Tanking has plagued the NBA in ways that sometimes it simply feels unwatchable. Imagine tuning into a game, and you feel that the teams are playing their best game. Losing on purpose? Seems like it. And all because they want to have an edge in the draft odds. Well, not anymore. Why?
Because the NBA presented three anti-tanking proposals to its Board of Governors in New York. The league will revise the proposals, and it will hold a formal vote in May. Per Shams Charania, all three proposals would significantly alter the current system. They share a core idea—adding playoff teams to the lottery. Beyond that, each model takes a very different path.
The NBA’s 3-step anti-tanking guideline
Let’s see what the league has in store for teams like the Utah Jazz, Brooklyn Nets, Washington Wizards, and others.
- All 18 teams would enter the draft lottery—10 that miss the play-in and the eight that qualify for it.
According to the first proposal, as outlined by Shams Charania, the bottom 10 teams would each carry an identical 8% shot at climbing the lottery ladder. Meanwhile, the NBA would distribute the remaining 20% among the eight play-in teams, sliding from 11th to 18th. Then the lottery would decide all 18 positions, turning the entire order into a high-stakes shuffle.
This means the league no longer gives the absolute worst team a big edge, and even mid-tier bad teams now have a real shot. As a result, there’s far less incentive to fully tank, keeping competition alive and the lottery unpredictable.
- Under this model, 22 teams enter the lottery pool. That includes the 10 teams that miss the play-in, the eight that reach it, and the four that exit in the first round of the playoffs. The league would rank them based on a two-year record. That approach mirrors how the WNBA structures its lottery weighting.
Now, according to the second proposal, each team would need to hit a minimum win floor each season to curb extreme losing. For instance, if the floor is 20 wins, the league would count a 14-68 team as 20-62 for lottery purposes. Performance would average over two seasons, so a 40-win season followed by a 20-win season becomes 30 wins. The lottery would still determine the top four picks, keeping the high-stakes excitement alive.
The lottery pool expands to 22 teams: the same 18 non-playoff squads (7–15 seeds) plus four first-round playoff losers. Odds now reward consistent performance, and falling below the minimum still counts as hitting it. Teams can’t tank for a single season, and mediocre playoff teams get a subtle nudge into the lottery, making the entire system smarter, fairer, and far harder to game.
The NBA presented three comprehensive anti-tanking concepts to its Board of Governors on Wednesday, with modifications expected to each before a formal vote in May, per ESPN sources.
1. 18 teams in draft lottery (seeds 7-15 in each conference) – flattened odds, with bottom 10…
— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) March 27, 2026
- Meanwhile, the NBA is looking into a “5-by-5” model. Under this format, the same 18 teams from the first concept—the 10 that miss the play-in and the eight that qualify—would enter the lottery. Next, the five worst teams would receive equal odds, with probabilities gradually decreasing for the rest. The league would conduct separate drawings for each of the top five picks in the draft.
Lastly, according to the third proposal, the spotlight falls on the bottom five teams. Each of these squads gets identical odds for the No. 1 pick, leveling the playing field. The lottery only decides picks 1–5, while the remaining 13 teams enter a separate drawing. A minimum floor, such as 10 wins, ensures that extremely poor teams don’t gain an extra advantage, keeping competition meaningful.
This means being the absolute worst team offers no extra perk over being fifth-worst. Even if last season’s lowest teams like the Utah Jazz, Washington Wizards, and New Orleans Pelicans missed a top-five pick, they couldn’t fall below 10th. The system rewards competitiveness and discourages full-scale tanking, making every game count while keeping the lottery thrilling.
How was tanking affecting the NBA draft odds previously?
The NBA Draft Lottery decides the top 14 picks for non-playoff teams to maintain competitive balance and limit tanking. Before 2019, the worst teams gained massive advantages, with the three lowest-ranked squads holding a 25% chance at the No. 1 pick and a 75% chance at a top-four selection. This made losing deliberately highly rewarding and encouraged teams to intentionally drop games for better draft positioning.
Since 2019, the league flattened the odds. Now, the three worst teams each have a 14% shot at No. 1, and their top-four chances cap at 52.1%. The 10th-worst team owns only a 3% chance. Officials randomly draw picks 1–4, while picks 5–14 follow the inverse order of record, preventing extreme losses from dominating the lottery.
The lottery uses 14 ping pong balls numbered 1–14, with officials drawing four balls to create over 1,000 combinations. Officials assign each team’s chances, and no team can move up more than 10 spots. This system keeps uncertainty high while curbing full-scale tanking.
| Team | Odds for No. 1 pick |
| 1st | 14% |
| 2nd | 14% |
| 3rd | 14% |
| 4th | 12.5% |
| 5th | 10.5% |
| 10th | 3% |
| 14th | 0.5% |
What has the NBA recently done to punish tanking teams?
The NBA fined the Utah Jazz $100,000 for keeping Lauri Markkanen out against the Washington Wizards on March 5 and in other recent games. Similarly, the Atlanta Hawks faced a $100,000 penalty after Trae Young missed an NBA Cup game, even though an independent physician confirmed he could have played. Now, at Wednesday’s press conference in Manhattan, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver announced changes are coming.
After heavy criticism of teams chasing top spots in the deep 2026 draft class, he confirmed the incentive structure will clearly shift next season to curb tanking and promote fair competition. “I do think ultimately this is a decision that needs to be made at the ownership level,” Silver firmly stated. “It has business implications, has basketball implications, has integrity, integrity, implications for the league. So it’s one that we take very seriously, and we are going to fix it. Full stop.”

Silver also explained that a true rebuild is one done with integrity, but today it’s hard to tell rebuilding apart from tanking. Misaligned incentives, lineup decisions, player injuries, and medical input make the distinction blurry. Silver further emphasized that incremental tweaks haven’t worked, signaling the league plans more significant changes to ensure fairness and curb strategic losing.
Therefore, the NBA is taking a hard line on tanking. Teams can no longer exploit the system or blur the line between losing and rebuilding. With new lottery structures, stricter participation rules, and revised incentives, every game will matter. The league is demanding integrity, accountability, and fairness, ensuring competition stays genuine and that strategic losing will face real consequences.














































