12-21-2016, 06:25 AM
Time to go on everyone's nerves.
But it is! Here are the main flaws:
- This time of year, the number of more than meaningless games increases. And by more than meaningless I mean: It's actually to no advantage for certain teams to win. And even if the players somehow really don't factor that in, the fans certainly do. Please lose out, for we lust for a high draft pick. Don't score, you idiots. And in some respect, that's the mess here, these fans are even right. Say what you want, that IS a flaw.
- Being a bad football team pays off. I get it, equalled opportunities provide a more diverse league, bad teams get good picks, then they get better, another fanbase is excited, then other teams get better picks, and so it's all nice and fair and diversified throughout the years.
Thing is: It's the salary cap that provides parity. And there's really nothing else you need for that.
By rewarding the highest draft picks to bad teams, you buy in a bad side effect: You also reward bad coaching, bad management, bad overall surroundings. Things that don't necessarily change. And therefore create downright talent graves. Like the Browns team, a huge talent grave. Because of various factors that just go systematically wrong there. And year in year out they get high picks, trade them for 1.000 decent picks, pick a lot of players that never really make the transition to the NFL there. There are other examples, Jacksonville sure wastes potential.
And at some point, that doesn't seem fair to the draft prospects, too. I played two great college seasons, hence I'm rewarded to go to a team full of so-called cancers and a bad environment where I don't really get the chance to develop further and my glorious future slowly just fades away. I might be dramatizing a bit.
Since I do, I add that it seems you reward failure and lift low achievers (bad teams) with extra handouts (an advantage) to make everyone equal, and that sounds a bit... well, communist-ish. Doesn't it?
I guess it's hard to deny that there is at least something, a little something to these points.
As soon as you caught on to that feeling - here's my fix. Just give it a quick thought before dismissing it, just for fun, if you please.
The team that came closest to making the playoffs gets the first pick. Then it goes down the list. The playoff teams pick last, as it is now.
- Way more meaningful competitive games towards the end of the season
- The playoffs stay potentially diverse and the race is likely to be close and exciting
- Systematically bad teams are much more pressed to make fundamental changes, and that
- of course still within the salary cap, so it's not really "unfair" to them in any way.
Discuss
But it is! Here are the main flaws:
- This time of year, the number of more than meaningless games increases. And by more than meaningless I mean: It's actually to no advantage for certain teams to win. And even if the players somehow really don't factor that in, the fans certainly do. Please lose out, for we lust for a high draft pick. Don't score, you idiots. And in some respect, that's the mess here, these fans are even right. Say what you want, that IS a flaw.
- Being a bad football team pays off. I get it, equalled opportunities provide a more diverse league, bad teams get good picks, then they get better, another fanbase is excited, then other teams get better picks, and so it's all nice and fair and diversified throughout the years.
Thing is: It's the salary cap that provides parity. And there's really nothing else you need for that.
By rewarding the highest draft picks to bad teams, you buy in a bad side effect: You also reward bad coaching, bad management, bad overall surroundings. Things that don't necessarily change. And therefore create downright talent graves. Like the Browns team, a huge talent grave. Because of various factors that just go systematically wrong there. And year in year out they get high picks, trade them for 1.000 decent picks, pick a lot of players that never really make the transition to the NFL there. There are other examples, Jacksonville sure wastes potential.
And at some point, that doesn't seem fair to the draft prospects, too. I played two great college seasons, hence I'm rewarded to go to a team full of so-called cancers and a bad environment where I don't really get the chance to develop further and my glorious future slowly just fades away. I might be dramatizing a bit.
Since I do, I add that it seems you reward failure and lift low achievers (bad teams) with extra handouts (an advantage) to make everyone equal, and that sounds a bit... well, communist-ish. Doesn't it?
I guess it's hard to deny that there is at least something, a little something to these points.
As soon as you caught on to that feeling - here's my fix. Just give it a quick thought before dismissing it, just for fun, if you please.
The team that came closest to making the playoffs gets the first pick. Then it goes down the list. The playoff teams pick last, as it is now.
- Way more meaningful competitive games towards the end of the season
- The playoffs stay potentially diverse and the race is likely to be close and exciting
- Systematically bad teams are much more pressed to make fundamental changes, and that
- of course still within the salary cap, so it's not really "unfair" to them in any way.
Discuss