Hear me out, I am not saying anything is wrong with the NBA, I just want to make it better. With every sport there are problems, Lerts fix em..
1. Make the first two rounds of the NBA Play-offs best of 5. They are too long and they also have too many days in between.
I'm okay with changing the first round back to best of 5, but that's it. As far as the days in between, yes I also find it ridiculous. Teams should play every other all the way through the playoffs. When going from one round to the next, the teams that are to matchup should play 2 days after the previous series of the last winner ends, no matter what. None of this predetermined date crap for the start of round 2 or later.
2. Time-outs should not warrant a team with a throw-in at half-court. For example, if a team is down by 2 with 4 seconds left and they call time-out, they should get the ball wherever the time-out was called. A team at the far end of the court shouldn't be able to call time and be at half-court.
I might be alone, but I actually like this idea as well. Calling a TO should only result in stopping the clock, not advancing the ball.
3. Introduce a new competition called the NBA Challenge Cup. It will be a way to bring in foreign teams to face the West and East Conference Champions. European big dogs such as Barcelona and Olympiacos would play Los Angeles and Orlando and it would be a precursor to a FIBA Champions League..
This is dumb and should never happen. Leave that for the World Championships & the Olympics.
4. No goaltending once the ball is rolling on the rim.
Bad idea, scoring would plummet.
5. Get rid of any NBA referee that even had a hint of a conection to the refereeing scandel a couple years ago.
Good idea in theory but implausible. See TrickyRicky's post.
6.- Change the way refs, well, ref.
Seriously, how obvious does this have to get? Kobe walks. D-Wade walks. LeBron walks. On defense, Kobe hacks. D-Wade hacks. LeBron hacks. But if any one of them is thrown off in the slightest- losing the ball, falling off balance, getting a defender's hand placed in a close proximety to their hand? Two shots, no question. And everyone has accepted that this is how the NBA works. This NEEDS to change for basketball to be played again, not just a big entertainment show that takes place on a basketball court.
Basketball has always been reffed this way, this isn't new. Whether right or wrong, players who are aggressive/successful get the benefit of the doubt. As far as walking goes, it's not called as nearly as purists think it should at any level. Fact is, the hop step that players take when jumping off two feet is accepted as one step, not two. Therefore, the stars aren't the only one to benefit. Also, what constitutes palming (or carrying) has changed as well. As long as a player doesn't actually put his hand underneath the ball (& parallel to the floor), nothing is called. If either call is made the old textbook way the game will be set back 40 years.
7. Change the image of the players.
Not NFL-style, where anything can warrant a fine or a suspension, but rather make honest approaches to help guys become better. Sure, we all know that athletes are immature. But it's getting ridiculous. Allen Iverson, Stephen Jackson, Carmelo Anthony, Ron Artest, Kobe, J.R. Smith, etc. etc. etc. Now I really don't have all that big of a problem with any of those guys, but how consistent do NBA players have to pretend to be thugs (none of them are) before things change? Seriously, what is a dress code gonna do? And why is everyone so anti-friendly? If you twitter Kevin Durant, he can at least send you back a message! If you wait for an hour to try and get an autograph of Mo Williams, he can sign your photo!
NBA players have been largely under the radar the last few years. Their players don't have nearly the image problems NFL players have. This thing with Michael Beasley is the worst story about an NBA player in a good while. However, since the stretch from the late 90s to the early 00s were so bad, people ignore the strides the league has made in this area. And to be honest, if your panties are in a bunch cuz Kevin Durant didn't twitter you back you need to get a life.
8. Change the favoritism.
Why is college basketball great? Upsets. Why are the NFL playoffs fun? Upsets. What do the NBA playoffs lack a ton of? Upsets. And why is this? Because the NBA doesn't let it happen. If there ever is a close game between the Bobcats and the Celtics when it means anything, guess who will be getting the calls? Down low to Okafor...looks to pass...he's knocked over by Garnett...and then pushed by Paul Pierce...he walked! Celtics ball, baby! The NBA gets what the NBA wants...and if they don't get it, they make sure they don't go down without a fight. Don't believe me? Let's take a look back at the a couple of recent years. Duncan or Amare? Who means more to the league? Horry pushes Nash, Parker hits Nash, Stoudemire is suspended, etc. San Antonio wins. LeBron! We need LeBron! LeBron needs to be in the Finals! San Antonio-Cleveland for the title. The Lakers are reborn! Kobe has to get there, and a rivalry needs to happen! The Celtics can do it, with KG! Lakers-Celtics! Lakers-Celtics! Boston-Los Angeles for the title. Kobe needs to get back! The Lakers need rings! But it's gotta be Kobe-LeBron! LeBron has to make it! Well, who else saw how atrocious the reffing was in the Orlando-Cleveland series? Luckily, the Magic wouldn't let it happen. But the Finals were too much, Kobe needed his ring.
Like TrickyRicky said, upsets aren't as apt to happen in a series as they are in a one-game elimination contest. I don't think upsets are stupid, I rather like them myself. However, I definitely don't want the playoffs to have fewer games just for the sake of having more upsets.
9. Superstar fouls are done. Not exactly a rule change, more a change of emphasis on the existing rules. Unless a ref sees such an egregious foul committed that he cannot NOT blow the whistle he lets play continue. Every time LeBron, Kobe, Wade or another high profile player drives the lane, it automatically results in either
a) a basket
b) free throws
c) both a) and b)
It is not humanly possible for someone to, gasp, actually defend the play under the current foul structure of the NBA. It's atrocious. Someone crashes to the floor and it is assumed that SOMEONE must have done SOMETHING. And it's never that the ball handler just leaped into the air awkwardly and threw up a shot that had no prayer of going in just because he KNEW he'd be bailed out when he landed and rolled around on the ground for a few seconds.
Already covered the superstar stuff. I see what you're saying but it happens at every level. I live in NC & watched a ton of Tar Heel games. Tyler Hansbrough was the beneficiary of a lot of falls called after he went barrelling into the defender. That said, I agree when a defender is standing there with his arms straight up & the shooter jumps into him because he knows he either doesn't have a chance at making the shot or the shot clock is running down or both should be a no call.