Since its launch in 2008, nbamaniacs has had a clear editorial purpose: to report on the NBA in Spanish with insight, without sensationalism, and with a distinctive voice. We’re not trying to be the first to report everything — but we always aim to offer a rigorous, independent, and well-contextualized perspective.
What we cover and how we cover it
Our editorial approach is based on selection, depth, and responsibility. In a league with over 1,200 games per season and a constant flood of content, we carefully choose which stories to tell — and how to tell them.
- We’re not a volume-driven outlet, but one focused on quality. We cover between two and five games daily, prioritizing sporting or editorial value over media hype.
- There are no favorites. If a team doesn’t appear one day or over a stretch of games, it’s not due to bias — we apply objective editorial criteria.
- Our topics range from pure basketball to trade rumors, historical analysis, the cultural impact of the league, and the economic and contractual aspects that shape the game.
What we don’t do
- We don’t fuel baseless rumors or jump into hollow speculation cycles.
- We don’t take quotes out of context or create clickbait headlines.
- We don’t publish automated recaps or filler content: every piece we publish has purpose, voice, and added value.
Short- and long-term goals
- In the short term, we aim to maintain the quality and consistency of our daily coverage, adapting to breaking news without losing our style or principles.
- In the long term, we want to continue building a solid and valuable archive about the NBA in Spanish: stats, context, history, and useful resources for both fans and professionals. Projects like our glossary, salary database, and historical summaries are part of that commitment.
Our unique value
Our coverage is aimed at the demanding reader. The kind who not only wants to know what happened, but why it happened, how it fits into the bigger picture of the league, and what might come next. That’s our turf.