It's not purely tanking that's the issue, but more the ability to tank for the majority of the season, before buying up a bunch of players to win a relegation series.
Exactly, here is one example french D1 :
(http://www.buzzerbeater.com/team/35796/schedule.aspx?seas...)Winterfoll Wolves won the relegation series without any opposition whereas he did 5V/17D against 11V/11D for his rival Azur BC.
Why ? Because he tanked most of the season before recruiting these players before the deadline:
(5655072)(10843522)(9372068)(17113306)(6878529)Azur BC tried to do his best during all the season but when he saw this, he knew he would have zero chances so he decided to let down to make a few economies.
Now, what is doing Winterfell Wolves in your opinion ? Tanking as he sold all this players after winning play downs. Great ...
Winterfell could do so why ? Because the last in his conference, Tenakha, decided to tank from the start of the season so he knew from the beginning that he could be 7th and still get a chance with this strategy. And you know why ? he is in the exact some situation this season with the last one tanking too

This creates another problem : it tends to create differences between conferences that last during seasons and longer than before. This is the problem of my own division where 1st conf is ususally weaker so they don't hesitate to keep low salaries compared to the 2nd where it sometimes looks like an armament war from the start that leads promoted to act by the same way.
Effect : in some divisions, playrEs prefer to tank one season in order the come back in another division. it happened during almost 10 seasons in french D3.14.
Of course, there are also every season the example of the B3.
from Kukoc :
The chemistry idea has been thrown around plenty of times. The reason why it sucks is the fact that it favors older established/rostered teams. It would get even harder to close the cap.
Not a problem if you give 100% of chemistry rate for the creation of a team and that you give a limite to this chemistry so that effects don't add up infinitely. What's more, during offseason, there might have a reset or a 66% impact on chemistry compared to the rest of the season. This might also help the fansurvey line about "scared to loose our best players" more accurate.
What's more, taking in account the time played by these players might be interesting too. A back-up or a trainee recruited during the season should not have the same impact than a big salary recruited for the final laps.
Since a few seasons it has become easy for promoted team to do better than average teams already there because of the promotion bonus and because market was so low that you can have a big team without problem.
Once again, The example of french D1 illustrates that : the winner was a promoted team last season.
Last edited by Dunker Joe at 5/29/2012 5:04:57 AM