07-13 10:02Views 5823
Milwaukee Bucks head coach Doc Rivers declared during a Summer League interview that the NBA currently has significant parity, stating, "I don’t think the NBA has been more open to anybody winning a title in 20 years." He believes this level of competitiveness is the best the league has seen since the early 2000s.
Rivers supports his declaration by pointing out the lack of repeat champions since the Golden State Warriors in 2017 and 2018. The last six NBA champions have all been different teams: the Toronto Raptors, Los Angeles Lakers, Milwaukee Bucks, Golden State Warriors (again, but not consecutively), Denver Nuggets, and Boston Celtics. This marks the first time in NBA history that there hasn't been a repeat champion within such a timeframe.
Rivers views this constant turnover of champions as a positive development for the league. While acknowledging it makes achieving a repeat or three-peat much harder, and some might argue it diminishes historic rivalries, he contends that the unpredictability of which new team will win next increases overall intrigue. He sees the current widespread competitiveness as beneficial for the NBA's future.
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