NBA play-in matchups, some playoff pairings are set

AP photo by Marta Lavandier / Miami Heat coach Erik Spoelstra motions during a home game against the Toronto Raptors on Friday.
AP photo by Marta Lavandier / Miami Heat coach Erik Spoelstra motions during a home game against the Toronto Raptors on Friday.

Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James and his teammates are staying in New Orleans for a couple more days. Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors will head back to Sacramento to face elimination again. And the Miami Heat are back in the play-in tournament, which started their run to the NBA Finals last year.

The play-in field is set. On Tuesday, it's the Lakers visiting the Pelicans for a No. 7 seed in the Western Conference, then the Warriors facing the Kings in an elimination game. On Wednesday, it's the Heat going to Philadelphia to play the 76ers and decide No. 7 in the Eastern Conference, followed by the Chicago Bulls hosting the Atlanta Hawks in a win-or-else matchup.

"Look, this is the best time of year," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. "These kind of environments, the games, the context ... you can't expect it to be easy."

Of the 20 postseason seeds, 15 were decided on Sunday as the 2023-24 regular season wrapped up, as were three of the four play-in matchups and three of the four first-round series that don't include play-in teams.

The final order in the East: Boston, New York, Milwaukee, Cleveland, Orlando, Indiana, Philadelphia, Miami, Chicago and Atlanta. In the West, the order from No. 1 to No. 10 is Oklahoma City, Denver, Minnesota, the Los Angeles Clippers, Dallas, Phoenix, New Orleans, the Lakers, Sacramento and Golden State.

"Good momentum going into the playoffs," Oklahoma City star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said after his team finished No. 1 in the West. "Nothing to complain about. ... We won a lot of basketball games. That's what it's all about. That's what everybody laces their shoes up for, to win basketball games and have a chance to win a championship."

The only first-round series that was set before Sunday was Clippers-Dallas in the West. Added to the list now: Milwaukee-Indiana and Cleveland-Orlando in the East, along with Minnesota-Phoenix in the West.

The games themselves didn't bring much drama on the regular season's final day. Of the 15 played, only one was decided by one possession — and it was at Madison Square Garden, where New York got a big win. The Knicks held off Chicago 120-119 in overtime, a result that let them leapfrog Milwaukee for No. 2 in the East.

"A hell of a regular season," Knicks guard Donte DiVincenzo said. "Let's get ready for the playoffs."

Among the biggest blowouts on Sunday: Oklahoma City beat Dallas by 49 to wrap up No. 1 in the West, Indiana stayed out of the play-in by beating Atlanta by 42, Sacramento downed Portland by 39, San Antonio topped Detroit by 28 and Orlando — which could have been in the play-in with a loss — rolled past Milwaukee by 25.

Orlando won 47 games to capture the Southeast Division and get back to the playoffs for the first time since 2020.

"So proud of them," Magic coach Jamahl Mosley said. "There's not really a lot of words for it. You talk about a group who has been up, been down, battled back, resilient ... they proved it. Big stakes, they took it in their own hands."

The Miami-Philadelphia winner will face No. 2 seed New York in the first round of the playoffs, and the loser will play host to the Atlanta-Chicago winner on Friday night for the chance to meet No. 1 overall seed Boston. The Lakers-New Orleans winner gets the No. 7 seed and will play reigning champion Denver in the first round — the Lakers were swept by the Nuggets last season — and the Lakers-New Orleans loser will face the Sacramento-Golden State winner for the right to play No. 1 Oklahoma City.

Golden State won a Game 7 at Sacramento last season to advance. The Warriors will have to win a play-in game there Tuesday that'll have Game 7-type consequences.

"It'll be a great atmosphere," Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. "We were there last year, obviously. They'll have their crowd behind them. It's nice to not get on a plane. So we'll take the bus up there tomorrow, have a day to prepare and be ready to go."

The only spot that switched in the East on Sunday was No. 2 and No. 3 between New York and Milwaukee. The West had two flips on the final day: Denver passed Minnesota for No. 2 and helped send the Timberwolves to No. 3, while Phoenix jumped up one spot to No. 6 and New Orleans dropped one to No. 7.

Phoenix won at Minnesota on Sunday, and now the Suns will head back there for a playoff series opener next weekend.

"It's time now," Suns guard Bradley Beal said. "It starts now."

Cleveland is the No. 4 seed in the East for the second consecutive year. The Cavaliers had a chance to move to No. 2 or No. 3 with a win on Sunday and led lottery-bound Charlotte by 13 with 10 minutes remaining.

And yet they didn't seem to want to move up much, getting outscored 30-7 the rest of the way. Charlotte won 120-110 in coach Steve Clifford's final game with the Hornets.

Upcoming Events