Building on last week's injury reporting updates amid gambling scandals, the NBA discussed new measures at its Board of Governors meeting to deter tanking by teams seeking better draft picks. Proposals include curbing protections on traded picks and locking lottery standings after March 1, balancing competitive integrity with legitimate rebuilding.
The NBA's fight against tanking took center stage at the Board of Governors meeting in Orlando last Friday, as owners and general managers proposed targeted reforms. ESPN's Shams Charania reported ideas to counter late-season manipulations, like resting healthy stars to protect traded picks or improve lottery odds.
Specific measures: limit protections on traded first-round picks to the top four or outside the top 14; bar teams from top-four picks in consecutive years; finalize lottery positions after March 1. These address cases like the 2023 Dallas Mavericks sitting Kyrie Irving and Luka Dončić in their finale to retain a top-10 protected pick owed to the New York Knicks, and the Utah Jazz benching Lauri Markkanen late-season to safeguard a top-eight pick.
The discussions build on recent gambling arrests, including Portland Trail Blazers coach Chauncey Billups and Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier, where player absences allegedly informed illegal bets.
Critics warn of unintended effects: a March 1 lottery lock could spur earlier tanking, as with the Jazz's 2023-2024 midseason roster dumps. Consecutive top-four bans might aid 'gap-year' teams hit by injuries, such as a hypothetical Boston Celtics resting Jayson Tatum. Commissioner Adam Silver stressed parity in June: "We set out to create a system that allowed for more competition around the league, the goal being to have 30 teams all in the position, if well managed, to compete for championships."
No changes are finalized, with deliberations ongoing. For teams like the Brooklyn Nets emphasizing organic development, such rules could promote consistent effort. These efforts aim to uphold fairness in a star-dependent league while maintaining broad appeal.