Αρχική Μπάσκετ Μελέτη: Αστέρια παίκτες κάθονται έξω Η πλειοψηφία των εθνικών τηλεοπτικών παιχνιδιών του...

Μελέτη: Αστέρια παίκτες κάθονται έξω Η πλειοψηφία των εθνικών τηλεοπτικών παιχνιδιών του NBA

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Various metrics suggest the NBA has slipped below both MLB and college basketball in popularity. One reason for the league's decline is the frequency with which star players sit out nationally televised games.

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This week, Yahoo columnist Tom Haberstroh examined how many star players have missed TV games this season. He defined a “star player” as someone with an All-NBA or All-Star appearance in one of the last three seasons. Using that definition, he found that just 32.7 percent of nationally televised games featured a full complement of star players.

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“Said another way: About two out of three national TV games will have at least one star player in street clothes,” he explained.

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Haberstroh also broke down star participation by network, suggesting that players are more likely to play through so-called injuries on ABC than on Peacock.

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“According to the Yahoo Sports study, in nine of the exclusively Peacock non-NBC games with stars on both sides, only one featured all the stars, a full-star percentage of 11 percent. But for ABC games, which are on Disney's biggest network platform, the full-star percentage checked in at 43 percent, more than triple that of Peacock. ABC's full-star percentage was the highest of the channels,” Haberstroh reported.

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Awful Announcing added in a follow-up report that only one of the NBA's top 25 scorers this season has played in every game: Minnesota Timberwolves forward Julius Randle. Only four others have even crossed the 70-game mark: Kevin Durant, Jamal Murray, Jalen Brunson, and Brandon Ingram.

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Worse, teams often wait until shootaround to announce the absence of star players, long after fans have already purchased tickets. In the process, the NBA has effectively disincentivized buying tickets early.

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This trend comes as the NBA asks fans to pay more to watch regular-season games. Under the league's new 11-year broadcast agreements, games now air on ESPN, NBC, Peacock, and Amazon Prime, with the latter two requiring paid monthly subscriptions in addition to cable.

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Injuries are unavoidable in any sport. But there is a difference between legitimate injury and choosing to rest for minor aches because the game carries little importance.

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