Eh, going into the playoffs this year there were like 8-9 teams you could’ve made a legitimate case for winning it. I think this has gotten a bit better, but a team with a top 3-5 player in the league has won like 12 of the last 15 finals. Sometimes that star is a bit emergent(like Kawhi with Toronto), but that top heaviness compared with the extreme player power in the league makes it a much more powerless existence for most NBA teams compared to other sports. At least in the Bulls case they're more attractive a literal destination than many others so they can break the cycle. I mean, I tend to think the bolded is a feature, not a bug. Mike Trout being buried on the perennially mediocre Angels for a decade or, inversely, an 83-win cardinals team being able to magical run their way through October is not that appealing to me. I’d prefer to see the best players face off on the biggest stage. Maybe it’s the length of time that NBA players tend to hold that mantle that makes it feel stale, but I do think things have leveled out quite a bit in recent years. I’m glad we’re past the four-year run of Cavs-warriors being an inevitability. There’s been 7 different franchises in the finals the past 4 seasons, and not all of them have been from the usual suspect franchises. Maybe it’s premature to call this the new normal, but the current landscape seems a decent bit flatter than years past. As far as market size or attractiveness of destinations go, I’m not sure how much of a factor this is. LeBron put in two stints in Cleveland, Giannis has stuck around Milwaukee, CP3 has elevated OKC and Phoenix, Memphis is an ascendant franchise with a bona fire superstar that’s already gotten as high as the two seed in the west, etc. it takes luck no doubt, but player empowerment also makes it possible for guys like LeBron, KD, Kawhi, CP3, etc. to be a bit more nomadic and infuse multiple franchises with talent and championship hope throughout their careers.