Demonzfyre it's not like I don't want competition it's the fact that I get put up against people with 10 r4 champs full roster of r3s in there to and I don't even have my first r4
That's....... competition.
Do you think running against professional athletes when you don't have one leg is competition?
What? That's not the same comparison. A better comparison is this- The Colorado Rockies are the worst team in the MLB. By your logic, they shouldn't have to play the top teams that are in the same league as you.
BGs is like baseball. You're in the same league, some will be good some will be bad but in order to get to the world series, you have to face and beat the competition. If you can't beat those rosters, then you don't deserve to advance.
In baseball, the teams that don't make the postseason receive the first lottery picks in the draft, with the teams with the worst records getting higher percentages for their lottery entries. Teams that do make the postseason must wait to draft after. And there are penalties for teams that outspend their allotment in the pool, including a tax on overspending and the loss of future draft picks.
Baseball also doesn't have a regular season where the teams that dominated in the majors start the next season in the minors where they face minor league teams or amateur teams, with MLB awarding massive bonuses for beating them--bonuses which are then spent on buying the best available players and developing them.
There is no penalty on teams spending there is no salary cap teams spend as much as the billionaire owners want to spend it's actually the only professional sport out their without a salary cap
There are significant penalties on spending in baseball. Baseball has luxury caps, where you are allowed to spend as much as you want, but as you exceed certain thresholds you are required to pay fines. The Dodgers paid an extra $103m in fines last year for exceeding the luxury threshold. So it's not a hard cap, but there can be significant penalties for overspending. What you're responding to still doesn't make a ton of sense, but just wanted to clear that up. Yes, baseball doesn't have a hard cap, but they do have significant penalties that increase as teams spend more. Of course, the billionaires don't really have to care.
So it's kind of like the NBA in a way where it's not a hard cap like the nfl but depending on how much you spend if you go over thresh holds then you have fines that come with it?
They're all a little different, but baseball easily has the most free spending. Baseball has the luxury threshold that starts penalizing teams after a certain amount, but doesn't limit their spending at all. The NBA has a soft cap and a hard cap. You can exceed the soft cap, but you're penalized at different thresholds leading up to the hard cap. The NBA also does something that the MLB desperately needs to do - they have a minimum salary cap. Imagine a world where the Pittsburgh Pirates would have to invest in their team for the first time in 40 years instead of just ripping off their fans. NFL is a hard cap that you are not allowed to exceed.
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