Patches Perry wrote:Andre Roberstan wrote:Was listening to the radio tonight about what it would take to get the 4 seed:
-Utah beats GSW
-Utah loses to Portland
-OKC wins at Memphis
4 seed is still in play! I don't know that it's likely, but it's doable.
From what I understand, it's less complicated than that. If OKC wins 1 more and Utah loses 1 of their last 2, OKC gets 4th.
If we want 4th (we'd have to play Utah), then we want GSW to beat Utah tonight. Obviously all of this is contingent upon OKC beating Memphis.
It's more complicated than that. 48-34 is the magic number.
-We reach that by winning vs Memphis
-The winner between Pels and Spurs reaches it
-Utah reaches it by going 1-1
-Portland reaches it by going 0-1
If Utah loses today and beats Portland, you'd be looking at a 4-team-tie at 48-34. And then you start going down this list:
b. More Than Two Teams Tied. In the case of a tie in regular-season records involving more than two teams, the following criteria will be utilized in the following order:
(1) Division winner (this criterion is applied regardless of whether the tied teams are in the same division).
(2) Better winning percentage in all games among the tied teams.
(3) Better winning percentage against teams in own division (only if all tied teams are in same division).
(4) Better winning percentage against teams in own conference.
(5) Better winning percentage against teams eligible for playoffs in own conference (including teams that finished the regular season tied for a playoff position).
(6) Better net result of total points scored less total points allowed against all opponents (“point differential”).
There'd be no division winner, so you're looking at winning percentage vs all the other teams. Our record against those 4 teams is not that great: 0-4 vs Portland, 1-3 vs New Orleeans, 2-2 vs Spurs and 3-1 vs Utah. So ideally, you'd want Portland to secure the 3rd seed and the Spurs to win vs Pelicans with Utah not winning out. So then you'd be looking at a 3-team-tie with Utah and San Antonio. We've won 62.5 % of the games against those teams; Utah's at 50.0 % and San Antonio at 37.5 %. That would put us at 4th playing Utah at 5th.
"I don't know of any player that, when the shot goes up, he doesn't want it to go in," Donovan said