Current:Home > MarketsWill the NBA Cup become a treasured tradition? League hopes so, but it’s too soon to tell -Nova Finance Academy
Will the NBA Cup become a treasured tradition? League hopes so, but it’s too soon to tell
View
Date:2025-04-14 19:13:25
No one knows if the NBA Cup will be around in 30 years.
Heck, no one knows what the world will look like in three decades let alone the NBA.
Thirty years ago, who knew that a player would score 40,000 career points and play at an All-NBA level at almost 40 years old? And who knew coming out of the 1992 Barcelona Olympics that three-plus decades later, the league’s MVP would be won by a player born outside of the United States for six consecutive seasons from 2019-2024?
The league’s plans for the NBA Cup are long term. It rebranded the “in-season tournament,” designed a trophy and added a title sponsor for the event which began last season.
The NBA is invested – including a significant promotional campaign that features actors Michael Imperioli and Rosario Dawson and NBA stars, including Steph Curry; specially designed NBA Cup courts for each team (NBA Commissioner Adam Silver admittedly is a fan of the colorful courts); and unique uniforms for home and road games.
MORE:The NBA Cup is here. We ranked the best group stage games each night
The Emirates NBA Cup begins Tuesday, and the league looks to build on a modicum of success from last season that concluded with the Los Angeles Lakers beating the Indiana Pacers. TV ratings for the NBA Cup final averaged 4.58 million viewers and was the most-watched non-Christmas game since February 2018. It helped that it was the Lakers - featuring LeBron James and Anthony Davis - and an exciting Pacers team led by blossoming star Tyrese Haliburton.
As the 67-game event wrapped group play and headed for the knockout rounds in the quarterfinals, semifinals and final, teams wanted to win. And there is a financial reward, including nearly $515,000 this season for each player on the NBA Cup championship team.
A refresher course: The 15 teams from the East were divided into three groups of five and the 15 teams from the West were divided into three groups of five. Teams in the same group will play each other once – two games at home, two games on the road on Tuesdays and Fridays, starting Tuesday and wrapping up group play Dec. 3.
Four teams from each conference advance to the quarterfinals – the winner of each group plus one wild card (a team that finished second in its group and won the tiebreaker) from each conference. The semifinals are Dec. 14 and the championship game (East winner vs. West winner) is Dec. 17 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. All games, except the title game, count in a team’s overall win-loss record.
The league made minor tweaks to the NBA Cup such as excluding overtime scoring from points differential and total points tiebreakers. And there are intriguing groups: Denver, Dallas, New Orleans, Golden State and Memphis in Group C in the West, and New York, Orlando, Philadelphia, Brooklyn and Charlotte in Group A in the East.
The NBA seeks to create a meaningful event early in the season that can generate interest post-World Series and pre-Christmas as the NFL and college football seasons unfold – and with games on nights when there are traditionally few high-profile football games.
Eleven months ago at the NBA Cup final, Silver said, "I want to thank all of the players in the league and the coaches, of course, the teams, for embracing this new concept. I know it doesn’t come without challenges. There’s no doubt there’s some things that we are learning this time through. Overall, we are thrilled with the interest we’ve seen so far this season."
Traditions don’t happen overnight. Or over the course of two seasons. Now, we can make real-time judgements on TV ratings, ticket sales, fan interest and the competition of games.
But the true measure of the NBA Cup’s success – or absence of it – will be revealed in 10, 15, 20 or 30 years.
Follow Jeff Zillgitt on social media @JeffZillgitt
veryGood! (44)
Related
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Leon Gautier, last surviving French commando who took part in WWII D-Day landings in Normandy, dies at 100
- Britt Robertson Marries Paul Floyd in Star-Studded Ceremony
- This is what the world looks like if we pass the crucial 1.5-degree climate threshold
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- At least 51 people killed in road accident in western Kenya, 32 injured, police and Red Cross say
- Darwin in a lab: Coral evolution tweaked for global warming
- Dutch prime minister resigns after coalition, divided over migration, collapses
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- Guyana is a poor country that was a green champion. Then Exxon discovered oil
Ranking
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- In a first, U.N. climate agreement could include the words 'coal' and 'fossil fuels'
- Benny watched his house drift away. Now, his community wants better storm protection
- Gavin Rossdale's Daughter Daisy Lowe Welcomes First Baby
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- Biden says he worries that cutting oil production too fast will hurt working people
- A blizzard warning in Hawaii but no snow yet in Denver, in unusual December weather
- Transcript: Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg on Face the Nation, July 2, 2023
Recommendation
Bodycam footage shows high
Two Sides Of Guyana: A Green Champion And An Oil Producer
Texas officials put the final death toll from last year's winter storm at 246
What is a cluster bomb, the controversial weapon the U.S. is sending to Ukraine?
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
See What Ben Savage and the Rest of the Boy Meets World Cast Looks Like Now
Zelenskyy visits Snake Island to mark 500 days of war, as Russian rockets kill at least 8 in eastern Ukraine
The biggest problem facing the U.S. electric grid isn't demand. It's climate change