Talbot44 wrote:jigga_man wrote:Andri wrote:
Sonics won in 1979 being the lower seed, after losing G1. So they were 2-1, and won. That on top of my head, so I doubt that stat.
That was under the 2-3-2 format. It was changed to 2-2-1-1 recently in 2014 so that stat itself is useless
Nah, he's right. Seattle was the road team, and they were up 2-1. It was 2-2-1-1-1 from 1947-1985. Lakers/Celtics cross country travel made them do the 2-3-2.
Yeah, the original tweeter either doesn't know history, or didn't make it clear that they meant no team has done it since the Finals switched BACK to 2-2-1-1-1 in 2014.
I just went through all history, and it shakes out like this. These are the teams from 1947 to 1984 who took a 2-1 lead without HCA, and the result of the series:
1948 Baltimore Bullets(won)
1950 Lakers(won)
1957 Hawks(lost)
1958 Hawks(won)
1962 Lakers(lost)
1973 Knicks(won)
1974 Celtics(won)
1975 Warriors(won - this wasn't a 2-1 lead, they flat out swept the higher seeded Bullets)
1979 Sonics(won)
1982 Lakers(won)
1984 Lakers(lost)
And these are the teams from 2014 to present who have taken a 2-1 lead without HCA, and the result of the series:
2015 Cavs(lost)
2022 Celtics(lost)
(Incidentally, they both lost to Steph and the Warriors.)
So in all history, it's actually a winning record - 7-5(8-5 if you include the 75 Warriors sweep) - for lower-seeded teams up 2-1 in the 2-2-1-1-1 format.
NOTE: Some of the above teams were technically higher-seeded(or the two teams had the same numerical seed) but did NOT have HCA, and the lack of HCA is what really matters here, so I counted them.