NEW YORK — Adam Silver's NBA has endless action and daily drama. That's the offseason. Then the regular season starts, and some of the intrigue ends. Most predictions again see Golden State and Cleveland standing above their challengers for a fourth straight season, a pattern of dominance that even has Michael Jordan fearing a league where 28 teams are "garbage." The NBA commissioner isn't worried. Silver believes great teams are good for business, the way Jordan's Bulls were in the 1990s and the way Stephen Curry's and LeBron James' teams are now. The commissioner says any of them can be beaten, too. "Sometimes it's just the nature of things, but I'm confident that given some of the moves that our teams made in the offseason that there's no doubt there are multiple teams gunning for the Warriors and for that matter gunning for the Cavaliers this season as well," Silver said. Jordan now owns the Charlotte Hornets, one of perhaps 25 teams in the NBA with little-to-no hope of winning a title this season — or maybe anytime soon. The Hornets have just one All-Star, not nearly enough to compete when the Warriors have arguably four top-20 players, and the Cavaliers restocked around James with the likes of Dwyane Wade and Derrick Rose after Golden State's romp last June. "I think it's going to hurt the overall aspect of the league from a competitive standpoint," Jordan told "Cigar Aficionado" magazine about multiple stars joining together on the same team. "You're going to ha