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The biggest problem in the NBA this year, as it was last year, is the chasm in quality between East and West.
Only two East teams would qualify for the playoffs if they were in the West.
Only 4 Eastern teams have a .500 or better record against the West. Only 5 Western teams have a losing record against the East.
Something's gotta be done.
I also think this has been going on for a long, long time. Think about it. When Jordan retired the first time, a Western team won both championships. Since Jordan retired, only one Eastern team has won a championship, and that was in large part due to a complete meltdown by the Lakers.
I think the mindset in the East during the Jordan years was "playing for second place", and they haven't recovered from that. Also, the East is so wide open virtually anyone can make the playoffs (with a losing record, even) and possibly the Finals. So teams aren't willing to wait and build; they see the possible revenue from a playoff run and jump for it. Coaches and GMs who can't make the playoffs in the East are fired.
So they all settle for mediocrity. Last year, 4 teams at or below .500 made the playoffs in the East. Two teams at or below .500 weren't able to make the playoffs in the West. (One of them, Utah, would have been tied with Miami for 4th place. A non-playoff team in the West would have tied for a homecourt slot in the East.) Owners and fans in the East need to realise that a slow rebuilding is necessary. That's the only way to avoid things like what Isaiah Thomas is doing to the Knicks. That franchise won't be any good for at least 4 or 5 more years, if not longer.
Look at the coaching changes in the East. Not a single coach in the East had his job 18 months ago, IIRC.
Compare that with teams out West. Jerry Sloan. Gregg Popovich. Rick Adelman. Flip Saunders.
Consistency helps. The coach is coaching out of fear, trying to squeeze one more win regardless of what it does to his players.
A key example of this: Flashback to the 2000 playoffs. Grant Hill and Tim Duncan are both injured. Popovich refuses to allow Duncan to play again, even though Duncan was a free agent and we could win without him. Detroit (can't remember the coach right now) let Grant Hill play on an injured ankle. 5 operations and nearly 5 years later, Grant Hill is playing again, but not quite at the same level. Tim Duncan has two MVPs and a ring in the same time frame.
Popovich knew he'd still have a job even if they went out in the playoffs. Doug Collins (I just looked it up) was a first year coach with no job security.
Player continuity is improving (note the quality teams always bring back a core of good players, instead of constantly shifting pieces around one star). But coaching continuity needs to improve as well.
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