moranelkarifnews : Fact or Fiction: Something is seriously wrong with the NBA

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
Pocket
WhatsApp

The discussion about ‘what is wrong with the NBA’ reached the mainstream this week.

 

Should the league be concerned about declining TV ratings? (Photo by G Fiume/Getty Images)

Each week during the 2024-25 NBA season, we will take a deeper dive into some of the league’s biggest storylines in an attempt to determine whether trends are based more in fact or fiction moving forward.

I thought the discussion about “what is wrong with the NBA” was mainly driven by social media, where people who purportedly like basketball were spending the early part of this season searching for answers to a decline in television ratings, but the conversation reached the mainstream this week. Commissioner Adam Silver addressed concerns in Las Vegas, where NBA Cup participants were also asked about the health of the league, as “Inside the NBA” hosts Charles Barkley and Shaquille O’Neal floated theories.

“It’s frustrating to me, because all it is now is a 3-point shooting contest and a free-throw contest, and I don’t like it,” Barkley, arguably the NBA’s most influential commentator, said on “The Dan Patrick Show.” “They can get mad, but I don’t want to go see a 3-point shooting contest every night. That ain’t no fun.”

It drives me f***ing crazy,” O’Neal added on his own podcast.

The increase in 3-point attempts is probably the most popular position among armchair analysts. Teams are attempting nearly 40 per game — up from 35 last season, from 20 in 2013-14 and from 10 in 1993-94.

Even LeBron James — maybe the only person in the game whose voice holds more weight than Barkley’s — shoehorned his grievance into an answer about the latest All-Star Game format, telling reporters, “Our game, there’s a lot of f***ing 3s being shot. So it’s a bigger conversation than just the All-Star Game.”

I may be in the minority, but I do not understand the premise. Shooting is an important part of the game, maybe the most important, and an increased degree of difficulty — at a success rate that makes the NBA of the 1980s and early ’90s look unskilled — should not on its own explain why people may be turned off.

Was it better when teams were shooting 40.1% on 31.3 midrange jump shots per game in 1996-97, as far back as the NBA’s database goes? That figure is down to 9.8 a game (at a slightly higher success rate). All those long 2-pointers have been pushed beyond the arc, where players are making 35.9% of them. By the percentages, the difference in eras is marked by one more missed field goal per game (and more points).

But that is not even the case. The pace has increased from the height of the Michael Jordan era, when nobody was wondering what is wrong with the NBA. Field-goal attempts are up. Field-goal percentages are up. Points are up. Everything but midrange jumpers is up, including dunks. Over a 20-year period from the turn of the century to the current era, dunks increased by 35%, according to RunRepeat.com.

As Boston Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla, whose reigning champions attempt more 3s than any team ever has, asked of us this week, “Why in basketball is scoring up being an issue, as opposed to other sports?”

If the league’s skill level is higher than it ever has been — and I do not think there is any debate about that — and offense is at an all-time high, why then are we not talking about what is right with the NBA?

TV ratings, that is why. We discuss no other metric in regards to a sport’s popularity. And we do not even understand that. NBA viewership has actually outpaced the decline in overall TV ratings, according to Sports Media Watch. Even if we were to accept that this viewership issue is not actually a linear TV issue, basketball is being consumed more than ever before. No other league has a larger social media following.

“If you look at other data points, in terms of our business, for example, we’ve just come off the last two years of the highest attendance in the history of this league,” Silver said in his media availability prior to Tuesday’s NBA Cup championship game. “We’re at a point where our social media audience is at the highest of any league and continuing to grow exponentially, so it’s not a lack of interest in this game.”

Every slate of games produces countless highlights and quotes and storylines — all the drama we enjoy about the sport — easily packaged into clips consumed by millions of people on social media. According to the NBA, the league has generated 10 billion video views on its social channels this season, a record pace. Viewership there is up 90% from five years ago. League Pass enrollment is at record levels, up 8%.

The NBA’s cable TV ratings are down 13% across all properties, per Nielsen. But consider this: A Nov. 29 game between the Oklahoma City Thunder and Los Angeles Lakers drew 1.14 million viewers to ESPN, as the game’s recap on Instagram generated another 5.2 million views. The NBA has 182.4 million followers across Instagram, X, TikTok and YouTube. The NFL, MLB and NHL have 153.4 million followers combined.

Not convinced that this challenges the notion that the NBA is losing its audience? Well, it convinced the league’s broadcast partners, who ponied up $77 billion for the rights to air games through the 2035-36 season, triple the NBA’s last media deal. Everything but TV ratings is telling us the league is thriving.

 

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
Pocket
WhatsApp

Never miss any important news. Subscribe to our newsletter.