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2025 NBA Play-In Tournament: Schedule, how does it work, which teams are in, how to watch

2025 NBA Play-In Tournament: Schedule, how does it work, which teams are in, how to watch

NBC Sports14-04-2025

Adam Silver has hit a few home runs as NBA Commissioner, but none may have traveled further — or been more embraced by fans — than the Play-In Tournament. What do fans want? Teams to face jeopardy — real drama. The Play-in brings that — it's win or go home. This year, some outstanding teams and some of the game's iconic players face that jeopardy.
Here is everything you need to know about the NBA's Play-in Tournament.
What is the play-in?
One of the big issues the NBA has faced (and continues to face) is tanking — teams focused more on their lottery odds and potential draft picks instead of winning. If there's one thing NBA Commissioner Adam Silver hates, it's the idea of fans rooting for their team to lose. The play-in was his way of changing that dynamic by giving more teams something to play for and creating some drama.
Now, seeds No. 7 and 8 no longer automatically make the playoffs, and seeds No. 9 and 10 can earn their way in.
How does the play-in work?
It's pretty easy to follow, with four teams competing for two playoff spots in each conference.
• Regular season seeds No. 7 and 8 play a single game, with the winner going straight to the playoffs as the No. 7 seed (to face the No. 2 seed).
• Regular season seeds Nos. 9 and 10 play a single-elimination game, from which the loser is out and goes home.
• The winner of the 9/10 game and the loser of the 7/8 game play a single elimination game to advance to the playoffs as the No. 8 seed (to face the No. 1 seed). The loser of this final play-in game is done for the season.
One of the side benefits of the play-in is that it created an incentive to win enough games to be a top-six seed and avoid the play-in. If not that, at least win enough games to be a 7/8 seed in the regular season — teams only need to win one of two games to make the playoffs.
Has any team reached the NBA Finals out of the play-in?
Yes. In 2023, the Miami Heat were the No. 7 seed, lost the first play-in game to Atlanta, and then had to come from behind in the final play-in game to beat Chicago and advance as the No. 8 seed. Once in the playoffs, Miami beat Milwaukee, New York, and Boston to advance to the NBA Finals.
Which teams are in the 2024 NBA play-in tournament?
Some of the biggest names in the game in the play-in this year: Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors, Ja Morant and the Memphis Grizzlies, and Trae Young with the Atlanta Hawks.
Let's break it down by conference and look at the schedule.
Eastern Conference play-in schedule, where to watch
Tuesday, April 15
• 7/8 Game: Atlanta at Orlando (7:30 p.m. ET on TNT)
Wednesday, April 16
• 9/10 game: Miami at Chicago (7:30 p.m. ET on ESPN)
Friday, April 18
• 9/10 winner at 7/8 loser (TBD on TNT)
Western Conference play in schedule, where to watch
• 7/8 Game: Memphis at Golden State (10 p.m. ET on TNT)
Dallas Mavericks (West 10) vs. Sacramento Kings ( 10 p.m. ET on ESPN)
• 9/10 winner vs. West 7/8 loser (TBD on ESPN)

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Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Sports Nutrition
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Sports Nutrition

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Sports Nutrition

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Tyrese Haliburton hit the game-winner, but Andrew Nembhard was Pacers' game-saver
Tyrese Haliburton hit the game-winner, but Andrew Nembhard was Pacers' game-saver

New York Times

time36 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Tyrese Haliburton hit the game-winner, but Andrew Nembhard was Pacers' game-saver

OKLAHOMA CITY — The Indiana Pacers, waiting for absolution from a bunch of TV screens in a big room in Secaucus, N.J., talked about what they'd do on offense when they got the basketball back from the Oklahoma City Thunder, whether they were down by just one point or down three. They didn't talk about how they planned to stop Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the NBA's MVP, who had 38 points at the moment in his first NBA Finals game. Perhaps they didn't have to. Advertisement Ultimately, the NBA's Replay Center denied Indiana's challenge that the ball either went out of bounds off Oklahoma City or that Thunder guard Cason Wallace fouled the Pacers' Pascal Siakam before the ball went out of bounds. Yet, the Pacers were still cool about keeping Gilgeous-Alexander from the basket. Drew had him. Andrew Nembhard, for those of you who don't talk Pacer. 'I've got the utmost confidence in him,' Haliburton said of Nembhard after the Pacers' latest great escape, 111-110, Indiana's sixth road win in seven postseason games this season. To be sure, Haliburton's game-winner with 0.3 seconds left — his fourth basket so far in these playoffs with less than two seconds to go — won Game 1. But Nembhard saved it, like when a great goalie in the Stanley Cup playoffs stands on his head. Nembhard personifies this team. No one cares who scores or when or how. Some nights, Aaron Nesmith goes thermonuclear in Madison Square Garden. Some nights, Siakam looks like one of the 10 best players in the league. And Haliburton, right now, is the best closer on Earth. The ball finds whoever's open and in rhythm. They care greatly, though, about who defends. And Nembhard has been one of the league's best on-ball defenders for most of the last two seasons. 'He's our guy,' Haliburton said. 'He's our guy. He's been our guy all year. If there wasn't the 65-game rule, he's an All-Defensive guy, plain and simple. We have the most trust in him. Shai is the hardest guard in the NBA. He's the hardest guy to cover one-on-one in the NBA. So there's no one look we can give him that is going to work every time. We trust Drew in those situations. We're showing help as much as we can, but he's doing a lot of the dirty work. He's done a lot of the dirty work for years now. That's his calling card in this league. And he's an elite defender.' SGA saw a lot of different guys Thursday, as is custom for someone of his prodigious skills. He got some Nesmith and some Haliburton and some Siakam. But with the game on the line — improbably, as Indiana had kicked the ball all over creation for 47-plus minutes, racking up 24 turnovers — Rick Carlisle went with Nembhard, his 25-year-old guard, as his chosen stopper, just as he has since the day after Christmas in 2023, when he put Nembhard and Nesmith in the starting lineup alongside Haliburton and Myles Turner. (The fifth starter that day was Jalen Smith; that changed for good after the Pacers got Siakam from the Toronto Raptors a couple of weeks later.) Advertisement There was no double-teaming. Indiana didn't double Gilgeous-Alexander most of the night. Much of the time, there was just Nembhard, SGA's teammate on the Canadian national basketball team. Yes, they've known and played against each other since they were kids. But … not with the Larry in the balance. Nesmith set up at the nail, ready if SGA tried to go to his right. But he wasn't attacking him. Nembhard was on his own. Gilgeous-Alexander went left, trying to blow by Nembhard. But Nembhard took the contact in his chest and stood SGA straight up. Gilgeous-Alexander spun right, the way he has all season, when he's been able to draw fouls and get to the free-throw line with very little trouble. But Nembhard stoned him again and swiped at the ball as SGA tried a 15-foot fadeaway. He makes that shot a lot. Thursday, he missed. Nesmith held off OKC's Lu Dort, who had killed Indiana all night on the offensive boards, and got the rebound. Less than 10 seconds later, the Springtime Killer, Haliburton, made his fourth game-winning shot of the playoffs with less than two seconds left on the clock. He got almost all of the attention afterward, with much of the media waiting a half hour for him to do his postgame news conference. By contrast, Nembhard was out of the Pacers' locker room in about three minutes, having answered just a few questions. 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You've got to have playmakers against Oklahoma City. They just make it so difficult defensively.' The Pacers are on the kind of roll that — well, let's not get ahead of ourselves. The Thunder went 68-14 in the regular season, which tied the 1972-73 Boston Celtics for the sixth-best regular-season record in NBA history. Four of the five teams that had better regular-season records than OKC and Boston went on to win the championship; of course, the all-time best single-season team, the 73-9 Golden State Warriors of 2015-16, didn't, losing to Cleveland in seven games in the 2016 finals. OKC was the overwhelming favorite coming into these finals for a reason. This was Game 1 of seven. But Indiana never seems to care about things like that. The Pacers didn't flinch even though they played terribly in the first half. The sellout crowd at Paycom Center was painfully loud all night. The Thunder defense was as good as it's been all season, when it was one of the best in NBA history. And the Pacers didn't stop Gilgeous-Alexander. He still scored 38 points. But he had to take 30 shots to do it. He missed some open ones. But he also had fewer open ones than he normally does, after he breaks out his seemingly endless bag of moves. And, with the game on the line, Drew had him. The Pacers were good. (Top photo of Andrew Nembhard: Jesse D. Garrabrant / NBAE via Getty Images)

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Thunder seek answers after letting Game 1 slip away
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Thunder seek answers after letting Game 1 slip away

New York Times

time41 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Thunder seek answers after letting Game 1 slip away

OKLAHOMA CITY — The shot that will come to define Thursday's Game 1 and perhaps these NBA Finals landed with 0.3 seconds left on the clock, coming off the fingertips of Tyrese Haliburton, giving his Indiana Pacers their first lead and delivering him another signature moment after what had otherwise been a pedestrian performance. Advertisement But the shot that could have nullified it came 11 seconds earlier. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the star of the 68-win title favorite Oklahoma City Thunder, powered into one of his favorite midrange spots, bumped his defender off for some extra space and rose for a 14-footer he has buried so often during his MVP rise. A make would have given the Thunder a three-point cushion and Gilgeous-Alexander a clean 40 points in his finals debut, making his continued greatness the most obvious Friday topic in the sports world. But Gilgeous-Alexander pushed it long, bricked off back rim and the Pacers — without a timeout — won the game on Haliburton's jumper 11 seconds later. 'Thought I got a pretty good look,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'Felt good. Didn't go in. Then they got a look. It went in. Basketball. Ups and downs. It is what it is.' Here's the fateful miss. This wasn't one of Gilgeous-Alexander's more efficient nights. He needed 30 shots for his 38 points, making 14. He got to the line eight times, a tick below his season average. The raw scoring number reads as spectacular, the third-most ever in a finals debut. His night was something below that. But it was productive and, prior to the late miss, he'd done plenty to deliver the Thunder a Game 1 win. The operation around him just happened to malfunction down the stretch again, similar to the Game 1 second-round collapse against Denver, a 13-point blown lead in the final 6:28 capped off by an Aaron Gordon dagger at the buzzer. That result changed the complexion of the Denver series and pushed the Thunder to the temporary brink. This collapse — the Pacers closed on a 12-2 run after the Thunder led by double-digits most of the second half — puts the overwhelming title favorite in danger again. They left the arena Thursday night knowing they must now essentially beat the Pacers five times in seven games. 'It's a 48-minute game,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'They teach you that lesson more than anybody else in the league the hard way.' The Game 1 loss to Denver had a glaring strategic misstep. The Thunder played the foul-up-3 game and were burned by how early they deployed it. Coach Mark Daigneault's decision generated heat. This late loss, while equally baffling, didn't have as obvious of a tactical root. Jalen Williams mentioned a few defensive breakdowns late. Multiple players said they felt the offense slowed down too much when they entered lead-protection mode. The Pacers also hit some difficult shots. Alex Caruso singled out the Myles Turner side-stepped banked 3 from the wing with six minutes left. Advertisement But the Thunder left the door cracked because of their inability to leverage Pacers giveaways. The Thunder forced the Pacers into 19 turnovers in the first half and 25 overall but it only led to 11 points. 'Maybe we could have been a little more aggressive getting to the rim with the ball in transition after some of those instead of trying to come up and run sets,' Caruso said. 'I don't know if that's actually true or not. That's probably in the history kind of basketball tells me we probably weren't aggressive enough pushing those turnovers.' There's also the question of whether it was the correct choice for the Thunder to lean small to open the series. Daigneault went away from his double-big starting lineup and inserted Cason Wallace in Isaiah Hartenstein's place. 'Getting Cason out there defensively gives us another perimeter guy for Haliburton and (Andrew) Nembhard,' Daigneault said. 'That was the idea there. We've been pretty fluid with the lineup throughout the course of the season. Cason started 40-something games. We changed the lineup a million times. We haven't in the playoffs. But that's why we do it during the regular season. So that it's not earth-shattering when we do it.' The Thunder got off to winning starts in both halves, so that starting lineup didn't burn them. But Wallace was a minus-13 in his 33 minutes. Daigneault subbed him in for Chet Holmgren with 3:24 left and the Thunder up eight. They went without a center down the stretch and lost that subsection by nine points. Holmgren had one of his worst games of the playoffs, finishing 2-of-9 shooting in 24 quiet minutes. But the Thunder won his minutes by four points. Hartenstein was effective but only played 17 minutes off the bench. The Thunder's staff clearly analyzed the matchup with the Pacers prior and opted to lean smaller than normal in Game 1. They blew them out in March without their centers available. That'll be the adjustment or non-adjustment to track entering Game 2. 'We have a lot of optionality,' Daigneault said. 'We'll look at everything. We'll look at anything we can to try to give ourselves the best chance to win.'

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