I'm not the kind of crackerjack legal mind you'd have to be to make it airtight, but you should need to have
x amount of players accounted for on the premises, whether dressed or scratched. Having four players 100% unavailable by virtue of their being time zones away from the game affects the integrity of the game. Call up D-League bodies if you have to send people home, but you shouldn't be allowed to be that shorthanded. That's what I have a problem with more than the fact that it was Tim Duncan, Tony Parker, et al who weren't there.
I know it's different in hockey, because you have to use the whole buffalo in hockey in ways you never have to do in basketball, but there were a few games in recent NHL seasons wherein the Flames and Devils had to dress fewer than the required 20 players because of salary cap issues. 19 and 17 respectively, if I'm not mistaken. I'm not sure how it was ever addressed that breaking the cap rules superseded breaking the gameday roster rules, but it was a distinct disadvantage, and wasn't fair to the people buying tickets to the game, because essentially not having a fourth line as the Devils did those nights catches up with your legs and yields a poorer product. YES I KNOW THE GAME WAS CLOSE THIS TIME, but you shouldn't be allowed to sabotage yourself so blatantly. There has to be some greater good spoken for here.
newper wrote:
Well there is a slippery slope... when does the fining stop?
Pop brings the players to the game, but they don't dress and sit on the bench
Pop brings the players to the game, they dress and do warmups, but never play.
Pop brings the players to the game, they dress and do warmups, but don't start, and only play 5 minutes a piece.
Pop brings the players to the game, they dress and do warmups, start, and only play 10 minutes a piece.
Pop brings the players to the game, they dress and do warmups, start, and only play 20 minutes a piece.
Pop brings the players to the game, they dress and do warmups, start, and only play 30 minutes a piece.
You left out the key part of the "slippery slope" phrase, which is that it is
a fallacy. Anyone who thinks that playing only 30 minutes could yield disciplinary action is either coloring outside the rhetorical lines or a pure idiot.
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Molly Lambert wrote:
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