For championships maybe not -- but the major point of this is getting lost.jfish26 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2024 4:42 pm All I'm saying is that, in addition to being a bad comparison to baseball structurally, the NFL isn't even really much better off competitively.
Winning a Super Bowl with a sub-HoF quarterback appears to be about as easy as winning a World Series with a sub-top-10 payroll.
The NBA example isn't helpful (to a Royals fan) either, as far as what things look like in a floor-and-cap environment.
The Celtics and the Chiefs built these teams ( I would prefer a harder cap in the NBA than the luxury tax option but at least the other teams are getting some money -- i'd argue that money should then however minimally force the floor cap to raise - i.e. you have to spend your luxury tax money on the roster ).
The Chiefs didn't buy championships. They didn't have a significant competitive advantage over anyone.
You put your 8 year old kid in a science fair.
He spends the week before building a wind turbine out of a plastic bottle and straws - never asks for your help - he kind of is a genius.
The next day Braeden Kenword ( fucking Kenwords ) comes in with a clearly pre-bought steam engine kit ( that you find out the next day cost over 500 dollars ). It's super cool.
He wins the science fair going away.
Just like he won last year with his pre-bought kit.
Compare this to your kid winning 3 years in a row with a strict max budget of 50 dollars because, well, your kid is actually creative and good at crafting/presenting at the science fair. Sure, other parents might be tired that your kid keeps winning but the playing field is even so they can't be upset.
You can be upset at Braeden Kenword.