I want to start this article with a confession. I don’t like the the word count point system. I just don’t. I have zero interest in writing a 2000 word article and little interest in reading one. I like ‘em short and sweet. I’m not saying all short and sweet articles are worth 5 but I am saying that I don’t like having to write 1000 words to get 5 points. I thought that there might be other closest haters out there like me and that our closeted contempt might be lowering the number of articles written so I decided to count up how many articles have been written each season for the past few season. Here are the results.
It turns out there has been a huge decline but not recently. The recent decline from the media point reform instituted in the 2023 has been quite modest, with the number of articles written decreasing from 23 the season before the change down to 17 this year. This small change could easily be some random fluctuation. The decline from 54 down to 21 was obviously not random. So what caused the huge drop? Around the start of the 2019 season, we instituted two changes that drastically changed the demand for points. One, we instituted the tax apron so that teams just barely over the salary cap don’t have to pay tax and, two, we made training camp free and limited it to three players (RIP, Zion). It appears that people aren’t writing as many articles, not because they don’t like the point award system or not because they don’t care about the league, but because they just don’t need as many points any more. Sure we still train players but that is more of a luxury than a need. For me, this was interesting because I expected the lower quantity to be the result of a shock to costs (a) but it actually ended up being the result of a demand shock (b).