1) Competition.The Bottleneck paradoxThe best example to illustrate that competition is totally unbalanced, is the following example:
(34182). In season 39, he ended with a 9-13 record. got the 5th draft spot. How? Well due to the fact that the red division is SOOOO much stronger than the blue one, the red division has been stacking up good teams, and the blue teams have 1 or 2 good teams, meaning they consistently get a better chance of securing home court advantage. That means that you bottleneck of good teams is created in the red conference. That means that the economies off all the teams on the red conference get screwed over. For those who are saying that is an exception:
(37476) (season 23) There are more examples to be found, if only you go through enough history of divisions. Other example? Look at the BBBL season 40. top 4 teams have been known from week 1 on the red side.
Solutionsa) Change the format of the current competition. This would also solve the interconference schedule luck that is created. But it is likely to bring new paradoxes with a new format, so this might not necessairly be the best option. it would shake up things drastically tho.
b) Preform a reseeding after each season. The easy version would be to do it per league. You rank the teams from 1-16 (promoting teams take the bottom spots, Demoting teams from higher division take the higher spots) and then you divide all the teams over the red & blue conference (teams 1, 4, 5, 8, 9, 12, 13 & 16 in red conference, the other teams in the blue conference). That would avoid having the paradox where one conference just blows away the other conference, which is currently happening in some leagues.
c) Do such a reseeding over an entire division (This impact will be minimal for the top divisions, but will be rather large for the II, III & IV divisions). You put all the teams in a division, rank em based upon their country rank, and then seed them into the divisions. (1 & 8 goes into II.1, 2 and 7 goes into II.2, 3 and 6 go into II.3, 4&5 go into II.4 etc etc). That will even out the competition and have a much bigger impact than the current 5th team promoting (i'll leave it up for debat wheither or not we still want a 5th team to promote, because that issue will be tackled later on).
note: a downside of options b & c, is that certain bigtime rivalries will be dissappearing. I know a fair amount of managers who look forward to facing eachother each season, but those games would then dissapear. But i'd consider that an improvement for a more fair competition (and if you really want that rivalry, improve your team and meet eachother in the first division. there you'll be guaranteed to face eachother ;)
Idea rating: category 1. This shouldn't be a difficult fix and could be done in stages. you can start with league reseeding and evolve to division reseeding.