Appearing on The Pat McAfee Show on Thursday (Twitter video link), commissioner Adam Silver once again addressed the topic of possible NBA expansion.
Silver has said in the past that he wanted to finalize the most recent Collective Bargaining Agreement and TV/media deals before looking seriously at bringing new teams into the NBA. That new CBA was implemented in 2023 and the new media deals will take effect later this year, clearing a path for expansion discussions to finally begin in earnest.
“Now that those things are done, we’re just beginning a process, internally at the league, of exploring the opportunity to expand,” Silver said (hat tip to RealGM). “I will say sometimes on the outside (expansion) looks like a no-brainer because it seems like you’re printing money to expand. But you’re really selling equity in the league. You have 30 teams that own the league, and now you’re saying, ‘We’re gonna have 32 teams that own the league,’ so you’re diluting the economic interest of all the 30 teams.
“You’re also potentially diluting the talent, because with roughly 450 players in the NBA, even among those – the greatest in the world – there’s only so many difference-makers. And then how are those players going to be distributed around the league? That’s a lot of what we spend time on in Collective Bargaining Agreements, the right distribution of players. And so we’re looking hard at it, we’re sort of modeling it, for lack of better term, in the league office.”
Silver went on to specifically name Las Vegas and Seattle as cities that will be involved in expansion discussions, but made it clear that the NBA will also be looking at other markets as well. The commissioner added that progress could be made this summer, though he doesn’t view it as a “foregone conclusion” that the league will expand.
“I don’t want to jump the gun here,” he said. “We have the 30 existing teams who all need to weigh in on this process, and also at some point need to have direct conversations with the people who are interested in those teams. It’s premature to do that right now. We’ve been contacted by groups who are saying, ‘We have interest in potentially being part of expansion,’ not just in (Las Vegas and Seattle) but others, and we’ve sort of said, ‘We’re not quite ready yet.’ But again, we will go through a very methodical approach to it and do it very cautiously, but we’ll continue to look at it.”
Here are more odds and ends from around the NBA:
- The NBA has unveiled the schedules for the first round of the playoffs for both the Eastern Conference and Western Conference series (Twitter links). The latest possible Game 7 for a first-round series would take place on May 4, while the playoffs will get underway on Saturday at 1:00 pm Eastern time with Game 1 of the Bucks/Pacers series.
- Yossi Gozlan of The Third Apron (Substack link) takes a look back at the recent history of Executive of the Year voting and explains why he’s predicting that Lakers president of basketball operations Rob Pelinka will win the award this year, with Koby Altman of the Cavaliers and Sam Presti of the Thunder right behind him. Unlike most of the other major end-of-season awards, Executive of the Year is voted on by NBA general manager, not media members.
- According to the NBA (Twitter link), the finalists for seven of the league’s major awards, including MVP, will be announced on Sunday at 6:30 pm Eastern time on TNT. The finalists are made up of the top three vote-getters for each award.
- Mike Vorkunov of The Athletic checks in on where things stand with the betting scandal that resulted in Jontay Porter being permanently banned from the NBA. As Vorkunov details, the Porter case is linked to investigations into match-fixing across college sports, with five schools being looked at by the federal government for possible ties.
San Jose, California NEEDS an NBA team!
Not on the list. Not close to being on the list.
San Jose is a top 10 USA city in terms of economy/population + over 2 hour drive (thanks to traffic) from the SF Warriors – it should be.
East coast cities are allowed to have like 8 teams in a 2 hour drive radius. But the Bay Area only gets 1? Nope. Gotta change. If not via expansion, then moving another team there. It’s bad business not to engage this massive market. Why wouldn’t you? Makes zero sense to not have teams in all of the top 10 USA cities.
MVP…
1/ Jokic
2/ Giannis
3/ SGA
DPOY
1/ Amen Thompson
2/ Dyson Daniels
3/ Toumani Cámara
ROY
1/ Zach Edey
2/ Yves Missi
3/ Kelel ware
MIP
1/ Christian Braun
2/ Austin Reaves
3/ Josh Giddey
SMOY
1/ Westbrook
2/ Deandre Hunter
3/ Malik Beasley
are the nuggets the only team you know of?
Diluting the talent? NBA Europe anyone. Because a guy like Sabonis Sr is leaving Europe at 53 yrs of age to play on a rookie scale contract, lol. You’ve got this Europe thing so wrong. Your version of the Euro NBA just may be less profitable than the WNBA.
What are you whining about? That was 30 years ago.