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Main Authors: Hassanzadeh, Ali, Davari, Morteza, Goossens, Dries
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.16968
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author Hassanzadeh, Ali
Davari, Morteza
Goossens, Dries
author_facet Hassanzadeh, Ali
Davari, Morteza
Goossens, Dries
contents The National Basketball Association (NBA) is actively considering the addition of two expansion teams, raising the question of how to restructure its conferences and divisions to balance travel efficiency, fairness, and revenue opportunities. This study fills a gap at the intersection of sports operations and strategic league design by providing a quantitative framework for expansion planning. We develop two optimization models: one minimizing total travel distance and another using a Nash Bargaining framework to balance travel burdens while accounting for media market size. Using data from all 30 current franchises and six candidate cities (Seattle, Las Vegas, Montreal, Vancouver, Tampa, and Mexico City), we evaluate 15 pairwise expansion scenarios under alternative season lengths and divisional formats. Results show that while the distance-minimizing model produces geographically tight divisions, the Nash Bargaining model generates more balanced outcomes, particularly for geographically isolated franchises, with only modest efficiency losses. Our study offers a flexible decision support framework for league executives, policymakers, and sports economists. It provides evidence-based insights into how expansion decisions can balance operational efficiency, fairness in competition, and access to major media markets in a multi-billion-dollar sports league.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2512_16968
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Fairness, Travel, and Market Potential: An Optimization Framework for NBA Expansion
Hassanzadeh, Ali
Davari, Morteza
Goossens, Dries
Physics and Society
The National Basketball Association (NBA) is actively considering the addition of two expansion teams, raising the question of how to restructure its conferences and divisions to balance travel efficiency, fairness, and revenue opportunities. This study fills a gap at the intersection of sports operations and strategic league design by providing a quantitative framework for expansion planning. We develop two optimization models: one minimizing total travel distance and another using a Nash Bargaining framework to balance travel burdens while accounting for media market size. Using data from all 30 current franchises and six candidate cities (Seattle, Las Vegas, Montreal, Vancouver, Tampa, and Mexico City), we evaluate 15 pairwise expansion scenarios under alternative season lengths and divisional formats. Results show that while the distance-minimizing model produces geographically tight divisions, the Nash Bargaining model generates more balanced outcomes, particularly for geographically isolated franchises, with only modest efficiency losses. Our study offers a flexible decision support framework for league executives, policymakers, and sports economists. It provides evidence-based insights into how expansion decisions can balance operational efficiency, fairness in competition, and access to major media markets in a multi-billion-dollar sports league.
title Fairness, Travel, and Market Potential: An Optimization Framework for NBA Expansion
topic Physics and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.16968