
NBL is missing the big picture
Then as long as people are happy with deep rosters, you will not have the best players playing.
Yes. Coaches are there to win for their clubs. But winning playing ugly will be good for the coach, but not the game as a whole.

My argument is that by concentrating on 6 players with all the money, you are going to have the best players playing, putting a better product out on display. (and probably a team that will win more than lose) But coaches will always put their interest first, before the game.
Maybe if a coach had of been brave enough to buck the current trend of 10 deep benches, who knows what would happen with a super 6 squad, especially with the current environment with regards to the referees making calls to clean up the game. If all you have are sheep, they will just follow the same path.
Is the AFL a better game because of the rotations? or do they just recruit more athletes who are good footballers, instead of great footballers who can run and jump a little.

This is something that could be fixed pretty simple. One of the problems is the coaches rotation system during games. The coaches want to bat 10 deep. Within the 6th minute of 1st quarter all starting 5 have sat on bench.
You try and spread $1 million around 10 players and you are going to get compromise which means cheap players, which means ........
In the 90's the games were 48mins and you would would have players playing over 40 mins. Your 3 aussies plus 2 imports played majority of minutes,
Now we get 40 min games with most players 20-30 min game time. I know the old argument of "these days the intensity is so much higher will be trotted out"., full court press, etc, etc.
The talent is spread around so widely within all the teams.

Another idiot Anon trotting out the same argument, more than satisfactorily beaten down by Nat and Paul... nicely nipped in the bud, guys...
I'll even add to the player list of players not playing here because even out of college they're getting bigger bucks...
Bose (playing nearly 4mpg compared to being a star over here)
Broekhoff
Motum
and don't forget Delly who we won't see play here either... Why? CASH... It's not unlimited...

listening to an all Australian AFL player being interviewed on local radio the other day,reckons half the modern day players in the league wouldn't even have made it on to the bench years ago,watered down terribly.
The AFL can thank its lucky arse that no one else in the world plays it's game.....

I'm with nat. I'd also chuck in that we need to change the points system to be realistic. Let's stop kidding ourselves by giving 10 points to guys who don't rate on the world stage. Lets get a points system that's realistic, and which has the flexibility to let a team go for a real 10-point player instead of shutting them out.
So, just to chuck something out there -
10 points - for someone who started on an NBA team, top Euro-League club or the Boomers in the last couple of years
9 points - for a bench player on one of those teams
8 points - for a starter on a good Euro-League team, someone who played NBA or top Euro-League or Boomers between 2 and 5 years ago, or if they started for a US D-League team or an NBL Grand finalist in the last two years
7 points - for a bench player on one of those teams, or someone who has played NBL for 5 or more years
and so on.

Luxury tax that feeds into an NBL marketing fund pool could have a nice positive feedback loop going.
Worth mentioning, Wildcats just announced membership have jumped another ~500 since the weekend to 7,600, and I think you have to chalk up a fair chunk of that to Ennis and his highlights.

"A-League has the best players they can afford.
NBL has best players they can fit into the points system."
Incorrect. Josh Pace and Tracy Mcgrady are both rated the same. So why doesn't Mcgrady come to the NBL? It's nothing to do with his points not fitting in. It's because he wants 1mil+ Pace (for EG) does not demand that kind of money.
So yes, the NBL has the best players they can afford.

Like BJF hinted Re Walker/Massingale. Massingale's point rating isn't stopping him from being signed, the fact he's an import is. If Lucas Walker was an import he also wouldn't be signed.
Lets name a bunch of Australian's who aren't in the NBL right now.
Andrew Bogut
Patty Mills
Joe Ingles
Nathan Jawai
David Andersen
Brad Newley
Aron Baynes
Julian Khazzouh
David Barlow
If there was a "marquee" player that could be signed outside of the player points cap. Would ANY of those players sign with an NBL team?
No.
Why? Because they wouldn't earn the kind of money they're currently on with their respective teams & leagues.
So it's not the point system that's stopping our stars from returning. It's money.
Then you hear people say "raise the salary cap". OK that sounds GREAT. Lets do that.. However where is this extra money coming from? Breakers and the Wildcats might be able to offer an extra 100k or so on top of the 1mil cap. But what about the other 6 teams? Cairns make a profit but it's very very small, we're talking a couple thousand. The others either lose or break even.
So what do we do? It's a catch 22.
You have to start small and build it up again. The first thing that should be done is expanding the import rule to 3 imports. 1 local import like someone said and the other 2 are for "true" imports like Rotnei Clarke, Kerron Johnson and so on.
Local import rule: Import must have played for a state league (SEABL, WASBL, Big V etc) for at least 2 full seasons. Could also join with the NZNBL and classify them as a "state league".
If the points rating stays then local imports shouldn't be rated as a 10. Should be a 7 max. If local imports are willing to play in Aus for 2+ seasons at min salary then I think they deserve a true shot at the next level.

The A-League doesn't have the best players available. It's propped up buy government hand outs that the NBL doesn't get and the best player leave to go overseas to better leagues just like the NBL.
