Johnny Bball wrote:What? How has this changed anything to date?
Teams at 9 and 10 would be playing to get to eighth place either way. Bottom 8-10 teams every year are tanking like always. It does nothing except make the games next week (maybe the last 4?) maybe mean a little more and at that point, and maybe keep one team from tanking a week earlier.... who cares. It devalues all the other games in the race for eighth.
It absolutely does not devalue games for the eighth seed, getting the eighth seed ensures that you only need to win one of two games.
Last year, it led to some great games, including one where the ninth seed Memphis Grizzlies upset the eighth seed Golden State Warriors. Not only does it functionally give us more Playoff basketball, it gives fans that otherwise have close to zero chance of high stakes basketball something to cheer for. I think the system is great.
Tim Reynolds wrote:It's a ridiculous idea, and I still think it should go away.
Let's play 82 games, work hard to make playoffs, then make it all possibly get thrown out cause of one or two bad games at the end.
Get rid of it.
The play-in is functionally Playoff basketball that is single elimination. I am a fan of the team that is arguably getting most hosed in the entire NBA by the play-in structure, and I like the high-stakes that the tournament creates.
-Luke- wrote:I like the idea of the play-in, but I don't like that it's unconditional. I think they should have some rules like in the bubble, where you had to be within a certain range. The Timberwolves are 43-34 right now, the three teams below them are 37-39, 33-34 and 31-44. The Wolves should be in the playoffs, period.
If the Timberwolves suck so hard that they choke two games at the end of the season, then they were going nowhere in the Playoffs anyways. If anything, I am glad that Minnesota fans have the opportunity to watch high-stakes basketball; it is way more fun to watch a "Game Seven" experience.











































