Current:Home > MyThe NBA’s parity era is here, with 6 champions in 6 years. Now Boston will try to buck that trend -WealthRoots Academy
The NBA’s parity era is here, with 6 champions in 6 years. Now Boston will try to buck that trend
View
Date:2025-04-18 00:18:26
It was a few minutes after Denver’s reign as NBA champion had come to an end last spring. The Minnesota Timberwolves were celebrating, their music and screams loud enough to be heard inside the room where Nuggets coach Michael Malone was somberly going through his final postgame news conference of the season.
In that moment, it was official: Another season was going by without the NBA having a back-to-back champion, and Malone was left to state what has become obvious.
“It is hard. It is hard. It is hard to repeat,” Malone said. “It’s hard to win.”
He’s right. And there’s never been an era in NBA history where it’s been harder.
Here are the last six NBA champions, in order: Toronto, the Los Angeles Lakers, Milwaukee, Golden State, Denver and now Boston. That’s six different title-winning franchises in six seasons, a run of parity that the league has seen only once before — nearly a half-century ago.
The days of dynasties may be on hold for now, replaced by a time when, for a variety of reasons, it’s more difficult than usual to get to the NBA mountaintop and stay there. It’s the Celtics’ turn to try to buck that trend.
“It’s always hard to win one,” said Boston guard Jrue Holiday, who won a title with Milwaukee in 2021 and was part of the Bucks team that was ousted in Round 2 a year later. “But then to win back-to-back is even harder.”
The NBA doesn’t seem to mind. This is the Parity Era and the current collective bargaining agreement figures to make it even tougher for teams to be dynastic — a swift change from the four-year run spanning 2015 through 2018 when Cleveland and Golden State got to the finals annually.
In simple terms, the more that teams spend, the harder it is now to make moves, especially moves involving big-contract players. The latest CBA, which went into effect last year, includes two aprons over the luxury tax figure. Go over the first apron, your roster flexibility is hampered. Go over the second one, and it’s severely hampered. It could be argued there haven’t been rule changes this significant since the league changed the lottery odds and added a play-in tournament to discourage tanking.
An example: it recently took Minnesota and New York several days to complete a deal a couple weeks ago after agreeing on the parameters — Karl-Anthony Towns going to the Knicks, Julius Randle and Donte DiVencenzo going to the Wolves — because the financial particulars needed to be very precise.
“The new rules … some of the consequences are unintended, quite frankly,” Wolves President of Basketball Operations Tim Connelly was quoted by ESPN saying. “I don’t know if anyone intended to make it this challenging to make moves, to make trades when you’re above certain aprons.”
No, that’s exactly what the NBA wanted.
“I don’t want to say nothing is lost, but to me, I don’t think our system, by definition, will prevent repeat championships,” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said. “I think that, yes, it makes it less likely, but we didn’t set out to say, ‘Let’s make sure there’s a different champion every year.’ I think, again, it goes more to equality of opportunity. But I think in the same vein, I think there’s real incentive for players to stay in markets.”
Nobody would say all 30 teams enter this season with a realistic title chance. But there are more true hopefuls than there were just a few seasons ago. Last year, 12 teams entered the year with title odds of 25-1 or shorter. Six years earlier, at the peak of the Warriors-Cavs run, there were only three such teams.
“The league’s looking for parity,” Washington general manager Will Dawkins said. “And flattening the lottery odds, adding in the second apron, all of those things are things that are supposed to contribute to that.”
None of the previous five champions, not including the reigning Celtics (the overwhelming favorite to win this season’s title, according to BetMGM Sportsbook), even made it back to the finals the following season. That matches the longest such drought in NBA history, last done when the champions from 1973 through 1977 — in order, New York, Boston, Golden State, Boston again and then Portland — were all ousted in the conference finals or earlier.
A few years ago, most teams probably didn’t think they had a realistic chance. That’s different row.
“I just think all of it is setting up to be more competitive, more teams going for it. And that’s when it gets fun, when there’s not much difference between teams,” Miami coach Erik Spoelstra said. “It’ll be how teams can manage all those different emotions and the competitive spirit throughout the course of a season. It gets uncomfortable at times. I love it. It’s awesome for the league, it’s great for viewership, it’s great for the fans. It’s ultimately what you want.”
___
AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- A romance turned deadly or police frame job? Closing arguments loom in Karen Read trial
- Dave Grohl takes aim at Taylor Swift: 'We actually play live'
- Texas A&M baseball coach Jim Schlossnagle pushes back speculation about Texas job
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Are the economy and job growth slowing? Not based on sales of worker uniform patches.
- Sofía Vergara Shares How Being in Her 50s Has Shaped Her Confidence
- CDK Global: Restoration underway after auto dealer software supplier hacked
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- For Tesla’s futuristic new Cybertruck, a fourth recall
Ranking
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- WNBA power rankings: Liberty, Lynx play for league supremacy in Commissioner's Cup
- How many points did Caitlin Clark have? No. 1 pick sets Fever record with 13 assists
- Why did everyone suddenly stop using headphones in public?
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Social media sensation Judge Frank Caprio on compassion, kindness and his cancer diagnosis
- Oklahoma Supreme Court rules publicly funded religious charter school is unconstitutional
- A nonprofit got jobs for disabled workers in California prisons. A union dispute could end them
Recommendation
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
Amazon Prime Day 2024: Everything We Know and Early Deals You Can Shop Now
1 dead, 2 injured in East Village stabbing; man in custody, New York City police say
Surgeons perform kidney transplant with patient awake during procedure
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
Chicago woman missing in Bahamas after going for yoga certification retreat, police say
1 dead, 2 injured in East Village stabbing; man in custody, New York City police say
Weather woes forecast to continue as flooding in the Midwest turns deadly and extreme heat heads south