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PSYCHOcatholic

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and they get the best draft picks for selecting the better players coming out of college.

They get the BEST draft picks? :P

I guess that's done so that they won't be as crappy next season?

strange rules you have there...

Their coaches get fired.

only after the season?

here, with football/soccer that would go faster :laughing:

of course in soccer it's a BIT worse to finish last after a season ;)

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I've been a Nets fan since they were in the ABA. Our towns high school basketball star was all-american at Princeton and he was ABA Rookie of the Year for the Nets. (BTW his brother was Rookie of the Year in the NFL for the 49'ers). Anyway, I've followed them since Dr. J came and even earlier...but after back to back trips to the NBA finals,,which they lost, the team has sunk to the bottom of the league. Until they decide if they are moving to Brooklyn or staying in Jersey...no money will be spent on players. All the star players are gone and it's up to a bunch of young players and throw aways to try to win some games.

I've watched a couple games and they give their all...they aren't dogging it...they are just out manned with a lack of depth and overall talent.

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They get the BEST draft picks? :P

I guess that's done so that they won't be as crappy next season?

strange rules you have there...

I don't think it's strange at all. It's exactly like Aussie Rules football. The teams all have a strict salary cap and the bottom teams get the higher draft picks. Because of these rules, the AFL has had ten different teams winning the premiership in the past fourteen seasons. In the same period of time, the English Premier League has had just three winners (and this will remain the same for the foreseeable future). Having the dominant teams changing fairly quickly is far more interesting than seeing the same teams dominating every single year. :P

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I don't think it's strange at all. It's exactly like Aussie Rules football. The teams all have a strict salary cap and the bottom teams get the higher draft picks. Because of these rules, the AFL has had ten different teams winning the premiership in the past fourteen seasons. In the same period of time, the English Premier League has had just three winners (and this will remain the same for the foreseeable future). Having the dominant teams changing fairly quickly is far more interesting than seeing the same teams dominating every single year. :P

you have a point there, and maybe it's just strange for me because I don't know it differently... :P

on the other hand there won't ever be the case of a team coming from nowhere, and within a couple seasons gets into the Top 5 or Top 10...

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Having the dominant teams changing fairly quickly is far more interesting than seeing the same teams dominating every single year.

Unless of course you support one of the usually dominating teams. :P

I personally enjoy watching the EPL for its high calibre football and am more interested in the matches themselves rather than the overall rankings. The predominance of the 'Big Four' is somewhat regrettable, but it doesn't take away from individual games. Some of the best matches have been between bottom table teams fighting to avoid relegation.

However having a salary cap or letting the worst teams choose the "best" new players isn't necessarily a guarantee they will be a whole lot better next season. Each sport still has its consistently great teams, maybe not always champions but certainly most teams don't go from top to bottom or vice versa all that quickly.

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