Albuquerque Journal

Upcoming play-in tourney has many detractors

In the end, only the losers will be whining

- BY TIM REYNOLDS

There will be three types of people in the NBA two weeks from now. Group 1 is those who won’t be in the play-in tournament. Group 2 is those who will use it to get to the playoffs. Group 3 is those who will make the tournament and see their seasons end there. Group 1 won’t care. Group 2 will love it. Group 3 will hate it. The play-in tournament, which starts May 18, is just two weeks away. Fans are going to embrace it and the ratings will be big, since the games will all absolutely matter and that’s what everybody wants. The games will have an NCAA Tournament feel, win-orelse, Game 7-type stuff. All six games will either send a team to the playoffs, or send a team home, or both.

There’s a lot to like about all of that.

There also will be naysayers, the level of volume of their complaints when it’s all said and done to be determined based on what transpires. There’s a chance that a No. 7 or No. 8 team — a team that would have ordinarily gone to the playoffs — will get bumped. There’s also a chance that someone will get hurt, as if 73 or 74 games is somehow that much more physically demanding than 72 games.

For now, those who need something to complain about will complain about the play-in games because they’re low-hanging fruit, easy to pounce upon. LeBron James said whoever came up with the tournament “needs to be fired,” offering that opinion Sunday night after the Los Angeles Lakers lost to Toronto in a game that moved the defending champions closer to possibly falling into the play-in round.

It should be noted that the Raptors played that game with desperatio­n — almost like they want to get into the play-in round, or something. If Toronto is going to the playoffs, the play-in is the only realistic path toward getting there. And other teams are embracing it as well, because of the second-chance opportunit­y it provides.

For the league, the teams that get to play host to these games and the television partners, the six extra games will mean more revenue gets generated. (Spoiler alert: That’s good for everyone.) For the teams involved, it will be more games immediatel­y after a jammed season and, for some, a short offseason. They may say that’s unfair, especially if they lose these games.

Here’s a way to avoid that unfairness: don’t finish seventh, eighth, ninth or 10th.

The 12 teams with top-six seeds in the Eastern and Western Conference­s will get basically a week off before the playoffs start. They won’t complain about that. The 10 teams that miss everything, they won’t complain either since they’ll be too busy packing for vacation. And the four teams that earn playoff spots from the playin games, they’ll be sending the league thank-you notes.

The four teams that go to the play-in and get eliminated, they’ll probably blast the format instead of putting the blame for missing the playoffs where it belongs — on themselves.

If traditiona­lists don’t like change because, well, they just don’t like change, that’s understand­able. But just imagine some of the possibilit­ies that might await two weeks from now: Stephen Curry and Golden State against Gregg Popovich and San Antonio in an eliminatio­n game, the Boston Celtics and Miami Heat — East finalists last year — facing off in a one-game showdown, or Damian Lillard in another high-drama moment that he’s embraced plenty of times already in his career.

There isn’t much not to like about the prospects of any of those happenings.

James has some problems now, and they don’t include the play-in tournament or his take that the person who came up with the idea should be fired. His sprained right ankle clearly hasn’t healed. He’s not in rhythm after missing basically a third of the season with the ankle, didn’t look right in his two appearance­s since coming back, the Lakers have been awful without him and they’re now in some serious trouble. They do not, in any way, look like a championsh­ip team at this point.

They might wind up needing the play-in. Nobody saw that coming, especially after a championsh­ip last fall, especially after James was very high — if not atop — the MVP conversati­on for much of the first half of the season.

James doesn’t like the idea of the play-in tournament now. His stance would probably change if it winds up being the mechanism that gets the Lakers back to the playoffs.

Whether he likes it or not, embrace the play-in idea. It’s here. It’s almost certainly here to stay.

Tuesday games

BUCKS 103, NETS 118: In Milwaukee, Giannis Antetokoun­mpo scored 36 points and Milwaukee used a fourth-quarter rally to beat Brooklyn for the second time in three days.

Milwaukee blew a 10-point lead in the second half and trailed 103-97 with 10 minutes left, but it responded with an 18-1 run to clinch a fifth straight playoff appearance.

Brooklyn cut the margin to four with 1:02 left, but Antetokoun­mpo sank a pair of free throws and Jrue Holiday made a steal in the final minute to seal the victory.

Kyrie Irving scored 38 points for the Nets, and Kevin Durant had 32.

Khris Middleton and Holiday each had 23 points for Milwaukee. Antetokoun­mpo also grabbed 12 rebounds, and Donte DiVincenzo finished with 10 points and 15 boards.

Brooklyn (43-23) fell 1½ games behind Philadelph­ia (44-21) in the race for the top seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs. Milwaukee (41-24) is third in the East, three behind Philadelph­ia and 1½ behind Brooklyn.

SUNS 134, CAVALIERS 118 (OT): In Cleveland, Devin Booker scored 31 points, and Chris Paul had 23 and 16 assists as Phoenix stayed in step with Utah atop the Western Conference by outlasting Cleveland for its fifth straight win.

Mikal Bridges made two 3-pointers, dunked and had a block as Phoenix scored the first 15 points in OT to finally put away the Cavs.

MAVERICKS 127, HEAT 113: In Miami, Tim Hardaway Jr. made 10 3-pointers and scored 36 points, Luka Doncic added 23 points and the Mavericks moved up to the No. 5 spot in the Western Conference by topping the short-handed Heat.

Duncan Robinson and Goran Dragic each scored 19 for Miami, which remained No. 6 in the Eastern Conference.

PELICANS 108, WARRIORS 103: In New Orleans, Lonzo Ball hit seven 3-pointers and capped a 33-point performanc­e with a stepback jumper with 25.3 seconds left, followed by four free throws in the final 15 seconds, and the Pelicans pulled out a crucial victory over the Warriors.

Stephen Curry, who had 37 points and hit eight 3s.

CLIPPERS 105, RAPTORS 100: In Los Angeles, Paul George and Marcus Morris scored 22 points each as Los Angeles rallied for a victory over Toronto to snap a three-game skid.

Reggie Jackson added 18 points and Kawhi Leonard had 13 to help the Clippers avoid their first fourgame losing streak of the season.

George and Jackson hit 3-pointers in the final two minutes, snapping a 99-all tie and putting the Clippers in control.

KINGS 103, THUNDER 99: In Oklahoma City, Buddy Hield had 18 points and 11 rebounds to help the Kings beat the Thunder for their third straight win.

HORNETS 102, PISTONS 99: In Detroit, LaMelo Ball scored 23 points, including two free throws with 5.8 seconds left, as Charlotte beat Detroit.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Los Angeles’ LeBron James, center, shown shooting against Toronto on Sunday night, has voiced his opposition to the play-in tournament the league is running.
MARK J. TERRILL/ASSOCIATED PRESS Los Angeles’ LeBron James, center, shown shooting against Toronto on Sunday night, has voiced his opposition to the play-in tournament the league is running.

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