@Malta do you think one of the reasons the eastern conference has never really got the top quality teams that the west has is because all of their teams end up treadmilling because everyone else is treadmilling? As in all the teams that might otherwise fight for the top picks end up trading a lot of wins that makes them go farther down in the lottery, which is basically what Philly avoided by being so extremely bad.
I mean the Heat, for example, are a team would benefit from getting a top pick this season but they went on a huge winning streak and now are close to a playoff spot in the east(even though they're still nowhere close to 500). That won't benefit them in the long run. I'm aware that the Western conference 8th seed is lower than the East's btw, but that's not really the point here, the top 7 teams in the west hurt the other teams records more than the Eastern teams do overall.
Same shyt happens to teams like the pistons and bucks. Having a top 5 pick would do wonders, but since the rest of the east is pretty much where they're at they end up getting a middle lottery pick.
And this isn't some recent thing, it feel likes this has been a constant for a long time. The bottom west teams, due to the strength of the West, end up near the bottom of the standings and end up with a great pick. The Suns have the 2nd worst record in the league, but a winning record in the east. I think it's safe to say if they were in the east they'd be in a position closer to what the Bucks are opposed to in line for a top pick. The West got Davis, the West got Wiggins, the West Durant/Westbrook/Harden, etc. I know they're not all top picks and West has a higher success, it seems, of finding superstars later in the lottery than the East, but overall it seems more of the top talent ends up in the West than the East.
I think its moreso the LeBron James effect and the fact that east GMs struggle in free agency. The east gms don't usually get the necessary help they need for the stars they do have or had, and they find themselves overpaying in FA and therefore don't have the cap space to bring on a star.
The east also has made the mistake of trading away first rounders that end up being players like Kawhi. But more importantly it doesn't help that Lebron switched teams twice and created 2 superteams with a big 3 which condensed the talent pool




right now. So maybe in a few years shyt will be flipped. All that said, I am still waiting for a West team to go through this gauntlet that everyone makes it out to be. Warriors cruised through the first two rounds with Steph out last year and now the only team that pushed them is gone, as they have their best player now. Bu...bu...but the East.