
Adam Silver has seemingly been untouchable for quite some time. Not anymore.
In 2014, Silver replaced David Stern, and he was viewed as the calm, steady voice the NBA needed. He handled the Donald Sterling situation swiftly and with ease. He had no problem navigating the bubble. The NBA has increased earnings considerably under his watch.
However, when Silver’s name comes up nowadays, there is a different vibe.
It is not just fans releasing frustrations online. It is analysts, former owners, radio hosts and TV personalities giving Silver some of the harshest criticism of his tenure. They are openly questioning his decision making, and some have even suggested he has ruined the game of basketball.
Sports personality Chase Senior was straight to the point. He posted on X that “Adam Silver has ruined the NBA,” pointing to tanking, an “unwatchable” regular season and an All-Star Weekend that has lost its shine.
The harsh reality is there is a growing feeling that the regular season lacks significance. A lot of fans feel like something is missing. Some games simply do not feel big anymore. It feels like players are saving their best for the playoffs instead of treating random nights in January like they actually matter.
Ten years ago, regular season games felt like you had to watch. You planned your night around them. Now, many of those same matchups do not carry that same weight. They are on, but they do not always feel important.
Criticism ramped up after reports surfaced that Silver and league officials would “seriously consider” eliminating the rookie draft if it were the only way to prevent tanking. That idea went over like a lead balloon.
Radio host Jonathan Zaslow of ESPN and SiriusXM responded by calling Silver “lost” and argued the fix is simple: “Weight the lottery evenly among all non playoff teams and move on.” In his view, blowing up the draft is overthinking it.
Tanking has been around for years, and it is not exclusive to the NBA. But it has become more visible in recent seasons. When fans believe teams are intentionally losing for better odds, trust starts to erode. Silver’s proposal only fueled that frustration.
NBA All-Star Weekend used to be something fans genuinely looked forward to. Now, for many, it feels forced and more like an obligation than a showcase.
Hall of Famer and TNT analyst Charles Barkley has openly criticized the modern NBA. He believes there is a lack of physicality and that the game lacks direction. At the same time, Bill Simmons often discusses similar concerns on his podcast, turning it into a broader conversation about whether the league needs adjustments to make games feel meaningful again.
No one is saying the NBA is collapsing financially, because it is not. The league remains globally strong, and its footprint continues to expand. But that is not what this debate is about. It is about the overall vibe and feel of the league.
Mark Cuban also pushed back on comments Silver made about the NBA being more of a highlights driven league. Cuban made it clear that fans are not just looking for clips on social media. They want to sit down and watch full games. They want easier access. They do not want to jump through hoops just to follow their team.
Maybe some of this is just fans getting older. Every generation believes the game used to be tougher and meant more.
But when former players, radio hosts and national analysts all start raising similar concerns at the same time, it makes you wonder if there is something to it.
The NBA is still a financial powerhouse with elite talent and growth potential.
The real question is not about revenue or long term stability. It is about feel. Does the NBA still feel the same to the people who grew up loving it?
For a lot of longtime fans, it does not. And when that feeling starts to fade, people notice, even if the balance sheet says everything is fine.
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