The Washington Wizards dream offseason was put to rest quickly when they landed the No. 6 overall pick in the NBA Draft Lottery a week ago.
From being tied with the highest odds to draft Cooper Flagg, to falling outside of the top five as a whole, the Wizards misfortune over the years seemed like it's destined to continue.
And while Washington landing at No. 6 overall very well could have been just bad luck, NBA legend Shaquille O'Neal's recent comments about his NBA Draft experience indicates that the Wizards bad luck may not have impacted their landing spot in the draft lottery.
Instead, there may just be a league-wide problem that they could have never overcome.
Shaq's comments suggest league problem
In a recent interview with Ashley Nevel, Shaquille O'Neale eye raising comments only sparked buzz around what everyone was already thinking about the NBA Draft:
O'Neal suggested in a recent interview that prior to the 1992 NBA Draft Lottery, the NBA Commissioner at the time, David Stern, asked him if he'd rather play where it was hot or cold. The LSU product answered hot, and lo and behold, the Orlando Magic was granted the No. 1 overall pick and the rights to draft O'Neal, the top prospect in the 1992 draft.
And while these comments obviously support the claim that the NBA Draft Lottery and the draft itself is rigged, it's not the only questionable situation in the past that makes fans around the world believe that the NBA is manipulating these type of events to have their hand in where certain players land at this time of year.
If this theory were to be true, it's clear that a team like the Wizards would never be able to overcome this league-wide problem.
Washington isn't a huge market and they don't have the young premiere talent or star players on the level of team's like the Dallas Mavericks, San Antonio Spurs or the Philadelphia 76ers - the three teams who miraculously landed top three picks in next month's NBA Draft despite their low odds.
The Wizards, Utah Jazz and Charlotte Hornets all entered the draft lottery tied for the highest-odds to earn not only the No. 1 overall pick, but a top three pick. Despite that, none of these three teams managed to land in the top three.
If the league is going to continue to pick and choose the franchises that they award top players to, it puts teams like the Wizards in position to feel hopeless.
Obviously, the NBA is a business at the end of the day, but if the league is will always have a hand in dictating where top prospects play, what's the point of having an NBA Draft Lottery if it truly is rigged like Shaq's comments suggests.