NBA leaders are weighing three draft reform plans as the league looks for a cleaner answer to tanking. The vote matters because draft odds shape how rebuilding teams value every remaining game. The Board of Governors discussed the proposals in New York on March 27, 2026, with Adam Silver pressing for changes that would protect competitive balance without punishing every rebuilding team.
Success in the upcoming May 2026 vote depends on finding a middle ground between small-market rebuilding needs and the league's demand for nightly competitive effort.
NBA Lottery Expansion and Draft Reform Odds
Proposal one introduces an eighteen teams lottery system that sharply widens the pool of participants. This model would include the ten teams that fail to reach the play-in tournament alongside the eight teams that qualify for the play-in. Under this framework, the bottom ten teams would possess identical odds for the top pick. Such a move would remove any statistical advantage for finishing with the worst record versus the tenth-worst record. The remaining eight play-in participants would see their lottery odds distributed in a descending order based on their regular-season performance. This plan aims to stabilize the competitive floor by ensuring that falling from tenth to fourteenth in the standings offers zero draft benefit.
As it happens, this approach mirrors the league's desire to extend the success of the play-in tournament. By including play-in teams in the lottery, the NBA acknowledges that fringe postseason contenders often face the harshest path to improvement. They are frequently too good to secure elite prospects but not talented enough to advance deep into the playoffs. Providing these teams with a statistical chance at a top-four pick could theoretically prevent them from intentionally sliding into the bottom ten. Managers would be forced to weigh the value of a postseason appearance against the marginal gains of a draft slot. The league's statistical modeling suggests this would create a more balanced distribution of talent across the middle of the standings.
Silver insisted the league is going to fix it.
Governors Review Two-year Record Weighting
Proposal two represents the most radical departure from traditional draft mechanics by incorporating 22 teams into the lottery. This version includes the 18 teams mentioned in the first proposal but adds the four teams eliminated in the opening round of the playoffs. According to reports from Shams Charania, the ranking for this 22-team field would not rely solely on the current season. Instead, teams would be ranked based on their aggregate record over the past two seasons.
Using a multi-year sample size would make it nearly impossible for a team to secure a top pick through a single season of strategic losing. It rewards long-term organizational incompetence or genuine rebuilding while punishing sudden, tactical pivots toward the bottom of the standings.
Meanwhile, the inclusion of playoff teams in the lottery means a shift toward a more holistic view of team building. Only the four teams that reach the conference finals and the four that fall in the second round would be excluded from the lottery in this scenario. It would mean 73 percent of the league would have a chance, however small, to move up into the top four selections. Some governors expressed concern that this could lead to already powerful teams landing generational talents.
That said, the counter-argument suggests that the dilution of odds for the worst teams is the only way to truly disincentivize the race to the bottom. A two-year record requirement is a safeguard against healthy teams suddenly deciding to tank for a specific prospect.
"There is an aspect of team building that is called a genuine rebuild, a rebuild"
Silver used the quote above to distinguish between legitimate long-term planning and the cynical manipulation of the draft system. Genuine rebuilds often take years of patient drafting and player development. Tanking, by contrast, is often viewed as a short-term fire sale designed to maximize a specific year's lottery percentage. League officials want to preserve the former while killing the latter. But defining the line between a young roster gaining experience and a veteran roster intentionally losing is notoriously difficult for the league office. The proposed two-year record weighting is an attempt to use hard data to bridge that gap.
What It Means
Professional basketball has long tolerated the stench of intentional failure as a legitimate path to salvation, but the era of the "Process" has finally exhausted the league's patience. Rewarding incompetence is a uniquely American sporting tradition that has arguably peaked in the modern NBA, where the gap between the contenders and the bottom-feeders is often a chasm of the league's own making. Adam Silver's vow to fix this "Full stop" is a necessary piece of theater for television partners and betting houses who demand a product that actually attempts to win.
However, these three proposals reveal a league that is terrified of its own shadow. Expanding the lottery to 22 teams is not a reform; it is a confession that the regular season has become a bloated, 82-game preamble that many teams find profitable to ignore. If the NBA were truly serious about competitive integrity, it would look toward the European model of relegation, but the franchise-valuation bubble makes such a move impossible. Instead, we are left with these statistical shell games. By diluting the odds, the league is merely spreading the mediocrity thinner across the calendar.
The governors will likely choose the path of least resistance in May, opting for a version of the eighteen-team lottery that preserves the safety of the basement while pretending to care about the ceiling. It is a cosmetic fix for a structural rot that will persist as long as losing remains the most efficient way to acquire a superstar.