In late October, just before the
start of the National Basketball Association season, the Phoenix Suns traded
their best big man, Marcin Gortat, and three other players to the Washington
Wizards for a conditional No. 1 draft choice and Emeka Okafor, a once-good
center whose herniated neck disk meant he probably wouldn’t play this season
and might not again. The Suns theretofore had been reckoned as laggards with a
potential of maybe 20 victories in their 82-game card. Afterward that estimate
seemed optimistic.
Instead
of anguished wails the move engendered popular and journalistic approval in the
desert metropolis. That’s because the team had accumulated four possible first-round
picks in the supposed-to-be-loaded 2014 draft, and its anticipated worst or
near-worst regular-season record would give it a good shot at Jabari Parker or
Andrew Wiggins, the projected cream of that crop. Ryan McDonough, the Suns’ young general
manager, was hailed as a genius for his act of roster destruction.
Funny
thing, though, some of the young and/or miscellaneous players the Suns collected
to mind the store this season turned out to be pretty good, and at year’s end
their 19-11 won-lost mark was sixth-best in the league’s western half, well
above draft-lottery status. If they continue that way they’ll have to grind out
further improvement laboriously rather than through a single-draft splash.
The
situation highlights a paradox that usually goes unremarked in sports. While
intentionally losing any single game is deemed disgraceful if not illegal, it’s
quite all right—even praiseworthy—for an organization to set itself up to lose
a season of games, or more. The practice is called “tanking” and it’s as much a
part of big-time pro scene as bloated salaries and ear-splitting game-break
entertainments. It makes sense because of the “worst goes first” amateur-player
drafts that all our professional leagues employ to give bottom teams a leg up
toward redemption.
Except
when an Andrew Luck is available, worst-goes-first works better in small-roster
basketball than in big-roster football. It worked so well in basketball that in
1985 the NBA acted to counter blatant tanking by abolishing the top-pick coin
flip between its two conference cellar dwellers in favor of a 14-team lottery
that’s so complicated actuaries have trouble understanding it.
The NBA lottery sometimes yields odd results--
in 2008 the Chicago Bulls, with only the ninth-worst record and a 1.7% chance,
drew the long straw and Derrick Rose. Further, top picks turn into busts often
enough (Kwame Brown, Greg Oden and, apparently, last year’s prize Anthony
Bennett) to give pause to the most cocksure general managers. But the 25% shot that goes to the team with
the worst mark is nonetheless worth trying for, and, annually, several always
do.
With the Suns out of the running,
the NBA’s race to the bottom now is being led by the Milwaukee Bucks and Utah
Jazz. Both were decent last year (the Bucks went 38-44, the Jazz 43-39), but each
cleared its roster of useful players in off-season preparation for a dive.
Interestingly, though, they may face
competition from a couple of teams that started the campaign with title
aspirations. The above-mentioned Bulls, again faced with the season-long injury
loss of the above-mentioned Rose, are being urged to dump other veteran stars
Luol Deng and Carlos Boozer in order to jockey for a better draft position, and
the Brooklyn (nee New Jersey) Nets, who impatiently added old Boston Celtics’ Kevin
Garnett and Paul Pierce to vie for supremacy in the East, now find themselves
old all around and wondering where their next fix will come from. A clamorous press in each of those clubs’ home
cities does not shy from use of the “t” word.
More interesting, I think, is the
fact that big-time sports’ shining recent examples of, uh, creative losing come
not from basketball but from baseball, the sport in which futurecasting is the
most iffy. That’s because it typically does not get its best young prospects
primed by the feedlots of academe but must develop them themselves, with little
certainty of reward.
The baseball model was established
in 2006 by the Washington Nationals under the veteran executive Stan Kasten. To
put it baldly, Kasten’s plan (he even called it “The Plan”) was for his historically
ailing franchise to be really lousy for as many years as it was required to
build a farm system that could sustain title contention. It took five seasons
of between 89 and 103 losses (2006-2010), but the team eventually accumulated enough
high-draft-pick standouts such as Ryan Zimmerman, Stephen Strasberg and Bryce
Harper to enable it to compete in better company.
Kasten’s present-day disciple is
the Chicago Cubs’ Theo Epstein. Hired in 2011 to accomplish the Herculean task
of reviving a team whose record of futility impresses even Buddhist monks,
Epstein, the one-time Boston boy wonder, has eschewed half measures,
remorselessly purging his roster of any veteran who might be worth a prospect
in return. The upshot has been two terrible seasons and a third at hand, with
who knows how many more looming beyond that.
True to his Hebraic roots, Epstein is like Moses, determined to have his
minions wander through the desert until no one with the old, slavish mentality
remains to enter the Promised Land.
That sounds better than tanking it, don’t you
think?
2 comments:
When I become king I'll limit basketball games to two minutes each; assmble all teams in one place; and hold the entire season in one day. It's always down to the last two minutes anyway.
What a boring sport (sport ?)...watching seven foot tall players raise their arms to place a large ball into a larger ring. How exciting (yawn). Bring back the Aztec version.
I now check the suns box score since my trip to phx. I love teams like that.
By the way, there are a bunch of great players in this year's draft. That power forward on Kentucky, Randall, is seriously good, and Smart on OK St. is supposedly big time also. That's 4 potentially franchise guys.
As for the Cubs.......go Cubs!!!! In Theo I trust.
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