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The NBA is considering an upper spending limit to restrict how much teams can spend on players

NBA ‘is considering an upper spending limit’ to restrict how much teams can spend on players each year – with reigning champion Golden State Warriors expected to splurge almost FOUR TIMES more than one side this season

The NBA wants more competitive balance and is considering an ‘upper spending limit’ that would significantly tighten the rules on how much teams can spend each year on their roster, according to reports.

The limit could essentially eliminate the luxury tax as an option for teams and would install an absolute ceiling on what can be spent each season.

The National Basketball Players Association (NBPA) is not interested in agreeing to such a plan, according to The Associated Press. The details of the new proposal were first reported by Friday ESPN and on Substack by longtime NBA reporter Marc Stein.

The idea comes at a time where some teams – the reigning NBA champion Golden State Warriors, primarily – are simply spending more than other teams either are willing or able to.

The Warriors, who are 3-2 this season after Thursday’s win over the Miami Heat, spent nearly $350 million this past season on salaries and taxes, and are projected to spend around $360 million this season.

That’s nearly four times as much as the San Antonio Spurs will spend this season, three times as much as the Memphis Grizzlies and a bit more than double the average that the other 29 clubs are on pace to spend this season.

Reigning NBA champion Golden State Warriors are simply spending more than other teams either are willing or able to - players Andrew Wiggins and Stephen Curry (R) in game Thursday

Reigning NBA champion Golden State Warriors are simply spending more than other teams either are willing or able to – players Andrew Wiggins and Stephen Curry (R) in game Thursday

Talks between the sides on the notion have been going on for some time between Commissioner Adam Silver (above), NBPA Executive Director Tamika Tremaglio and others

Talks between the sides on the notion have been going on for some time between Commissioner Adam Silver (above), NBPA Executive Director Tamika Tremaglio and others

And most of those teams – at least 20 of the 30 – aren’t in line to go into the tax this season, either.

Talks between the sides on the notion, and other matters such as reinstating the ability for players to go directly from high school to the NBA draft, have been going on for some time between Commissioner Adam Silver, NBPA Executive Director Tamika Tremaglio and others.

The current labor deal between the league and its players is set to expire after the 2023-24 season, although either side can terminate the deal a year early by announcing its intent to do so by December 15.

The league’s position on team spending isn’t difficult to figure out. If only high-spending teams in major markets can afford to pay huge salaries and tax bills, that would create a major competitive advantage.

NBA SALARIES

The NBA has a soft salary cap, meaning franchises can go over the amount in certain circumstances, like resigning their own players.

The NBA has a luxury tax threshold for example, allowing teams to exceed the salary cap as long as they pay the respective fine.

The aim of the luxury tax is to improve equality when big teams and smaller sides are acquiring free agents.

The NFL and NHL have hard salary caps, limiting how much teams can spend together.

By taking that ability away, better competition in more markets would, in theory, create more revenue – and increase player salaries.

It’s easy to see why players wouldn’t want any deal that essentially caps how high salaries can climb.

The league has a salary cap and luxury tax threshold, although those are hardly deterrents to teams willing to dig deeper than others when it comes to retaining star players.

Golden State’s proposed tax and salary bills for the 2023-24 season is about $483m as of now, but the numbers can change in the coming months based on other personnel decisions.

The Warriors have committed more than $600m in contracts to Stephen Curry, Draymond Green, Klay Thompson, Jordan Poole and Andrew Wiggins alone, including what they’re making this season.

The NBA is coming off a massive financial year, with revenue topping $10 billion for the first time and basketball-related income reaching $8.9 billion, another record.

‘The numbers surprised me to a certain degree because it exceeded projections, and the projections represent where we think our business is going,’ Silver said in July. ‘I think it´s quite remarkable from where we came two-and-a-half years ago.’

The Warriors have committed more than $600m in contracts to Curry (above), Draymond Green, Klay Thompson, Jordan Poole and Andrew Wiggins alone.

The Warriors have committed more than $600m in contracts to Curry (above), Draymond Green, Klay Thompson, Jordan Poole and Andrew Wiggins alone.

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