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Tim Legler on Why the NBA Is in the Healthiest Place It Has Been in Years Go to https://kachava.com and use code WINGO for 15% off your first order. The NBA Finals are at Madison Square Garden. The Knicks have not won a championship in fifty-three years. Victor Wembanyama is making his Finals debut. Jalen Brunson is playing the best basketball of his life. And the ratings for the first two games are up ninety percent from a year ago. The league is healthy. And Tim Legler — one of the most respected analysts in the business, someone who has been inside the NBA for thirty years as a player, broadcaster, and analyst — is here to explain exactly why. And to be honest about the things that are not working too. The ratings story Last year's NBA Finals were a ratings disaster. Every single game except game seven was outrated by the NFL's Hall of Fame preseason game — a game where no starters play and nobody actually watches on purpose. That is how bad it was. This year is completely different. Knicks versus Spurs. New York versus the most fascinating young player the league has produced in a generation. The biggest media market in the country finally has a team worth watching on the biggest stage. Ratings up ninety percent through two games. The league needed this. It got it. The ticket price problem Here is the other side of that story. A pair of courtside seats for game three at MSG was going for approximately three hundred thousand dollars on the secondary market. Three hundred thousand dollars. For one game. Tim Legler's answer — a finance major who went to Wharton after his NBA career — is supply and demand. One hundred and one. The demand exists because the moment is real. The city has waited fifty-three years. If you want to be in that building you are going to pay for the privilege. But Josh Hart said it publicly and he was right — it is unfortunate for the die-hard fans who have waited their whole lives for this and cannot get into the building because the market has priced them out. Both things are true simultaneously. The media deal — year one growing pains The new NBA media landscape brought Amazon and NBC in while Turner moved out. The result in year one — fans confused about where to find the games they want. Legler heard it everywhere. Airport layovers. Restaurant meals. People stopping him. Where is the game tonight? His take — it is a year one problem not a permanent one. The content is all there. You just have to work a little harder to find it. Year two will be smoother. Change is hard. The landscape of entertainment has changed across the board and the NBA is not exempt from that adjustment period. But here is what matters — the Finals are delivering. And a two month run of great playoff basketball can make up for a lot of regular season frustration. That is the NBA's great advantage. It always has this in its pocket starting April fifteenth. The best players on earth playing as hard as they can. Desperate to win. Nothing in sports quite matches it at its best. And right now it is at its best. The Spurs dynasty — the luckiest team in sports LeBron James said it — the San Antonio Spurs are the luckiest team he has ever seen. David Robinson. Tim Duncan. Kawhi Leonard. Victor Wembanyama. How does one franchise keep landing in the right place at exactly the right moment? Legler's answer — you cannot whiff on those picks. When circumstances put you in position to draft generational talent you have to hit. The Spurs have hit every single time. And it is not just the talent. It is the character they draft. The maturity. The leadership. Wembanyama pauses for ten seconds before answering a question because he wants to give you something real. That is who he is. That is who the Spurs draft. And Mitch Johnson — replacing Greg Popovich, one of the greatest coaches in NBA history — has been impressive in ways nobody quite expected. His communication. His leadership instincts. His ability to know when to push and when to support. The Spurs are going to be very good for a very long time. Where the league goes from here The regular season is still a problem. Load management. Tanking. Stars missing games. Fans paying to watch their team and finding out their player is resting. The league knows it. They are working on it. Some of it is almost impossible to solve because it is a mentality not a rule. But the direction is right. The young stars are arriving — Wemby, Cooper Flagg, and a new generation that is going to carry this league for the next decade. The business is strong. The Finals are electric. And for the first time in a few years the NBA heading into its offseason with real momentum. Tim Legler on why the league is in the healthiest place it has been in years. And what still needs to get fixed. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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