The NBA’s big tanking fix is now in place.The league’s board of governors approved a comprehensive reconfiguration of its draft lottery rules Thursday by a remote vote, according to two sources with knowledge of the vote. The NBA will replace its previous draft lottery system, which gave the worst teams in the league the best chance at getting a high lottery pick, with a new format that tries to divorce team performance from lottery luck.The new rules passed 29-1, with the Memphis Grizzlies as the lone “no” vote.“We have to fix incentives, so teams aren’t out there with an incentive to be bad,” NBA commissioner Adam Silver said Wednesday on the Pat McAfee Show. “It’s the No. 1 issue for our fans right now. Nobody wants to see that. It completely obviously goes away once we get to the playoffs, but we just got to fix that problem.”Some NBA team executives have said the new system will trade off one set of problems for another. Some of the executives canvassed by The Athletic this month believe the league is making an overcorrection, while others think that the new rules will make it harder for the league’s worst teams to escape the bottom of the standings.Others pointed out that the incoming format will impact already made trades centered around draft picks, as the value of those picks has changed.Silver admitted Wednesday that “some people think it may even be a bit of an overcorrection.” But he believes it is a necessary step for a league that has changed the lottery rules numerous times since it was instituted in 1985.“You need incentives to perform,” Silver said. “I mean, we’re actually calling the system for the three worst records are going to have slightly worse odds than they would have otherwise had. And we’re stealing a term from soccer, which is relegation, and there is a notion that possibly there should be a penalty for performing poorly. I mean, in real relegation, you’re actually out of the major league. Here, if you’re the worst performing team in the NBA, you still get your same economic share of national and global television revenue.“You still get your same share of national and global merchandising revenue. And I think at the end of the day, you want the greatest incentive to be successful, so those teams still have very good chances to get a top draft pick, but I’ll just also add that’s not the only way to build a team.”This story will be updated.