SIGN ME UP FOR 30 DAYS OF FRESH COFFEE
CLICK HERE

By Marc Lawrence
Tuesday, Mar 31

ADAM SILVER’S
BIGGEST TEST

MLC

“We are going to fix it, full stop.”

Those were the words from NBA Commissioner Adam Silver when asking about the excessive ‘tanking’ going on the league today.

The NBA's tanking crisis is Adam Silver’s biggest test yet.

He acknowledged that the current incentives make it hard to distinguish between legitimate rebuilding and outright tanking, and that being a middle-of-the-pack team often feels like the worst position due to draft implications.

Tanking surged in visibility during the 2025-26 season due to a strong upcoming draft class and perceived overt “resting” or lineup decisions that prioritized future assets over current competitiveness. Silver has stressed that this undermines the integrity of competition and puts pressure on fans and teams.

The league is aiming for changes that alter incentives so that finishing with the absolute worst record is no longer the clear path to the best odds.

They primarily deal with expanding draft lottery eligibility to play-in teams, including using a weighted draft lottery system where every team would be lottery-eligible, akin to the methid currently in place kin the WNBA.

“The word changes, behavior changes,” Silver said, “I don’t think the changes we made over the last 40 years or so were necessarily wrong. Match is math.”

He also cautioned against the framing of any upcoming lotter reform as a “forvever fix.”

Most Frequently Cited "Tanking" Teams

These teams are repeatedly mentioned across reports for blatant efforts, long losing streaks, youth development focus, or clear incentive to lose:

  • Indiana Pacers — Often cited as having the worst or near-worst record (around 15–17 wins); multiple 15+ game losing streaks; fined by the league; strong incentive due to draft pick protections.

  • Washington Wizards — Frequent 10–16 game losing streaks (including a current one); consistently among the very worst records; long-term rebuild mode.

  • Brooklyn Nets — Openly rebuilding (owner has acknowledged it); very low win total; focusing on young players and future assets.

  • Utah Jazz — Fined $500k for pulling stars (e.g., Lauri Markkanen, Jaren Jackson Jr.) in the fourth quarter of close games; hybrid approach of acquiring talent while still chasing lottery odds.

  • Sacramento Kings — Long 0–16 losing streak earlier; playing prospects heavily; out of contention and prioritizing future.

Other Teams Often Mentioned in the "Tank Watch"

These joined later or are in the gray area of rebuilding/collapsing seasons:

  • Memphis Grizzlies

  • Dallas Mavericks

  • New Orleans Pelicans

  • Chicago Bulls

  • Portland Trail Blazers

ON TODAY'S SCORECARD
“Utterly Impossible”

MLC

The subtitle of this recap? Straight from the great Bill Raftery — and it fit like a glove after UConn stunned top-seeded Duke Sunday in one of the wildest finishes March Madness has ever delivered.

Instant classic.

Duke looked home free — up 19 late in the first half, and still holding a 10-point cushion with under seven minutes to play. But UConn kept clawing, trimming the deficit to two with 10 seconds left.

Still, it was Duke’s game to lose.

Inbounding under their own basket, up 72-70… disaster struck.

A deflected pass found its way into the hands of UConn freshman Braylon Mullins — and just like that, history was waiting.

The unlikely hero of one of the greatest NCAA Tournament games ever didn’t even want the shot.

After corralling the loose ball near midcourt, Mullins immediately tried to give it up — whipping a pass to Alex Karaban on the right wing. Understandable. Mullins had been ice cold, mired in a month-long slump and 0-for-4 from deep on the night.

I saw five seconds on the clock,” he said, “so I tried to get it to someone who’d made one.”

But the basketball gods had other plans.

Karaban, blanketed, sent it right back — now under three seconds.

No options. No time. No choice.

Rise. Fire. Pray.

Splash.

Mullins drilled a 35-footer from the edge of the logo as time expired, lifting UConn to a stunning 73-72 victory — punching their ticket to a third Final Four in four years while ripping Duke’s heart out in the process.

A shot for the ages.

Absolutely. And if you think this was a one-off miracle… think again.

Check the STAT OF THE DAY below — it says otherwise.


GRINDING OUT THE PROFITS
You Know When You Know

Portland over LA CLIPPERS by 7

Another key Western Conference playoff clash finds the No. 8 seed Clippers hosting the No. 9 seed Trail Blazers, with Portland lugging a SSR2 hammer (same-season double revenge) into the fray. It’s a role in which the Blazers have cashed tickets in this series, going 6-2-1 ATS in their last nine tries. And they’re not just showing up – they’re surging, winning 14 of their last 20 games outright at the right time of the season. Meanwhile, the Clippers are barely treading water, dropping five of their last six at press time. Worse yet, Los Angeles has one eye on deck with a SSR2 date against San Antonio – and it shows. The Clips are a money-burning 5-11 ATS in games leading up to Spurs showdowns. Put it all together and… you know what to do.

From this week’s PLAYBOOK NBA Only Hoops Newsletter

Click here to Download your Copy


STAT OF THE DAY
134-1

The record of NCAA Tournament No. 1 seeds with a 15-point lead at halftime. It was
134-0 until Duke collapsed against
UConn on Sunday.

MLC



TRENDING TODAY
What Are the Odds

So, what are the odds of Illinois meeting Michigan in the NCAA Tourney title game on Monday?

Let’s break it down this way ...

Illinois at -1.5 against UConn has a 56% chance of winning the game, while the Huskies own a 44%-win probability to beat the Illini.

Michigan at -1 against Arizona is listed at 53%, while the Wildcats have a 47% likelihood of beating the Wolverines.

Moving on to Monday’s projections, should those results happen as described, Illinois and Michigan would be the likely survivors to play one another in the championship. The odds of the matchup.

The odds on the title game pairings are...

Michigan vs Illinois → +242

Illinois vs Arizona → +291

Michigan vs UConn → +315

UConn vs Arizona → +374

FYI: The last time a championship game involved two teams from the same conference was 1988 when Kansas beat Oklahoma, 83-79, as an 8-point favorite.


PERCOLATING

54% Overturn Rate

The ABS era in MLB is off and running, with 54% of challenged calls (94 of 175) overturned through Sunday so far in the young season.

That works out to 3.7 challenges per game, with pitchers and catchers (63%) having a much higher success rate than batters (42%).

Tough day at the office: Umpire C.B. Bucknor had six calls overturned in Saturday's Red Sox-Reds game. That included two consecutive blown calls in one at-bat, both correctly challenged by Cincinnati slugger Eugenio Suárez. And on Sunday, umpire Chris Segal one-upped Bucknor with seven calls overturned in the Orioles-Twins game.


QUOTE OF THE DAY

"The first time you quit it's hard.
The second time, it gets easier.
The third time, you don't even
have to think about it."

- Paul "Bear" Bryant


ASK MARC

Mike B. from Lincoln Ca wanted to say - The question of allowing unlimited draft pick trades: Classic question of "Win at all cost mentality" vs. “Plant your garden wisely." Just ask the Dallas Cowboys about their Herschel Walker trade. To quote Indiana Jones ... “Choose Wisely!”

Marc Says: Sage words of advice, Mike. I remember asking Mike Ditka at a BoDog Conference in Las Vegas back in 1999 why he dealt away all 12 of his draft picks just to move up and grab the No. 5 overall selection — Texas Heisman winner Ricky Williams. Ditka was all in. Hook, line, and mustache. He had convinced himself Williams was a franchise-altering force — the next Earl Campbell. Two months before the draft, at the NFL owners meetings, he boldly proclaimed he’d “trade his entire draft” to get him. And he did. The result? A 3–13 disaster, a pink slip at season’s end, and a gutted roster that left the Saints talent-starved for years. Ditka’s response to my question? He believed Williams was a generational back — worth the risk. Turns out, the risk cashed… just not the way he drew it up. Instead of a generational legend, he got a generational pot-smoking burnout —whose flame flickered out long before his legacy ever lit up the league.

 


The Coffee Club is a presentation of PlaybookSports.com
Feel free to share this e-newsletter with friends.

Online: PlaybookSports.com • follow @MarcLawrence •  email: coffee@PlaybookSports.com • Office: 954.377.8000


lock Privacy Policy
Playbooksports.com will never share or sell your information for any reason.No Spam. No Hassle. Unsubscribe Anytime.


Playbook (R) and Marc Lawrence's Preferred Picks (R) are registered trademarks of Preferred Picks Publications Inc. Copyright (c) 2026c) Playbook(R) Enterprises Inc. Contact Support: 1-954-377-8000. All information contained herein is for amusement purposes only. Any contrary of such information is specifically prohibited.
lock

 

Coffee In One Hand. Confidence In The Other. The Coffee Club Way.


SIGN ME UP FOR 30 DAYS OF FRESH COFFEE DELIVERED DAILY TO MY INBOX
CLICK HERE



About Us Contact Us Log In Member Center Create An Account Privacy Policy Store

Copyright © 2026 © Playbook® Enterprises Inc.   Contact Support:  1-954-377-8000  All Logos © to their respective organizations.
This website does not endorse or encourage illegal gambling.
All information contained herein is for amusement purposes only. Any contrary of such information is specifically prohibited.