The Commercial Appeal

NBA West: Wild race for eighth – and ninth

- Tim Reynolds

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. – Add this plot twist to an unusual NBA season: To get the No. 8 seed in the Western Conference, a whole bunch of teams will enter the final two weeks of the regular season trying to finish ninth.

Yes, ninth.

All the drama in the West when the NBA season resumes at Walt Disney World on July 30 after a 4 ½-month break because of the coronaviru­s pandemic will come from the bottom of the standings and the race just to get into the playoffs.

Memphis comfortabl­y holds eighth place, which ordinarily would mean a playoff berth. But not this year, not with five teams with realistic chances of forcing a play-in series by finishing ninth and within four games of the team in eighth – which, barring a collapse, would be the Grizzlies.

“We obviously know our eight-game seeding schedule is going to be a challenge,” Memphis coach Taylor Jenkins said. “All teams playing for playoff positionin­g, getting into the playoffs … I mean, we’re going to have high-competitiv­e games.”

If the Grizzlies go 5-3 in their seeding games, they’re assured of no worse than a spot in the play-in series – a best-oftwo matchup between the No. 8 and No. 9 teams when the regular season ends, provided the No. 9 team is within four games of eighth. The No. 9 team would have to go 2-0 in that series to advance. The challenger­s all have a storyline. San Antonio is aiming to become the first team in NBA history to make 23 consecutiv­e postseason appearance­s. Sacramento is aiming for its first playoff trip in 14 years; Phoenix is aiming for its first playoff spot in 10 years, with those droughts the longest in the history of each franchise. New Orleans is trying to get in and extend J.J. Redick’s streak of making the playoffs in every season since his freshman year of high school. Portland is seeking a seventh consecutiv­e postseason spot.

Add it all up, and inside the bubble, there’s going to be a sprint to the finish in the West.

“The mark of success for us was going to be to play meaningful games in March and April,” said David Griffin, the executive vice president of basketball operations for the New Orleans Pelicans. “This is now going to be meaningful games in July and August, but we’re going to get to do that. That was important to us because of our young core.”

WHO’S IN

The Los Angeles Lakers need a combinatio­n of three wins or Los Angeles Clippers losses to clinch the No. 1 spot out West – assuming the Lakers don’t go 0-8 at Disney while the Denver Nuggets go 8-0. The Lakers, Clippers and Nuggets have clinched playoff berths, as have Utah, Oklahoma City and Houston. Dallas needs only one win in its final eight games to wrap up the No. 7 seed, so that realistica­lly leaves six teams for the one remaining playoff spot.

WHO’S OUT

Only Minnesota and Golden State failed to make the restart out of the West.

ZION’S START

New Orleans rookie Zion Williamson, who has missed much of the practice window at the restart because he left the bubble to tend to a family situation, has scored 448 points in his first 19 games. He’s the 14th player in NBA history to have at least that many points in the first 19 appearance­s of his career, and the first to do so since Michael Jordan (486 points) in 1984-85. As of Friday, Williamson had not yet returned to the bubble.

BACK ON TOP

The Lakers should be the No. 1 seed for the first time since 2010 – which was also the season in which the Lakers won their most recent championsh­ip. The Lakers have reached the NBA Finals in each of the last four seasons where they have entered the playoffs as the No. 1 seed out West.

SUB-.500 PLAYOFFS?

It’s possible – and if there’s a play-in series, very possible – that a losing record will be good enough to get into the West playoffs for the first time since 1997. That year, Minnesota, Phoenix and the Clippers all got into the postseason despite finishing the regular season below the .500 mark. Memphis is 32-33 going into the restart and all five of the other still-contending clubs for that last spot are already at least eight games below .500 with eight games remaining.

 ?? NELSON CHENAULT/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? “We obviously know our eight-game seeding schedule is going to be a challenge,” Memphis Grizzlies coach Taylor Jenkins said. “All teams playing for playoff positionin­g, getting into the playoffs … I mean, we’re going to have high-competitiv­e games.”
NELSON CHENAULT/USA TODAY SPORTS “We obviously know our eight-game seeding schedule is going to be a challenge,” Memphis Grizzlies coach Taylor Jenkins said. “All teams playing for playoff positionin­g, getting into the playoffs … I mean, we’re going to have high-competitiv­e games.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States