As the NBA regular season winds down, the debate surrounding the league’s newly implemented 65-game threshold for regular-season awards has reached a boiling point. Several high-profile superstars have openly criticized the mandate after falling short of the required games due to injury. However, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver took to the podium this week to firmly defend the policy.
Protecting the Product
Silver argued that the rule is functioning exactly as intended: combating the epidemic of “load management” and ensuring that the league’s best players are on the floor for the fans who purchase tickets and television packages. “The fans are the lifeblood of this league,” Silver stated. “If an award signifies you are the best player in the NBA for that specific season, you must be available to play a substantial majority of the games. That is the baseline expectation.”
A Divisive Policy
While executives and broadcast partners largely support the rule, the NBPA (Players Association) has expressed frustration that legitimate, contact-based injuries are costing players millions of dollars in super-max contract escalators. Despite the pushback, Silver made it clear that the 65-game rule is here to stay, forcing teams to completely rethink how they manage player health throughout the grueling 82-game campaign.

