If the NBA expands to 32 teams in the coming years, executives for Western Conference teams are hopeful it will provide the league an opportunity to revisit the idea of seeding the playoff teams one through 16, regardless of conference, according to Brian Windhorst and Tim Bontemps of ESPN (Insider link).
Assuming Seattle and Las Vegas, the presumed frontrunners, get teams in the next round of expansion, a current Western Conference team – likely one of the Timberwolves, Grizzlies, or Pelicans – would have to move East to balance out the two conferences. Given the relative strength of the East vs. the West, those three clubs may push hard to be the one chosen, but that battle could potentially be avoided by revamping the postseason seeds, Windhorst suggests.
“It would be the right thing to do for the health of the league,” one West general manager told ESPN. “It’s not just about fairness, it’s about giving the fans the best playoff product.”
A change along those lines would require the approval of at least three-quarters of the NBA’s teams (23 of 30), as Bontemps observes, which means at least eight Eastern Conference teams would have to get on board with the idea, potentially voting against their own interests.
Here are more odds and ends from around the basketball world:
- Bontemps and Windhorst suggest in the same ESPN story that many scouts and executives around the NBA believe the 2024/25 in-season trade market will take a while to get going. Trades this early in the season are somewhat rare anyway, and new CBA-related restrictions related to aprons and hard caps have only made deals more challenging. “We were looking at a trade concept the other day and there were three reasons the other team wouldn’t be allowed to do it,” one general manager told Windhorst. “One of the rules I didn’t even know about.”
- In another Insider-only story for ESPN, Bontemps ranks all 30 NBA teams’ cores, listing each club’s top three building blocks based on both present and future value. The Celtics (Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, Derrick White) top the list, while the Nets (Nic Claxton, Noah Clowney, Cam Thomas) come in at No. 30.
- Joe Vardon and Mike Vorkunov of The Athletic provide some additional details on the proposed changes to the NBA’s All-Star format, noting that since the league is expected to split its All-Stars into four teams, the head coaches for the top two teams in each conference (four in total) will likely be invited to All-Star weekend to coach a squad. As Vardon and Vorkunov detail, the current Collective Bargaining Agreement calls for the players on the winning All-Star team to earn $100K, while the players on the losing team earns $25K. The NBA and NBPA need to renegotiate those figures before formally implementing the new format, which would result in three losing teams instead of just one.
- In a memo sent to team officials, the NBA urged its players to take extra precautions to secure their homes in the wake of a string of burglaries affecting Bucks big man Bobby Portis and Timberwolves guard Mike Conley, among others. Tim Reynolds of The Associated Press has the story.
Then in 5 years when East is stronger teams like Warriors and Lakers will be sobbing about the 1 to 16 seeding. There are problems in the NBA but this is not one of them.
The problem with that theory is the owners will have to change…
Cheap owners in the east is what keeps the disparity what it is… It’s been decades since the East had the edge over the West for long enough for anyone to care…
Defense wins championships but not All-Star games so I don’t expect much change and how they’re played by the players.
They should just keep it with East versus West let the fans vote the starters not the media. I think they put too much on it that’s why nobody likes the game no more.
The tribal east vs west thing only works if there are rivalries…
And because they only play the east vs west games twice a year unless they meet in the finals… There are no meaningful rivalries…
It doesn’t work for the All Star game either…
It’s just a basketball celebration, not a competition… Giving us 4 4th quarters this way could be far more interesting… At least the rookie team will want to win and the team facing them won’t want to lose…
Interesting claim! The rooks are going to do the uncool thing and play hard at both ends to embarrass the vets. It has some merit and could happen.
They want to have that next MJ vs Kobe moment… And so does the NBA…
I’m not a big fan of the idea, but it does have some merit on pride for the All Stars to at least win that game against the rookies…