NBA and NBPA Jointly Announce New All-Star Game Format
The NBA All-Star Game has become an embarrassment and a travesty, culminating in the 2024 fiasco during which the teams combined to score 397 points while attempting 168 three point shots and just five free throws. A strong Commissioner would have announced right after that game that--due to lack of player interest in participating in a meaningful game--the All-Star Game will be discontinued; sure, the NBPA would have been outraged because many players have contract clauses promising them bonuses for being selected as an All-Star, but a strong statement by the Commissioner would have put the players on blast and put the onus on the players to do better.
Unfortunately, the NBA does not have a strong Commissioner like David Stern. The NBA is stuck with Adam Silver, who is a weak Commissioner, as I recently noted:
Throwing more cash at players who act entitled and spoiled will not make things better. Radical measures are needed: if All-Stars refuse to play hard, then cancel the All-Star Game and render null and void any contract bonuses related to being selected as an All-Star; if players think that the season is too long to play all 82 games, then slash the schedule to 60 games, and reduce player salaries proportionately to make up for the lost TV revenue. We all know that Commissioner Adam Silver--who prides himself on getting along with the players--would never do such things, which is why we all also know that the NBA that we love is going to continue to decline until the owners suffer financial losses as a result of selling a second-rate product.
Instead of fixing the All-Star Game problem, Silver--as I expected and predicted--is giving the All-Stars more money and begging them to play hard; the NBA and NBPA jointly announced yet another change to the All-Star Game format:
For the first time, the NBA All-Star Game will feature a mini-tournament with four teams and three games. Two teams will meet in one semifinal (Game 1), and the remaining two teams will meet in the other semifinal (Game 2). The winning teams from Game 1 and Game 2 will advance to face each other in the championship (Game 3). For each game, the winner will be the first team to reach or surpass 40 points.
Each team will have eight players and be named for a TNT NBA analyst. The 24 NBA All-Star selections will be divided evenly into three teams, with the rosters drafted by TNT’s Inside the NBA commentators and honorary team general managers Charles Barkley, Shaquille O’Neal and Kenny Smith. The three analysts will make their respective picks for Team Chuck, Team Shaq and Team Kenny live on TNT in the NBA All-Star Draft, which will be conducted on Thursday, Feb. 6 just before the network’s doubleheader that night.
The fourth team will be the winning team from the championship game of the Castrol Rising Stars, the annual showcase of top first- and second-year NBA players and NBA G League standouts, which will be played on Friday, Feb. 14 during NBA All-Star 2025...
The four teams participating in the NBA All-Star Game will compete for a prize pool of $1.8 million, with each player on the championship-winning team receiving $125,000, each player on the second-place team receiving $50,000 and each player on the third- and fourth-place teams receiving $25,000.
The first thing that comes to mind after reading the above paragraphs is that when the format cannot be explained simply the format is too convoluted. The NBA All-Star Game format used to be "The best players from the Eastern Conference and the Western Conference--as selected by the fans and the players--will play one game under normal rules." The NBA All-Star Game did not have the intensity of game seven of the NBA Finals, but it also did not feature players running up and down the court shooting crazy shots without playing a lick of defense.
The second thing that comes to mind about the "new and improved" NBA All-Star Game format is that each player on the winning All-Star team received $100,000 last year, while the players on the losing team received $25,000 each; in other words, as a reward for embarrassing themselves and the league by not taking the All-Star Game seriously, the players are being given a larger All-Star game prize pool.
The new format is gimmicky, and is yet another example of just how clueless and weak Adam Silver is. A strong Commissioner would not "fix" the All-Star Game by turning it into something completely different; a strong Commissioner would either convince the players that it is in their best interest to take the All-Star Game seriously, or he would discontinue the All-Star Game: in 1998, David Stern replaced the Slam Dunk Contest with the WNBA-NBA 2Ball competition (which is not to say that 2Ball was great, but the point is that when the Slam Dunk Contest declined Stern got rid of it--and when he brought it back in 2000, Vince Carter had one of the most memorable performances in the event's history).
The players run the league now, and at this rate they are going to run it into the ground; ratings are down this season, which is the first sign that the golden goose of huge media rights deals may not live forever: if the ratings continue to decline, then the price for the rights fees will be cut, which will in turn lower the salary cap and lower salaries. Maybe that won't happen, or maybe today's players don't care about that possibility because their goal is to get as much cash as they can get now regardless of what happens later--but for those of us who love the game and love the history of the game, it is disheartening to watch the current version of the NBA that is marred by a general lack of competitive spirit, tanking, load management, and excessive reliance on high variance three point shooting.
In an unrelated yet related story, the NBA is reportedly considering doubling the length of the NBA Cup from four games of group play to eight games. The possible unintentional comedy that will not be funny that could result from lengthening the NBA Cup is that if the league lengthens it too much then some players may start engaging in load management during the event! Maybe the NBA Cup could even have its own All-Star teams and All-Star Game so that the players have yet another opportunity to receive more cash for not playing hard!
Here is a novel concept for the NBA to consider: have an 82 game regular season as a qualifier
for a four round playoff system that culminates by crowning a league
champion.That is not nearly as convoluted as the new NBA All-Star Game format or the NBA Cup format, but if the players are willing to actually try then it just might work.
Labels: 2025 NBA All-Star Game, Adam Silver, David Stern
posted by David Friedman @ 1:39 AM
10 Comments:
I'm a little confused. Are all 3 of these games going to be played on the usual Sunday evening of All-Star weekend? And they seem like short games to only 40 points. Also, if there's 4 teams of 8 equalling 32 players total and only 24 All-Stars, where are the extra 8 players coming from?
"Each team will have eight players and be named for a TNT NBA analyst. The 24 NBA All-Star selections will be divided evenly into three teams, with the rosters drafted by TNT’s Inside the NBA commentators and honorary team general managers Charles Barkley, Shaquille O’Neal and Kenny Smith. " --> but before you said "four teams" (semifinals and finals) ... which is it?
Anonymous:
My understanding of the press release is that all three games will be played on Sunday night in place of the traditional All-Star Game. There will three teams of eight players each (the 24 NBA All-Stars) plus one team of eight "Rising Stars" (the winning team from Friday's "Rising Stars" game.
As I mentioned in my article, the format is gimmicky and confusing.
Anonymous:
All of the details are in the NBA's press release. I did not want to just quote the whole press release, but I now see that the way that I excerpted the press release made the announcement even more confusing, so I have edited my article accordingly.
The fourth team is the winner of the "Rising Stars" game, played on Friday during All-Star Weekend.
Anon from 3 teams / 4 teams comments ... Gotta love that these players -- many of whom have MAX contracts well into 9 figures -- will be pocketing the $125k, $50k, and $25k, rather than having money earmarked for charity
Anonymous:
The sense of entitlement from the players--who demand to be paid more and more to do less and less--is breathtaking, and is noteworthy considering how much complaining they do about how other people and organizations spend their money. As you note, the players and the league could have donated all of this money (and more) to charity, but the sad reality is that this money is being used to bribe the players into playing hard--and the even sadder reality is that the players will probably not play hard anyway, although it will be interesting to see if the "Rising Stars" are motivated by the extra cash. A G-League player has won the Slam Dunk Contest, so I would not be shocked if G-League players win a game to 40 against a team of self-satisfied and unmotivated All-Stars.
Simple solution. Do two teams like always. Members of the losing team are not eligible to be all-stars the following year. They will play hard for this.
Matthew:
The flaw with your solution is that if a few players don't play hard and their team loses then the players on that team who played hard are punished as well. If we're going to do a collective punishment, don't do it selectively. Your solution could end up rewarding players who did not have much to do with winning but were just along for the ride while punishing players who played hard but whose team fell just short of winning.
I prefer an even simpler solution: if the players don't play hard, cancel the game and get rid of the bonuses for making the All-Star team. Silver should have canceled the All-Star Game several years ago, just like David Stern got rid of the Slam Dunk Contest. I understand that getting rid of the game would be more difficult than getting rid of one All-Star Saturday event, but the principle is the same.
I thought the NBA had bottomed out with having a cash prize tournament within the regular season but then they actually turned the All-Star Game into three separate games. These gimmicks might seem relatively harmless now but they might be the first dominos to fall in a path that leads to a highly acrimonious lockout that results in a canceled season in the 2030s. The league is not operating in a sustainable way and eventually the bottom will fall out.
It isn't? The money keeps coming in. Everyone in the NBA is getting richer. The average league salary for a season is almost 12 million, which 140 players make. 85 players make at least 20 million/year. It seems that whatever the NBA does, the money keeps coming in and the fans keep tuning in.
Post a Comment
<< Home