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Sports

Is the NBA Alright?

Plus: Horse racing thrives, and spring football should too.

Jason Russell | 5.6.2025 10:30 AM

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LeBron James holding a basketball, with his back turned to Stephen Curry, who is crouched down low guarding LeBron. | Ariana Ruiz/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom
(Ariana Ruiz/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom)

Good morning and welcome to another edition of Free Agent! You've seen field-storming and court-storming, and now you've seen rink-storming.

But our focus today isn't on hockey, it's on the association (as cool people call the NBA). We'll talk about the state of pro basketball, plus more horse racing and a little bit of pro spring football. Hopefully you have some fun along the way.

Locker Room Links

  • The Athletic ranks the 10 best signature cocktails associated with sporting events. Did your favorite make the list?
  • The Baltimore Ravens released kicker Justin Tucker after 16 massage therapists accused him of inappropriate conduct, though the team insists it was a "football decision." Maybe the ongoing investigation is finding credible evidence behind the accusations, or maybe the team just wants to get rid of a headache. Either way, watch to see if he gets signed by anyone else.
  • The 2027 NFL Draft will be in Washington, D.C., as announced in the Oval Office on Monday. (The 2026 Draft is in Pittsburgh.)
  • With college sports in a bit of turmoil, it's worth considering this plan from the late, great Mike Leach. (No, not the one involving a little person.)
  • What grade does your state deserve for sports betting regulations? Our friends at the Consumer Choice Center have a report card.
  • Trans women are getting banned from women's sports in England after a U.K. Supreme Court ruling on biological sex.
  • Honda Center, home of the Anaheim Ducks, is getting a privately funded $1 billion renovation, paid for by the Ducks' owners (even though the arena is owned by the city government).
  • Elsewhere in Reason: Could Trump really reopen Alcatraz? Here's why it'd be difficult.
  • No one asked for this:

    Monday, ESPN is on the #MetGala red carpet for the 1st time EVER@itsthebaldgirl & @OmarESPN are on the ground for #SuperfineStyle to capture how athletes are showing up & out

    Catch the action LIVE on ESPN TikTok w/coverage across ESPN social & @SportsCenter pic.twitter.com/yUBqs25qes

    — ESPN PR (@ESPNPR) May 5, 2025

Is Basketball OK?

I watched more NBA basketball this season than in the prior five seasons combined. But that was still only a handful of games, so perhaps I'm not the best person to start giving out suggestions—or maybe I am, because I'm exactly the person the league needs to draw back in.

My Detroit Pistons—three-time NBA champions, who in my formative years made it to the conference finals six years in a row—are finally good again and made the playoffs for the first time since 2019. Their last three playoff trips ended in first round sweeps, so I cautiously dipped my toe into the NBA postseason again, a territory I usually only visit for the occasional play-in game or title-decider. I was rewarded with a 4–2 series loss to the New York Knicks, but a fantastic series nonetheless. Every game was a coin flip, no lead was safe.

That's what every NBA playoff series should be. The NBA can't design it that way, but there are changes they can make.

Don't miss sports coverage from Jason Russell and Reason.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

The modern complaint seems to be that everyone got too good at shooting, so now there are too many three-point shots and there's not enough action in the key. I'm inclined to agree with Substack writer and podcaster Ethan Sherwood-Strauss' proposal to bring back hand-checking beyond the three-point line. I have no idea what a foul is anymore (and apparently the refs don't either), and this change might worsen that confusion for casual viewers, but the resulting increase in defensive conflict outside the three-point line seems worthwhile.

Another idea, perhaps more crazy: Get rid of the straight lines in the three-point arc and make it a semicircle. You shouldn't get three points from a shorter distance just because it's in the corner. A wild stat: One in nine shots in the NBA is a corner three, as Kirk Goldsberry points out.

But teams should get a three-year warning before changes like this are made. It's not fair to draft and develop your roster under one set of rules and have it suddenly changed when your squad is reaching its prime.

Then there's the schedule problem. In an 82-game schedule, any single game doesn't make much difference in the standings, unlike in the NFL. Andrew Bogut recently made this point—he's an NBA champion (2015 Golden State Warriors) and current assistant coach in Australia's National Basketball League, where teams play just 28 games in the regular season, spread over roughly 20 weeks. I'd love to see the NBA reduce its schedule by about 25 percent (along with every other professional league I follow), and this would help with the "load management" issue too—but reducing the number of games means less TV money, and it doesn't exactly scream "thriving, growing sports business."

The NBA is not a league that's consumed primarily on TV, however. It's consumed on social media through slams, shots from wayyyyy downtown, buzzer beaters, hard fouls, trash talk, fits, sneaks, and anything else that might go viral. It's consumed through podcasts, talk radio, and daytime TV talk shows that often spend more time talking about player moves and coach drama rather than team performance. When fans are watching games, many are watching pirated streams instead of boosting the league's TV ratings and ad revenue. The NBA can't really monetize any of this, it can only hope all the attention leads people to spend their money on tickets, merchandise, NBA League Pass, or maybe even cable.

At the end of the day, there's only so much the league can do (and maybe its viewership problem isn't as bad as it seemed). Basketball is destined to have lots of stoppages in crunch time and almost every critical possession will involve some debatable referee call/no-call. But the clearest way to make me and billions of people around the world watch the NBA is simple: Make the Pistons good.

Old Horse, Old Tricks

I was ready to write that horse racing needs some new blood to get people engaged. Apparently I was wrong, because NBC's viewership of the Kentucky Derby peaked at 21.8 million viewers, a record.

Going in, the Derby felt a little light on engaging storylines, other than trainer Bob Baffert's return from a three-year suspension. This year's winning trainer, Bill Mott, comes across as a nice old man who's only just broken through for success (his other Kentucky Derby win came in controversial fashion in 2019), but has actually been in the sport's hall of fame since 1998. There are also the hundreds of racehorses who die every year, all subsidized by your tax dollars, as we covered last week.

New trainers, owners, and storylines might wash away some of those stains. But apparently viewers are interested enough as it is (at least in the Kentucky Derby, though perhaps not the rest of horse racing). Why is that?

I haven't surveyed all 21.8 million viewers, but I imagine there are a few factors: People like gambling (especially on long shots), traditions (like the fancy hats and the bugler), specialty drinks (mint juleps), and parties. The Kentucky Derby lets you combine any or all of the above. Since the race lasts all of two minutes, it's not like people are deciding whether to watch or not based on the quality of the competition. It's also possible a new Netflix show helped increase viewership too.

It turned out to be a great race, with a pack of long shots leading the field until the homestretch, when the top two favorites dueled it out for the win. That's not really why people watch though. Horse racing thrives on tradition, but that can only get it so far.

Watch Football

I'd argue this part of the NHL and NBA playoff calendar is a bit of a lull before conference championships start up. So it's a great time to start watching spring football in the United Football League (UFL).

The league has eight teams, six of which are legitimate title contenders. Anyone should be able to find a rooting interest, whether it's a nearby team, a player who went to that college you like, or your feelings about head coaches like Skip Holtz and Bob Stoops. Jump on a bandwagon now and you've got four more regular season games to watch, plus the playoffs.

I've been a big fan of the D.C. Defenders since the XFL made its short-lived return in February 2020, was quickly thwarted by the pandemic, and came back in 2023 before merging with the USFL for 2024. As a lifelong fan of the franchise (their life, not mine), can confirm: If your team wins, it'll be awesome—if they lose, it's no big deal, it's just the UFL.

Replay of the Week

Game seven. Down by a goal. Seconds away from elimination. Goalie pulled. How could replay of the week go to anything else?

WHAT AN END TO REGULATION… GAME 7 OT BEGINS NOW ON TBS AND MAX ???? pic.twitter.com/brukX8qkVH

— NHLonTNT (@NHL_On_TNT) May 5, 2025

If the Winnipeg Jets had lost in (double) overtime, we would have gone with something else, but they didn't.

That's all for this week. Enjoy watching the real game of the weekend, Hamburg vs. SSV Ulm in Bundesliga 2.

Start your day with Reason. Get a daily brief of the most important stories and trends every weekday morning when you subscribe to Reason Roundup.

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NEXT: Intelligence Agencies Undermining Trump's Claims

Jason Russell is managing editor at Reason and author of the Free Agent sports newsletter.

SportsNBAAthleticsGamblingFootballNHLOnline Gambling
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  1. Dillinger   8 months ago

    >>The modern complaint seems to be that everyone got too good at shooting

    mho the modern complaint is the central planned "entertainment" portion all the professional leagues. the players are not competing against only each other.

    the NBA died when Allen Iverson retired and he barely kept it alive

  2. Dillinger   8 months ago

    >>If the Winnipeg Jets had lost in (double) overtime

    we wouldn't be able to beat them in the 2d round. bamo Estrellas!

  3. Dillinger   8 months ago

    >>I'd argue this part of the NHL ... playoff calendar is a bit of a lull

    written like a Wings fan not a hockey fan.

    1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   8 months ago

      Lol. Yeah, us Wings fans got a little spoiled getting into the 3rd and 4th round about 8 times in 14 years, making round 2 a bit of a “lull”.

      That’s ok. Go Red Wings! And I’m glad your boys took out the Avs. Fuck those guys.

      1. Dillinger   8 months ago

        Stars/Avs is now a 28 year rivalry I love it. Went to Denver last year for game 6 watched the Stars wipe them out on their ice.

        1. Jefferson Paul   8 months ago

          I'm biased as a Pens fan, but the best hockey rivalry in recent years was Pens-Caps. All five Pens Cup-winning teams, including the more recent '09, '16, and '17, went through Washington, and the one Caps Cup-team had to go through Pittsburgh. That was some fucking awesome playoff hockey with Crosby vs. Ovechkin.

          The 90s Red Wings-Avalanche rivalry gets honorable mention--unless you're talking to just about anyone other than me, in which case DET-COL would be the best playoff rivalry in the NHL over the last 30 years.

      2. Jefferson Paul   8 months ago

        That 25-year streak of making the playoffs was damn impressive. Now the Red Wings seem to be stuck in mediocrity (the worst possibility as you don't get high draft picks*, but also don't have a shot at actually winning another Cup).

        *Unless you win the stupid draft lottery as the Islanders did last night. I hate how skewed the lottery is against the bad teams. The worst team by standings has a much greater chance of not picking 1st, than it does of winning the draft lottery for the 1st pick.

  4. Bertram Guilfoyle   8 months ago

    What's the libertarian angle here?

    1. Eeyore   8 months ago

      Drinking

    2. Sometimes a Great Notion   8 months ago

      Gambling?

    3. Dillinger   8 months ago

      freedom to discuss sports without being banned from a political site? yes this happened to me once.

      1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   8 months ago

        Aside from your hatred of fans of great hockey dynasties, I cannot imagine a good reason to ban chill dill from any comment section.

        That’s just wrong.

        1. Dillinger   8 months ago

          I don't hate the Wings in fact my dad's wife picked me up a shirt when she was at a home game on a business trip. I've worn it to shreds ... never once outside, but to shreds.

          I moved around too much to have home teams I love everybody on a sliding scale.

    4. Minadin   8 months ago

      Monocles. You see them at Derby parties more than anywhere outside the Libertarian Convention.

  5. Bill Godshall   8 months ago

    I haven't watched, nor desired to watch, any NBA games since they wrote racist slogans on their courts in 2020 claiming only Black Lives Matter, and since multimillionaire black NBA players (the richest group of blacks ever in world history) outrageously and falsely claimed that America is a racist country that continues to discriminate against and persecute blacks.

    The NBA has been dead to me ever since. Perhaps if they sincerely apologize for their deceitful racist accusations against whites, I might consider watching another game, but it would have be a very sincere apology (something I'll never see nor hear in my lifetime).

  6. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   8 months ago

    “The Baltimore Ravens released kicker Justin Tucker after 16 massage therapists accused him of inappropriate conduct, though the team insists it was a "football decision." Maybe the ongoing investigation is finding credible evidence behind the accusations, or maybe the team just wants to get rid of a headache. Either way, watch to see if he gets signed by anyone else”

    Maybe it also has something to do with the fact that he’s a 90% career fg kicker who dropped 13% down to 73%?

    1. Sometimes a Great Notion   8 months ago

      Ding. Coupled with the fact they saved 4.2 million in cap space since his 2025 pay isn't guaranteed.

      1. Mickey Rat   8 months ago

        These are always "what have you done for me lately" and payroll cap decisions.

    2. EISTAU Gree-Vance   8 months ago

      I believe that would be a 17% drop. Just sayin’.

      1. CE   8 months ago

        Actually, it would be an 18.9% drop.

  7. Longtobefree   8 months ago

    The NBA is blatantly and proudly racist.

  8. Stupid Government Tricks   8 months ago

    Perhaps the NBA could try variable height baskets: position each team's basket 5 feet higher than their tallest player. I get tired of watching physical freaks.

    I also get tired of LeFlop, and the general referee incompetence and favoritism.

    Eh. Can't stand watching anyway, and as Bill Godshall does, I have long memories. You piss off most of your fans with that woke crap, your WNBA allies cry about one of their star players getting busted in Russia for being stupid, and you let your WNBA star rookie get hounded for not being black ... sorry, I have long memories.

    1. Eeyore   8 months ago

      No. Put the baskets 2 feet off the ground, but change it so you have to send the ball up from the bottom of the rim. Accidentally making a top down basket should subtract a point from your teams score.

      1. Stupid Government Tricks   8 months ago

        O Man, LeFlop could get into that!

    2. Longtobefree   8 months ago

      Just restrict each team to 30 feet of players on the floor at one time.
      5 six footers, 6 five footers, 3 ten footers, whatever, but the total on the floor has to be six feet or less.
      (round down)

      1. Stupid Government Tricks   8 months ago

        Another good idea. Combine the two, and I can imagine missed shots because a player exchange had to raise or lower the basket while the ball was still on the way.

      2. Super Scary   8 months ago

        Every team should also be required to have a Master Blaster style player.

        1. Wizzle Bizzle   8 months ago

          Hold the GD phone. I am way into this idea.

          Spin the wheel, Raggedy Man!

      3. Jefferson Paul   8 months ago

        If you really want to restrict the teams, just mandate that each team must be majority-white. Or worse, combine the NBA and WNBA so it's co-ed basketball.

        /sarcasm

  9. Sometimes a Great Notion   8 months ago
  10. JonFrum   8 months ago

    "Trans women are getting banned from women's sports in England"

    Correction: MEN are getting banned from women's sports. Stop lying.

    1. Bertram Guilfoyle   8 months ago

      Stop hurting Jeff's feelings.

  11. IceTrey   8 months ago

    Don't forget the college lacrosse tournament begins this week!

  12. EISTAU Gree-Vance   8 months ago

    “The real game of the weekend” can never be soccer.

    That’s just gay.

  13. CE   8 months ago

    It's hard for any league to be "alright" when "alright" isn't a word. All right?

    And cool people don't call the NBA "the association," they call it "the Association."

    But yeah, the 3-point line is too close now, since everyone grew up practicing 3-pointers. Move it out to 25 feet (from 23-9) and widen the court so the corner threes are also 25 feet (instead of 22 feet).

    And then abolish the draft, so teams stop tanking. Just let them all compete for rookie free agents.

    And cut the schedule to 72 games (from 82), to eliminate games on back-to-back nights. And cut the playoffs back to 16 teams. These 2 changes would stop the "player management" that currently has fans paying over a hundred bucks to see their favorite player, only to find he's sitting on the bench in a suit to watch the game, and still getting paid.

  14. Brian   8 months ago

    The NBA is not even basketball any more.

    Basketball used to be a sport where you had to evade your opponent. Now, you can just shove them out of your way.

    Basketball used to have something called "traveling", but no longer. Now, it's called a "Euro-step" and it's just fine. You cannot twitch before you start dribbling, but you can take 75 steps after you stop dribbling. I watched Stephen Curry, with two hands on the ball and two feet inside the three-point line, step one foot outside the three point line, step the other foot outside the three point line, all while holding the ball with two hands, and then shoot a three-pointer and make it. That was traveling in my day, now it's a "step back three".

    Now, hacking is encouraged. As long as you touch the ball first, you can rip your opponent's arm off and get away with it.

    I do not even recognize the game any more.

  15. creech   8 months ago

    I can't sympathize with you hockey fans. At least your cities have a pro hockey team, unlike Philadelphia.

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