So if 6 teams in the lower section tank (8th seeds are bots or tanking to relegate) the season. Both 6-7th will buy those players for the money they have saved during the season. Doesn't that mean 4 out of 6 still relegate and 2 of those with nothing in their pocket?
In that situation I don't really have any sympathy for any of those teams, as they have all chosen to tank. In reality, it doesn't really happen like that though.
More often, you'll have one team on one side that tanks all season (let's assume there's a bot in 8th spot) and buys up a bunch of $200k players to beat the guy in 6th place that has been playing to compete all season. The guy in 6th (who has been playing 'properly') has little chance of beating the guy that tanked and bought in a bunch of hired guns for the relegation series.
Whether the team in 7th is financially better off (I'll get to that bit further down) is irrelevant, as the team that is in 6th has been relegated as a direct result of his opponent tanking all season and buying players in for the relegation series. The team in 6th doesn't even have the chance at competing in the relegation series - short of buying a bunch of hired guns himself, there's nothing he can do about it. In this situation, tanking has become the 'optimal' strategy to survive. Surely this has a negative impact on the game experience?
As for the financial aspect, it's debatable whether the team is financially better off or not. I don't want to get into a long debate about the specifics, as that's not really what the issue is about, other than to say they are
probably better off financially. Using a quick example...
Assuming a team can save between $200k - $250k a week by only paying the salary floor, they will save something like $2.5m - $3m a season compared to a team that is competing with an average roster (this is II in Australia, just as an example). The high salary guys they buy in are generally not that expensive to purchase (due to the wages), but let's assume they will sell them off for around about the same amount they purchased them for, give or take $300k total. Let's say we buy in 2 guys with $150k salaries and 1 monster $200k guy to win the relegations series, two weeks of wages for these guys is $1m, plus a $300k loss on the sale (estimate), it ends up costing them $1.3m to buy in the hired guns for the relegation series. Take this away from the ~$3m in saved waged for the season is still a profit of ~$1.7m.
Given this financial incentive, as well as the ability to not relegate, and it suddenly becomes clearer why this is becoming the optimal strategy to succeed.
I have relegated once. I tried to stay in DivI when I first promoted. I kept building my team. I never want to relegate again. It messes up your economy and I had to get a 22-0 record to get back up. How can anyone say relegating is good in a big country? Bizarre.
I fully agree with you. I don't think relegating is of great benefit to a team. The issue isn't teams that tank and relegate though - I don't have a problem with that, as they are still being punished by relegating. My issue is with teams that tank and then buy players at the end of the season to avoid relegation. This is what the BB's need to look at, as soon as possible.