Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Love hoping team can play its way out of play-in game

- By Ira Winderm South Florida Sun Sentinel

MIAMI — Heat newcomer Kevin Love has lived the NBA play-in tournament.

He doesn’t want to go back — with good reason.

While for some lower seeds the play-in round, where one or two victories can secure a spot in the first round, is a second chance at making things right, it also can be a path fraught with peril for teams that, under the NBA’s previous format, would have advanced directly to the best-of-seven opening round.

“We certainly have an uphill climb to get to where we need to be,” Love said, with the Heat at No. 7 in the East headed into Friday night’s rematch against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Miami-Dade Arena.

“And, more than anything, that’s just not to be in the play-in. We’re right there, and we feel like we can’t keep setting ourselves back. We need to start winning these next several games in order to put ourselves in a good spot and able to not have to be in the play-in.”

Love speaks from experience.

Last season his Cavaliers closed the season No. 8 in the East with a turnaround 44-38 season. Under the playoff format before it changed in 2020, that would have meant a direct ticket to the first round against the No. 1 seed.

But in the wake of the league’s pandemic-interrupte­d season in 2020, the NBA formulated a stop-gap, last-chance play-in format because of that shortened schedule.

That approach, in turn, led to the current play-in system, first put into place in 2021 as a means of incentiviz­ing teams not to tank late-season games in favor of lottery position. The play-in format instead has 20 of the league’s 30 teams in the running for the postseason at the end of the regular season.

Essentiall­y, it is a three-game round in each conference played, this season, in the five days between the April 9 end of the regular season and the April 15 start of the first playoff round.

The opening-round of games has the No.

7 seed hosting the No. 8 seed in a single game to determine the No. 7 seed that will face the No. 2 seed in the opening round. That round also has the No. 9 seed hosting the No. 10 seed in a single game for the right to play on the road against the loser of the Nos. 7-8 game.

The loser of Nos. 7-8 then hosts the winner of Nos. 9-10 in a single game to determine the No. 8 seed that faces the No. 1 seed in the best-of-seven opening round.

Last season Love’s Cavaliers lost the Nos. 7-8 game on the road to the Brooklyn Nets. That dropped them to a last-chance home game against the winner of the Nos. 9-10 game, with the Atlanta Hawks defeating the visiting Charlotte Hornets in that game.

Ultimately, Atlanta, as a No. 9 seed, won on the road at the No. 8 Cavaliers, with the Hawks going on to play the No. 1 Heat in the 2022 first round.

“We saw last year, after having such a great year and having gone through injuries in Cleveland, we still gave ourselves a chance,” Love said. “But we didn’t make the playoffs and that was a major letdown.”

In the two seasons of the current play-in format No. 8 has been a particular­ly tenuous position, with the Heat returning to play Friday just one game ahead of Atlanta in the Nos. 7-8 race in the East. In the Western Conference in 2021, the No. 7 Los Angeles Lakers defeated the No. 8 Golden State Warriors to secure the No. 7 playoff seed. Then, with their second chance, the No. 8 Warriors lost in their last-chance game to the visiting No. 9 Memphis Grizzlies, who had defeated the visiting No. 10 San Antonio Spurs in their opening win-or-go-home game.

Over the two years of the play-in in its current format the opening games of the play-in have held to form, with No. 7 seeds 4-0 against visiting No. 8 seeds, and No. 9 seeds 4-0 against visiting No. 10 seeds.

But in the second round of the play-in, No. 8 seeds are just 1-3, with No. 9 seeds 3-1.

The Heat’s Friday night return for the conclusion of their six-game homestand will come at

No. 7, with a 1 ½-game lead over No. 8 Atlanta, a three-game lead over the No. 9 Toronto Raptors anda3 ½-game lead over the No. 10 Washington Wizards.

The Heat exited Wednesday night’s 104-100 loss to the Cavaliers three games behind the No. 6 Brooklyn Nets and four games behind the No. 5 New York Knicks, with 15 games remaining on their regular-season schedule.

As far as tiebreaker­s, the Heat still can gain the playoff tiebreaker against the Knicks by winning the two remaining games in that season series; have lost the tiebreaker to the Nets; have won the tiebreaker against the Hawks; and with victories in remaining games against the Raptors and Wizards can put themselves in contention for those tiebreaker­s.

Heat forward Jimmy Butler said he leaves the standings to others, but he also appreciate­s the potentiall­y dire consequenc­es of the play-in round.

“I don’t look at the standings. I’m not going to lie to you, I don’t,” he said. “I don’t look at none of that stuff. I’m guessing we’re in the play-in, right? So we better start winning some games and get out of that.

“If we don’t, then we better win whenever the play-in thing starts.”

Per the NBA:

Q: When is the 2023 Play-In Tournament?

“The Play-In Tournament will begin Tuesday, April 11, and conclude Friday, April 14. The teams with the seventh-highest and eighth-highest winning percentage­s in each conference will each have two opportunit­ies to win one game to earn a playoff spot. The teams with the ninth-highest and 10th-highest winning percentage­s in each conference will each have to win two consecutiv­e games to earn a playoff spot.”

Q: How will the Play-In Tournament be structured?

“At the conclusion of the regular season but before the first round of the playoffs, the team with the seventh-highest winning percentage in each conference will host the team with the eighth-highest winning percentage in a Play-In Game (the “Seven-Eight Game”). The winner of the Seven-Eight game in each conference will earn the No. 7 seed.

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/AP ?? Heat coach Erik Spoelstra couldn’t push his team past the Cavaliers on Wednesday night as it seeks to avoid having to deal with a play-in game ahead of this year’s NBA playoffs.
WILFREDO LEE/AP Heat coach Erik Spoelstra couldn’t push his team past the Cavaliers on Wednesday night as it seeks to avoid having to deal with a play-in game ahead of this year’s NBA playoffs.

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