basketball

NBA players union says 65-game rule for awards 'must be abolished or reformed'

Yahoo Sports

This comes in the wake of Cade Cunningham's collapsed lung, taking him from likely First Team All-NBA to potentially missing qualification.

Cade Cunningham appeared on track for a top-five finish in MVP voting (he was third in the last ESPN straw pol l) and a First Team All-NBA nod. Then he suffered a collapsed lung diving for a loose ball last week. There is no timetable for his return, but there is a chance he will miss the rest of the regular season, or at least enough games that he will not meet the NBA's 65-game threshold to qualify for postseason awards.

Cunningham would have to play in five more to qualify. That led to this statement today from the NBPA, the NBA's players' union: "Cade Cunningham's potential ineligibility for postseason awards after a career-defining season is a clear indictment of the 65-game rule and yet another example of why it must be abolished or reformed to create an exception for significant injuries. Since its implementation, far too many deserving players have been unfairly disqualified from end-of-season honors by this arbitrary and overly rigid quota.

" Cunningham's agent, Jeff Schwartz of Excel Sports, gave this statement to ESPN’s Shams Charania . "Cade has delivered a first-team All-NBA season. If he falls just short of an arbitrary games-played threshold due to legitimate injury, it should not disqualify him from recognition he has clearly earned over the course of the season.

The league should be rewarding excellence, not enforcing rigid cutoffs that ignore context. An exception needs to be made. " Cunningham is not alone.