Portsmouth tallied just 19 points last season—a total that looks respectable only when compared to the 2007-08 Derby County side, which only managed to score 11.
To show the disparity, The Wall Street Journal asked Stats Inc. to determine the standard deviation of wins for all NBA and EPL teams over the past few seasons. (Standard deviation is a tool that allows statisticians to see whether two groups of numbers in a data set—such as wins and losses among all the teams in a sports league—are generally growing further apart or getting closer together).
Last season, the NBA's standard deviation of wins was 13.4, up from 10.8 in 2006-07. That suggests the best NBA teams were about 24% better than the worst ones. In the EPL, the standard deviation was 18.1 points last season, up from 15.9 in 2006-07. That's a 13.8% increase over the same period of time. If that keeps up, the NBA will soon look like two leagues, one that consists of teams that play for titles and one for teams that merely play.
To be fair, the NBA's best team at the moment, the Spurs, found all three of its best players—Tim Duncan. Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili—through the draft. And the Oklahoma City Thunder, a team that could never be accused of playing in a big splashy market, has one of the best records in the Western Conference.
NBA Commissioner David Stern said last weekend that during its collective bargaining discussions with the players, the league was committed to coming up with "a system where all 30 teams over a period of time have the ability to compete."
Nonetheless, there's reason to believe the growing consolidation of stars in the NBA will only continue. New Orleans's Chris Paul and Utah's Deron Williams, two of the league's top talents at point guard, are among several future targets for the Knicks. And one of the league's last mega-stars who's playing without a partner in crime, Dwight Howard of the Orlando Magic, will have to sign an extension with that team in the summer of 2012, or take his talents elsewhere.
If you're betting on the outcome, the pool of options isn't getting any deeper.
Write to Kevin Clark at kevin.clark@wsj.com
online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703775704576160791914631796.html
How the NBA Became English Soccer
As More Top Stars Flock to a Handful of Teams, the Disparity Grows; Lakers and Heat Meet Chelsea and Arsenal
By KEVIN CLARK
As more superstars defect to a few teams, the NBA may soon look like English soccer where only four teams have managed to finish in the top standings over the past seven seasons.
If there's a philosophical divide among sports fans that cleaves our ranks roughly down the middle, it's the question of what we consider more entertaining—a league where every team has a chance to win every season, or a league where the most popular teams are its perennial contenders.
Carmelo Anthony's trade to the New York Knicks Monday night is the latest sign that the NBA is drifting in one distinct direction. It's becoming a league where a handful of glamour-puss teams are attracting all the marquee players and where, if recent events are any indication, they may vacuum up championships for years to come. In fact, as more stars like Anthony defect to these few teams, the league may quickly come to resemble (gasp!) English soccer.
In England's Premier League, which is widely considered the world's deepest pro league, only four teams—Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, and Manchester United—have managed to finish No. 3 or better in the final league standings over the past seven seasons. Not coincidentally, these teams have also been the prime destinations for mid-career superstars who've taken a change of scenery. (Manchester City, a team that has spent lavishly on superstars, has also prospered. It's currently poised to take this season's No. 3 spot).
The NBA hasn't seen anything approaching that level of predictability. This season, teams like the San Antonio Spurs, Chicago Bulls and Oklahoma City Thunder, which have built their teams without skimming the basketball cream, continue to hold their own in the standings.
But the winds of change are clearly blowing. By switching teams to the big-market Knicks, Anthony (formerly of the Denver Nuggets) joins Amar'e Stoudemire (formerly of the Phoenix Suns), in making New York a prime player. LeBron James (Cleveland) and Chris Bosh (Toronto), have joined Dwyane Wade to make the Miami Heat a perennial power. This comes not long after the Los Angeles Lakers loaded up with Pau Gasol and Ron Artest and the Boston Celtics grabbed Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen to play alongside Paul Pierce.
"What started it was Boston, with Garnett, then Ray Allen," said Stoudemire. "Then the Lakers followed it up with Gasol and then Miami. I think Boston started it, won a championship right after that and that formula was working and everyone just kind of tagged along."
In the last three seasons, these talent centers have been changing the complexion of the league. The Lakers and Celtics have taken up five of six possible spots in the finals and are both in contention again this year. And since this summer, the Heat—and now the Knicks—have vaulted into the ranks of bonafide contenders.
This consolidation of talent has had another measurable effect on both leagues: the worst teams seem to be getting worse. This season, the James-less Cavaliers set an NBA record with 26 losses in a row, while last season, the New Jersey Nets became the fifth NBA team in 50 years to win just 12 or fewer games over a full season.
In the Premier League, Portsmouth tallied just 19 points last season—a total that looks respectable only when compared to the 2007-08 Derby County side, which only managed to score 11.
To show the disparity, The Wall Street Journal asked Stats Inc. to determine the standard deviation of wins for all NBA and EPL teams over the past few seasons. (Standard deviation is a tool that allows statisticians to see whether two groups of numbers in a data set—such as wins and losses among all the teams in a sports league—are generally growing further apart or getting closer together).
Last season, the NBA's standard deviation of wins was 13.4, up from 10.8 in 2006-07. That suggests the best NBA teams were about 24% better than the worst ones. In the EPL, the standard deviation was 18.1 points last season, up from 15.9 in 2006-07. That's a 13.8% increase over the same period of time. If that keeps up, the NBA will soon look like two leagues, one that consists of teams that play for titles and one for teams that merely play.
To be fair, the NBA's best team at the moment, the Spurs, found all three of its best players—Tim Duncan. Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili—through the draft. And the Oklahoma City Thunder, a team that could never be accused of playing in a big splashy market, has one of the best records in the Western Conference.
NBA Commissioner David Stern said last weekend that during its collective bargaining discussions with the players, the league was committed to coming up with "a system where all 30 teams over a period of time have the ability to compete."
Nonetheless, there's reason to believe the growing consolidation of stars in the NBA will only continue. New Orleans's Chris Paul and Utah's Deron Williams, two of the league's top talents at point guard, are among several future targets for the Knicks. And one of the league's last mega-stars who's playing without a partner in crime, Dwight Howard of the Orlando Magic, will have to sign an extension with that team in the summer of 2012, or take his talents elsewhere.
If you're betting on the outcome, the pool of options isn't getting any deeper.
Write to Kevin Clark at kevin.clark@wsj.com
online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703775704576160791914631796.html