The Providence Journal

Who’s rising, who’s falling in NBA standings?

- Jeff Zillgitt

If the NBA season ended today – and trust me, I know it doesn’t but for the sake of this exercise, play along because these are realistic playoffs scenarios – either the Los Angeles Lakers or Golden State Warriors will miss the playoffs.

And it’s possible neither makes the playoffs unless one escapes the depths of the play-in game.

Today, the Warriors are in 10th place at 41-34, and the Lakers are in ninth place at 43-33. The winner of the 9-10 game plays the loser of the 7-8 game for the eighth seed with the winner of the 7-8 game gets the seventh seed.

If the Lakers or Warriors make it in as the No. 8 seed, they will play either Oklahoma City, Denver or Minnesota in the first round.

Let’s take a look at who’s rising and who’s falling in the playoff races in the Eastern Conference and Western Conference.

Rising

Dallas Mavericks: Since Feb. 5, the Mavericks are 19-7. It’s the second-best winning percentage, and the Mavs have the No. 4 offense and most important to their postseason success, the Mavs have the No. 8 defense during that stretch.

Luka Doncic has averaged a tripledoub­le (32.5 points, 10.2 assists and 10.1 rebounds) and Kyrie Irving is averaging 25.5 points, 5.1 assists and 4.7 rebounds and shooting 51.8% from the field and 41.5% on 3s in the past two months, and trade deadline acquisitio­ns, Daniel Gafford and P.J. Washington, both average at least 11 points.

The Mavs are tied for fifth place with New Orleans and two behind the fourthplac­e Los Angeles Clippers. Columnist USA TODAY

Oklahoma City, Denver, Minnesota: It’s crowded and competitiv­e at the top of the West. The Nuggets, Thunder and Timberwolv­es are separated by a ½ game for the top seed.

Denver, in first because they’ve played one more game and have one more victory than the other two teams, and Oklahoma City are 7-3 in their past 10 games, and Minnesota is 8-2.

Denver and Minnesota play each other April 10, and the Thunder are finished playing both teams. In head-tohead tiebreaker­s, the Thunder own the tiebreaker over Denver and Minnesota, and Minnesota owns the tiebreaker over Denver pending the result of their remaining game.

In a three-way tie, the Thunder own the tiebreaker today.

Lakers, Warriors: Both teams are 7-3 in their past 10 games, and the Warriors have won five consecutiv­e games, putting a two-game buffer between them and 11th-place Houston. The Lakers and Warriors play each other Tuesday.

The Lakers are just 11⁄2 games behind Phoenix for the eighth spot and have a chance to catch the Suns.

The Lakers own the tiebreaker against Phoenix.

Boston Celtics: Boston had a weird two-game losing streak to Atlanta, but it is still 22-4 since losing to the Lakers on Feb. 1. The Celtics have the best record (59-16), the No. 1 offense, the No. 3 defense and the No. 1 net rating.

It’s all about winning another for the franchise’s 18th title and first since 2008.

Miami Heat: Are the Heat still a dangerous team?

Miami is 7-3 in their past 10 games and have won three consecutiv­e games.

The Heat are a top-5 defense, but just 21st offensivel­y. Can they put it together for the playoffs? Well, it is Erik Spoelstra, Jimmy Butler and Bam Adebayo, so … it’s possible.

Falling

Phoenix Suns: The Suns were tied for fifth place at the All-Star break with a 33-22 record. Now, they’re tied for seventh place at 44-31 and their remaining schedule is brutal: seven games against seven postseason teams, all of whom have the same or better records.

The Suns are just a game behind Dallas and New Orleans for fifth place, but they’re also just 11⁄2 games ahead of the Lakers.

Houston Rockets: With 13 victories in 15 games, the 11th-place Houston Rockets closed the gap on Golden State and trailed the Warriors by just a ½ game a week ago. But two consecutiv­e losses by the Rockets and four consecutiv­e wins by the Warriors created distance between the two.

Houston is three games behind Golden State, and it will be difficult to make that up in seven games. They play each other Thursday, and even with a victory by the Rockets, it might not enough, especially with Golden State owning the tiebreaker.

New York Knicks: The Knicks have lost three consecutiv­e games and are tied for fourth place with Orlando, 11⁄2 games ahead of sixth-place Indiana and two games ahead of Miami. Injuries continue to impact the Knicks.

Cleveland Cavaliers: The Cavaliers are 4-6 in their past 10 games with losses to Houston, Miami (twice) and Charlotte. In third place, the Cavs trail second-place Milwaukee by 11⁄2 games and are up 11⁄2 games on Orlando and New York.

Philadelph­ia 76ers: The Sixers have plummeted in the standings since losing Joel Embiid to a knee injury in late January. The good news for the Sixers is that Embiid returned Tuesday and had 24 points, seven assists, six rebounds and three steals in a 109-105 victory against Oklahoma City.

Unless the eighth-place Sixers can catch the sixth seed – they are two games behind Indiana and 11⁄2 games behind Miami – they are headed for play-in game and potential first-round series against Milwaukee.

 ?? TROY TAORMINA/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Mavericks guard Luka Doncic shoots against Rockets forward Amen Thompson on Sunday in Houston.
TROY TAORMINA/USA TODAY SPORTS Mavericks guard Luka Doncic shoots against Rockets forward Amen Thompson on Sunday in Houston.
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 ?? KEVIN C. COX/GETTY IMAGES ?? Boston’s Jaylen Brown dunks over Atlanta’s Bruno Fernando during the third quarter on March 28 at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Ga.
KEVIN C. COX/GETTY IMAGES Boston’s Jaylen Brown dunks over Atlanta’s Bruno Fernando during the third quarter on March 28 at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Ga.

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