Las Vegas Review-Journal

Playoff picture is giant logjam

Western spots almost all up for grabs

- By Tim Reynolds

Let’s go ahead and put Denver and Sacramento into the Western Conference playoffs. It’s hard to imagine Memphis and Phoenix falling out of the mix, even with Ja Morant away from the Grizzlies and Kevin Durant still not able to make his home debut for the Suns because of ankle trouble. Put them on the bracket as well.

And from there, it’s anyone’s guess.

The West is an absolute mess, and the middle of the pack — the race for the last two guaranteed playoff spots and the four berths into the play-in tournament — is as muddled and murky as possible.

“Hope,” Utah coach Will Hardy said, “is a good motivator.”

True. There’s plenty of hope still out there, too.

The West has, more often than not in recent years, been the power-broker side of the NBA. Not this year. The shinier records are at the top of the Eastern Conference, which is on pace to finish with three of the best four records this season — something that hasn’t happened since 2008-09.

The West has become a logjam this year, and the standings change almost nightly. A single win or loss can change everything: Utah was ninth in the West entering Monday, and a four-point loss at Miami left the Jazz tumbling three spots to 12th. The Los Angeles Lakers, meanwhile, went from 11th to ninth — from out of the playin to back in — without even playing.

Defending champion Golden State beat Phoenix and went from sixth to fifth. After the Warriors, it’s the Los Angeles Clippers in sixth, Minnesota seventh, Dallas eighth, the Lakers ninth, New Orleans 10th, Oklahoma City 11th and the Jazz 12th.

Put another way, 2 1/2 games separated the fifth-place Warriors from the 11th-place Thunder. Only 4 1/2 games separated the Warriors from the 13th-place Portland Trail Blazers. It’s hard to envision a scenario, given how tight the standings are right now, where at least some West races for seeding don’t go down to the final day.

“No one’s really out of it right now, at this point in the Western Conference,” Hardy said.

This is exactly what the NBA wanted when it added the play-in tournament — intrigue all the way to the end of the season. Only the top six teams in each conference are guaranteed playoff spots when the regular season ends on April 9; the next four from the East and West go to a play-in tournament.

Only three teams — Houston, San Antonio and Detroit — have been eliminated. Charlotte isn’t too far away from joining that trio. Everyone else still has a legitimate chance.

“You do have to embrace the competitio­n,” Miami coach

Erik Spoelstra said. “When you’re dreaming about things in the middle of the summer, this is what you want. You want games with incredible pressure and context. You don’t want games to have no meaning, to play for lottery balls. You want to have this kind of context. And you want to see what this competitio­n can bring out of you.”

 ?? Jeff Chiu The Associated Press ?? Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors are fifth in the West, but one bad week could knock them out of the playoff picture.
Jeff Chiu The Associated Press Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors are fifth in the West, but one bad week could knock them out of the playoff picture.

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