The NBA is currently riding a massive financial high, having recently secured a staggering $76 billion media rights deal. With their pockets lined and global interest surging, the league has its sights set firmly on the future, which includes an highly anticipated expansion to 32 teams, with Las Vegas and Seattle emerging as the absolute frontrunners. From a purely business and revenue standpoint, adding two new franchises in deeply passionate sports markets seems like a guaranteed slam dunk. However, when you peel back the financial layers and look directly at the on-court basketball product, a fierce debate has erupted among some of the game’s most respected legends. At the center of this heated controversy are Hall of Famer Tracy McGrady and the always outspoken Gilbert Arenas.

Tracy McGrady, never one to mince his words, recently sparked a massive conversation by strongly opposing the league’s upcoming expansion plans. During a candid podcast appearance, T-Mac did not hold back his criticism of the current state of the NBA. While acknowledging that the move would obviously increase revenue and that a city like Seattle undeniably deserves a team, his primary concern is the actual talent pool. According to McGrady, the league simply does not possess enough elite, franchise-altering talent to justify watering down the product across 32 teams.
McGrady’s argument is rooted in what he views as a noticeable decline in the quality of night-to-night basketball. He openly called out struggling franchises like the Brooklyn Nets and the Washington Wizards, labeling their current iterations as practically “unwatchable.” For McGrady, the issue is not that players cannot score—scoring is arguably higher than ever—but rather a severe lack of true franchise cornerstones. He questioned where the next generation of players like Steph Curry or Damian Lillard are coming from; players who possess the unique blend of leadership, charisma, and transcendent skill required to carry the entire weight of a brand-new franchise on their shoulders. Furthermore, T-Mac pointed to the rampant tanking epidemic currently plaguing the league. If several of the existing 30 teams are intentionally losing games just to secure top draft picks because they lack foundational talent, how can the NBA logically justify adding two more rosters to the mix?
It is a sobering and highly analytical take from a player who carried expansion-era franchises on his back during his prime. However, not everyone agreed with McGrady’s pessimistic outlook on the modern talent pool. Enter Gilbert Arenas.
Never one to shy away from a viral moment, Gilbert Arenas immediately fired back at McGrady’s comments with a hilarious, unfiltered, and deeply chaotic history lesson. Arenas took direct aim at the idea that past eras of the NBA were somehow overflowing with superior talent. To prove his point, “Agent Zero” went straight for the bizarre and often forgotten realities of the NBA Drafts from the 1970s and 1980s.

Arenas aggressively pointed out that during the 1980s, the league drafted more total players in a single decade than they have in the last forty years combined. He used this statistic to mock the perceived depth of the era. He hilariously reminded his audience that the league was once so desperate for publicity and so lacking in profound basketball talent that teams literally drafted track stars like Bruce Jenner, a woman, and infamously, a literal wooden chair. Arenas’s overarching point was incredibly simple: if the NBA could survive and successfully expand by four teams during the chaotic, often untalented era of the 1980s, then today’s highly skilled, globally sourced NBA can easily absorb two more franchises in Las Vegas and Seattle.
While Arenas’s rant was undeniably entertaining and incredibly viral, it did require some historical context that he conveniently left out of his explosive counter-argument. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, the NBA was legitimately facing bankruptcy. The league was struggling to secure television deals, attendance was dismal, and the overall brand was failing. To generate headlines and clout before the era of the internet, teams engaged in publicity stunts during the draft, which at the time consisted of a grueling ten rounds. The sheer volume of players drafted in the 80s was simply a byproduct of the draft’s length, not an indicator of the era’s basketball talent. The vast majority of those later-round picks never stepped foot on an NBA court, as rosters were strictly limited to 12 to 15 men.
Furthermore, Arenas glossed over the fact that the 1980s saw the addition of five new franchises—the most rapid expansion in league history—largely because the arrival of Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, and eventually Michael Jordan literally saved the league and demanded a wider footprint. Since 1995, the league has only added a handful of teams, allowing the talent to concentrate and develop.
So, who is actually right in this generational clash? Tracy McGrady’s concerns are highly valid for the immediate present. When you watch a Tuesday night game between two lottery-bound teams, the lack of competitive, high-IQ basketball can be glaring. The gap between the elite contenders and the bottom-feeders is wide, and adding two more teams will inevitably create a few years of growing pains and potentially ugly basketball for those new franchises.

However, Gilbert Arenas’s underlying belief in the modern player is also correct. The game is more global than ever before. Elite talent is pouring in from Europe, Africa, and Australia, fundamentally shifting the landscape of the league. While the initial expansion draft might create some diluted rosters, the sheer volume of skilled basketball players worldwide suggests that the league will eventually stabilize.
Ultimately, the NBA is a business, and the $76 billion TV deal ensures that expansion is not a matter of if, but when. Las Vegas and Seattle will get their teams. There will undoubtedly be growing pains, and as McGrady warned, some unwatchable basketball in the early years. But as Arenas hilariously pointed out, the league has survived drafting wooden chairs and track stars; it will certainly survive adding two more cities to its empire.
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