It's a star driven league yes.
That doesn't mean it wants all their stars in the small markets.
For the good of the league.... they want the Bell-Cow markets to succeed.
Its why you expand into New Orleans and don't start your league there.
How many strawmen can you erect?
Yes having good teams in several cities is good for competition and for the consumer.
But your argument was the NBA needs the Knicks to be a powerhouse.
They don't.
Not a strawman. You're thinking about league survival. I'm saying... for the league to be in its best incarnation ESPECIALLY as it relates to how much ABC can charge for AD time.... you want the Knicks vs the Lakers every year.
With Chicago and Houston in the Conference Finals respectively. So ABC charges more. So the NBA charges more. So the avg annual NBA contract rises more. etc.
Adam Silver wants the small markets to SURVIVE. But he wants the BIG markets to THRIVE. Don't pretend otherwise.
Again more strawmen.
And you've changed the argument and now changed my argument.
No one said the NBA doesn't want robust big markets.
I specifically said the NBA need strong competition in several markets to attract consumers.
And I disagreed with your opinion that the NBA needs the Knicks to be a powerhouse to continue to grow.
The NBA rate of revenue growth has surged during the time period when, the powers of the league were in Cleveland, San Antonio, Oakland, and not the coastal mega markets of LA and NYC.
[url]http://fortune.com/2018/05/26/nfl-vs-nba-americas-biggest-sport]http://fortune.com/2018/05/26/nfl-vs-nba-americas-biggest-sport][url]http://fortune.com/2018/05/26/nfl-vs-nba-americas-biggest-sport[/url]
" Overall revenues might be a better metric, and though that’s still somewhat opaque, it’s where the NFL’s weakness is most obvious. NFL revenue grew an estimated $900 million to $14 billion in 2017, or just short of 7% growth. Forbes, meanwhile, reports the most recent NBA season generated $7.4 billion for teams, up a staggering 25% from the year before.
That suggests the NBA is growing more than three times as fast as the NFL – and that could have startling impacts in just a few years. Using the most basic sort of growth calculation, current trends point to NFL revenues of around $28 billion by 2029 – about in line with a goal of $25 billion by 2027 Commissioner Roger Goodell set a little over a decade ago.
But the same calculations using the most recent growth numbers suggest that by 2029, NBA revenues will be – brace yourself – over $68 billion."
Kam-The NBA appears to be doing fine without Dolan's Dunkers dominating.
As already posted the next revenue bonanza might come from legal wagering or maybe international expansion.