Conservative News Daily

NBA’s Desperation: Huge Fines Proposed for Teams Caught in This Act

Load Management: NBA‍ Considers ⁢Stricter Guidelines and Hefty Fines

Well, ⁣there goes ⁢the entire business‌ model of the Los Angeles Clippers.

Los Angeles’ second-favorite basketball team has developed a bit of a notorious reputation in ⁣recent years⁣ for something known to NBA fans as “load management,”⁣ particularly when it comes to the team’s dynamic duo of Paul George and⁤ Kawhi Leonard.

The concept of load management is ⁢a straightforward one: To best preserve a player’s health, a team may intentionally bench ‍him even if‍ he’s “healthy,” all things considered. It’s something the Clippers ‍have deployed judiciously given the checkered⁤ injury history of ⁤George and (especially) Leonard.

But while‍ load management may be​ best⁢ for the player and ⁢the team, it’s not nearly as good for the fan paying his ‌or her hard-earned money to attend an‌ NBA game⁣ — only to‌ see a completely healthy star player in ⁣street clothes on the team bench.

(To be⁣ clear,​ it’s not just the Clippers who do this.​ The Philadelphia 76ers, Milwaukee‍ Bucks and ⁢Dallas⁤ Mavericks have rested superstars⁢ Joel Embiid, Giannis Antetokounmpo, and Luka Doncic, respectively, for load management ⁣purposes last year.)

On​ a separate but possible related note: As OutKick has covered numerous times on its site, NBA ratings have stagnated, at best. At worst, the ⁤league is‌ facing ⁤genuine popularity concerns… and load management is absolutely a part of the problem.

The league, perhaps aware of its‌ ratings and the public backlash to load management (a common refrain among NBA fans‍ of a certain age is ⁣that Michael Jordan never ‌needed load management,‌ and ⁤his travel⁣ accommodations were ⁣not nearly as luxurious ‍as what current players ​enjoy), is now on the⁤ cusp of levying a hefty financial punishment ‍for load management.

Stricter Guidelines and Fines

ESPN’s NBA reporter Adrian Wojnarowski reported yesterday, originally, that the ​league ‌was considering⁢ “stricter guidelines on resting players for national‍ television games and ⁣multiple stars together in the same games.”

In a ‌subsequent X post, Wojnarowski shared⁤ some potential specifics about what those “stricter guidelines” may look like.

“Under new rules, teams would be fined $100K for a first violation, $250K for a second ⁤violation and $1⁣ million more than the previous penalty for each additional ‌violation, ⁢sources tell ESPN,” ⁣the longtime NBA insider posted.

Even for billionaire⁤ NBA owners, a million-dollar fine is nothing to sneeze⁢ at, especially when‍ it’s per infraction.

Perhaps alleviating matters ever-so-slightly for NBA‌ owners, it appears the league will only ⁤be applying​ these rules for “star” players.

According to NBA reporter Shams ‌Charania, there will be‍ a very specific definition as to what constitutes a “star”‌ player:

Citing unnamed sources, Charania claimed that⁤ the tentative definition of ⁣a “star” ‌is “someone‍ who’s made an All-Star or All-NBA team in the past three seasons.”

Some ⁣corners of NBA punditry feel that this ‌move doesn’t actually ‍address any of the health concerns that players have.

Forbes Sports’ ​NBA ⁤writer Shane Young echoed that dissatisfaction on‍ X:

“The league will do anything but address the real issue that’s been‌ causing all of the star absences. ‌It’s ⁤comical,”‍ Young posted.⁢ “Either extend ‌the season length and spread out the games, or reduce the total ⁤number.”

The post NBA Getting Desperate:‍ League Floats Massive Fines if Teams Are Caught Doing This appeared first on The Western Journal.



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