The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Is this the year for NBA to have a Cinderella champion?

- Paul Newberry AP Sports Columnist

More than any other sport, the cream of the NBA assuredly rises to the top in the playoffs.

This, of course, is a postseason unlike any other.

No fans. No homecourt advantage. Everyone hunkered down in the same place.

Will a Cinderella team emerge from the pack at Disney World? Maybe even claim an improbable title?

“I felt that way coming into the whole thing,” said Rick Carlisle, coach of the seventh-seeded Dallas Mavericks. “Look, there’s no travel, you’ve got really the same environmen­t virtually every game. The digital boards look different and stuff like that, but there’s just a great opportunit­y here for everybody.”

Indeed, we’ve already seen signs of a topsy-turvy tournament unfolding in the land of Mickey Mouse.

Milwaukee, top seed from the Eastern Conference, lost Game 1 of its opening-round series against eighth-seeded Orlando. The top team in the West, the Los Angeles Lakers, dropped their opening game as well to No. 8 Portland, a team that had to win a playin game over Memphis just to quality for the postseason.

Both powerhouse­s bounced back for doubledigi­t wins in Games 2, but these series look like they’ll be more competitiv­e than they would ‘e been if not for the season being upended by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Underdogs provide some of the most compelling stories in sports, and there are no shortage of non-NBA teams that have pulled off shocking triumphs.

Just last season, baseball’s Washington Nationals finished second in the NL East but went on to capture their first World Series title, knocking off the 106-win Los Angeles Dodgers and the 107-win Houston Astros along the way. Then again, the Nats’ triumph wasn’t all that usual; since MLB added a wild card to its postseason mix a quarter-century ago, seven teams have won it all after failing to win their division.

In 2012, the Los Angeles Kings fired their coach during the season and slipped into the NHL playoffs as an eighth seed, an afterthoug­ht in the race for the championsh­ip. Shockingly, they knocked off the top three seeds in the Western Conference in dominating fashion, winning 12 of 14 games, before beating the New Jersey Devils in the Stanley Cup final. For that matter, the Devils were also a highly unlikely finalist, having finished sixth in the East.

The 2011 New York Giants barely finished above .500 (9-7) and actually gave up more points than they scored during the regular season. But they found magic in the postseason, winning three straight NFC playoff games

— two of them on the road

— before knocking off the favored New England Patriots in the Super Bowl.

Which brings us to the NBA.

In the 70-year history of the league, there have only been eighth champions that went into the playoffs seeded lower than No. 2 in their conference or division, and only two of those were not at least third.

The 1969 Celtics finished fourth in the Eastern Division — the final playoff spot

— but they were hardly some plucky underdog. A championsh­ip run that seems surprising at first glance actually marked the last hurrah for the game’s greatest dynasty, an 11th title in 13 years to send Bill Russell into retirement with yet another ring.

The NBA’s only true Cinderella

champion was the 1995 Houston Rockets, but even their bucking-the-odds crown as a No. 6 seed wasn’t totally out of the blue.

The Rockets were the reigning champions, after all, taking advantage of Michael Jordan’s dalliance with baseball to capture their first title. The following year, a midseason trade that paired Clyde Drexler with Hakeem Olajuwon gave Houston a pair of future Hall of Famers, who carried the team to its second straight title.

Since then, only two teams seeded fifth or lower have gotten as far as the conference finals.

In the lockout-shortened 1999 season, the Knicks barely slipped into the playoffs as a No 8 seed but made it all the way to the NBA Finals before losing 4-1 to San Antonio. The fifth-seeded Grizzlies pulled off a pair of upsets in the 2013 playoffs before getting swept by the Spurs in the Western final.

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