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What The Diamond League Can Learn From The NBA In-Season Tournament

By Paul Snyder

December 13, 2023

This is hardly an original idea on my end – Canadian Olympian Aaron Brown tweeted (or is it X’d?) this suggestion as I’m sure did many others – but adjusting the Diamond League season to more closely resemble the NBA’s In-Season Tournament is a GOOD IDEA. So let’s unpack it.

Aaron Brown TweetAaron Brown Tweet

@KingsleySC on Twitter / X

First, some background. The NBA had a problem that will likely sound familiar to track fans: viewers and even athletes didn’t care about the regular season.

With 82 regular season games, good teams could afford to take some nights easy by resting star players without it meaningfully impacting playoff seeding. As the season wore on, teams would ramp up the intensity, so that by the first round of the playoffs, they were firing on all cylinders. This resulted in engaging, high-quality basketball come late spring, preceded by – pardon the expression – some real horseshit hoops during the winter months.

The shrewd business minds behind the NBA knew this was a problem, so they did what shrewd business minds do: introduce a stakes-raising gimmick designed to prod the players into caring about a game on a Tuesday night in November, and in turn give the fans a reason to tune in.

And despite the obnoxiously-painted floors, the borderline inscrutable manner in which tournament games were also regular season ones, games being played in Las Vegas, and meager-by-NBA-salary-standards prize money, those crazy bastards made it work. 

We enjoyed playoff-caliber basketball before Christmas.

The league’s most recognizable superstar, LeBron James, was awarded the inaugural In-Season Tournament MVP trophy as he guided his Lakers squad to the inaugural In-Season Tournament title, and a fun, upstart Indiana Pacers team emerged from basketball purgatory to announce its arrival as a longshot NBA title threat. There were memorable game-winning buzzer-beaters, hard-fought back-and-forth battles between established contenders and rising stars, and the sort of fights that only unfold when something real is on the line.

So what can track learn from this?

For starters, relying on one short championship season to drum up interest among fans is a losing proposition. We do a horrendous job of giving casual fans a reason to stay plugged into the sport between Olympic and World Championship cycles. The Diamond League is sitting there, almost entirely separate from the events that most of the world associates with track & field. Let’s shift it up in the calendar so that the Diamond League – and especially the DL Championship – serves as our In-Season Tournament: the precursor to the even bigger title fight.

Another related note, is that from a spectator standpoint, riveting competition doesn’t necessarily require the competitors to be at their absolute best. The Lakers fought the hardest of any team in the NBA in November and December, but as of right now, there are five teams Vegas oddsmakers think have a better shot at winning this year’s (real/normal) NBA championship than the Lakers. Track athletes tend to be precious about when they compete, and rarely do so if they aren’t in top form – we need to give them a reason to race/jump/throw/vault when they’re still dialing things in. The product on display will still be entertaining.

And the third, is that money talks. Each Laker was awarded a $500,000 prize for winning the tournament. That’s not a lot by American pro basketball standards, but it was enough of a carrot to get players fired up. I’d imagine a significantly smaller prize purse would still be mighty enticing to a lot of the world’s best track athletes. Then there’s the calculation some will inevitably make: “I’m going to go for the money now, knowing the big dogs are going for Olympic gold later.” By presenting athletes with a few titles to shoot for of various levels of prestige, some will take a personally cynical approach, but ultimately that means higher level of competition the entire season, and a chance for athletes outside of the usual suspects (up-and-comers, aging greats, etc.) to enjoy a little limelight.

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Paul Snyder

Meme-disparager, avid jogger, MS Paint artist, friend of Scott Olberding, Citius Mag staff writer based in Flagstaff. Supplying baseless opinions, lukewarm takes, and vaguely running-related content. Once witnessed televison's Michael Rapaport cut a line of 30 people to get a slice of pizza at John's on Bleeker at 4am. You can follow Paul on Twitter at @DanielDingus.