Thursday, July 31, 2014

Dominican Soccer Doesn’t Dominate



This post was written by SBS member Hannah Sawyer. Hannah is interning this summer in the Dominican Republic. She boxes there, as she did last summer in Russia.  Hannah was kind enough to share some first-hand research from her time abroad.

Given its position as a Latin American country, some people are surprised that the Dominican Republic does not have a strong soccer program. Of course, the adequately informed sports connoisseur will associate the DR with baseball, but you would still expect futbol to have a significant foothold in this Caribbean nation. Or, from the gringo perspective, if a country has the gall to call the sport “football”, it must like it a lot.

The fact is, soccer is just not prioritized in the Dominican. Kids might mess around with it for a little bit, but by the teenage years most move on to other sports. As trainer and sports journalist Jorge Allen Bauger says in Forbes Dominican Republic, after “13 or 14 years young people search for other alternatives.” It’s hard to pinpoint a reason. The sport requires the barest minimum in equipment, and is therefore quite inexpensive compared to baseball, gymnastics, tennis, and especially basketball (where you now not only need a hoop, a hard surface, and a ball, but also an iPhone with a Vine app to prove that those dunks actually did happen). This financial difference is particularly poignant in a place where some 35% live below the national poverty line. True, the country has a population of 10 million, generating a small talent pool that could explain its lack of international competitiveness, but that doesn’t explain the low domestic participation.

Participation, of course, is different than interest. Indeed, people do like soccer here. The World Cup was predictably popular, kids idolize the usual international superstars, and the adults are well informed of the happenings of their favorite premier league teams. Dominicans take soccer seriously but just don’t play it. I suppose the comparison could be made to women and (real) football… American women do not compete on football teams, but the NFL’s fanbase is 45% female, according to Bloomberg Businessweek.

Back to the population explanation… the same could be said regarding baseball, but this small country is renowned throughout the world for its talent. The Blue Jays just pulled six guys from Santo Domingo to the minor leagues (compare that figure to the ten Dominicans playing collegiate or professional soccer in the states). Eighty-nine Dominicans started last year’s Opening Day, composing over 10% of the day’s roster. Since 1995, the country has led the Major Leagues with providing the most foreign-born players every year.

Yet perhaps the Caribbean winds are changing. MLB COO and Cornell alum Rob Manfred pointed out that there is hesitation regarding the baseball draft. In a Skype session with the SBS on April 30th, Manfred elaborated that the number of players from neighboring Puerto Rico dramatically decreased after the commonwealth entered the draft. The DR’s “local resistance”, he believed, must also be attributed to various socioeconomic factors that lead to more sports being available. At the moment, rugby, tennis, and boxing are filling those spheres, but it is possible that the Dominican Republic will discover a renewed passion for futbol. Until then, we’ll just say gracias for the Cano’s, Ramirez’s, and Ortiz’s of America’s National Pastime.

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Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Can NBA Teams Win a Championship with a Maximum Contract Player?


NBA free agency is already in full effect and everyone is making their prediction about where LeBron James will end up. Beyond LeBron, there are a few other high profile free agents and a number of teams with enough cap space to make a big splash in free agency. The surplus of teams with cap room is going to create bidding wars between these teams and ultimately the players will earn a big payday. While securing elite talent is necessary to building a competitive team, overpaying for talent and signing players to maximum contracts makes it near impossible to create a championship team under the current collective bargaining agreement.


One goal of the collective bargaining agreement signed by both the owners and the NBA players' union in 2011 was to create a competitive balance between all teams regardless of salary figures. Under the new CBA, teams who spend more than the "soft" salary cap are hit with a more severe luxury tax and lose options which offer salary flexibility. This has caused teams to reign in their spending and think twice before offering big long-term deals to players. Still, there are 19 players in the NBA today signed to a maximum contract, and 12 of those players were named NBA all-stars in 2014. Only seven of those players failed to lead their team to the playoffs last season.

While none of these max contracts are identical, as Larry Coon explains, these players occupy a substantial amount of their team's salary budget. This is the problem of max contracts under the current CBA. NBA championships are never won by one player, as it takes at least two usually three core players and solid role players rounding out the team. The Spurs won the championship this year with four key players. General managers cannot surround their max contract player with enough complimentary talent having such a restricted budget.  Only Kevin Durant and the 2012 Oklahoma City Thunder have made it to the NBA Finals with a max contract player during the three years the current CBA has been in effect, and they lost to the Miami Heat 4-1. To put that in perspective, only six teams made it to the NBA Finals without a max contract player from 1999, when the limit on an individual player's salary was created, to 2011. Of those six teams, only the 2004 Detroit Pistons and the 2011 Dallas Mavericks won the championship.

It was reported by Brian Windhorst that LeBron would be demanding a max contract from whichever team he ends up with (fun fact: LeBron James has never been the highest paid player on his respective team). In the current market, many other players will be offered a max contract. Kyrie Irving signed earlier in free agency, Carmelo Anthony will surely get a max deal, the Houston Rockets offered Chris Bosh a max contract to play in his hometown, and Gordon Hayward could even be offered a max deal.

What does this mean going forward? I would be shocked a team with a max contract player has not won the championship in the next two years before the players union can opt out of the bargaining agreement. While it has not been done yet none of the players who have tried make their teammates better the way LeBron James does. This is a guy who took a team that started Sasha Pavlovic and Daniel Gibson to an NBA Finals! Regardless of where LeBron goes it will be fun to see where not only the stars of this free agency class wind up, but also where the role players sign. The NBA landscape could be completely changed within the next few weeks.

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