How did Memphis grizzlies do that against wolves

 


Before Ja Morant propelled the ball toward the rafters at Target Center, he had to ask for it. He had thought about this moment.

With only seconds remaining and his Grizzlies about to close out a remarkable victory Thursday, in which they essentially came back from two separate 25-point deficits, Morant approached Desmond Bane, who was dribbling out the clock to inevitable victory. The point guard asked for the basketball. Bane flipped it to him. Morant, whom Timberwolves fans booed all night, took a dribble and right-hand whipped it into the sky as the buzzer sounded on a 104-95 win, which gave Memphis a 2-1 lead in its best-of-seven first-round playoff matchup with Minnesota.

If a basketball was ever going to break the roof of an arena, this was the time.

“I’m disrespectful just like they disrespectful,” Morant told reporters after the game, referring to the boos. “That’s why you see I threw that ball in the air. … That was our goal. Come in and win games on the road and have their fans go home mad. So there will probably be a lot of people drinking tonight with that ‘L.’ ”

BOX SCORE: Grizzlies 104, Timberwolves 95

If Wolves fans wanted to find a responsible way to forget that game, no one would blame them.

Minnesota led, 47-21, with 10 minutes, 30 seconds left in the second quarter, but the Grizzlies cut the deficit to just seven by halftime, thanks to 3s aplenty from Bane, swarming defensive energy and the Wolves’ jumpers turning to ice. They went back to melting in the third quarter, when the Minnesota lead ballooned again, this time to 25.

The Timberwolves took an 81-58 advantage with 1:52 remaining in the third quarter.

Then, everything changed.

For the rest of the night, nearly 14 minutes of play, Minnesota made only four shots. It was quite the ending for a team that scored the first 12 points of the game. The Grizzlies closed on a 46-14 run.

“I don’t know how we really did it,” Memphis head coach Taylor Jenkins said.

Bane, who scored a team-leading 26 points on 7-of-15 3-point shooting, had theories.

“We had to fix our body language,” Bane said. “I feel like we got down early, didn’t have the start we wanted to have, and we lost our juice.”

Somehow, they found enough juice for Minnesotans to use as mixers once they got home. Even when the Grizzlies were sinking, Bane did his best to keep his teammates above water, draining pull-ups, spot-ups and any kinds of long-range looks he could find.

Once the comeback began, it was more than just him. Morant took control of the offense down the stretch, attacking the paint relentlessly, as he does when he’s at his best. He finished with his first career triple-double in the playoffs: 16 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists. The defense cracked down. Minnesota started bombing 3s and missed as many fourth-quarter triples as they took until second-year wing Anthony Edwards swished a meaningless one from the corner inside the final minute. The Grizzlies already had things wrapped up by then.

They loaded up on Karl-Anthony Towns, as well. If the Wolves, who led the NBA in 3-point makes during the regular season, aren’t going to drain from deep at a top-notch rate, then they need Towns to look like the All-NBA presence he proved to be all regular season. But that hasn’t happened, and it has developed unexpectedly.

Possibly the most versatile-scoring 7-footer in the world — someone who is elite from 3, the midrange, in the post, in the pick-and-roll, you name anything else — isn’t even taking shots. There was no greater microcosm of Towns’ discomfort than when he started to rise for a jumper from the left wing late in the game, but Brandon Clarke flew at him, knees eye level, to make him regret the decision. Towns got flustered, never released the ball and traveled.

The Wolves’ best player put up 11 shots in Games 2 and 3 combined and went a paltry 3 of 4 from the field Thursday on the way to an eight-point night.

The disappearing act from Towns comes after Memphis made a significant adjustment in Game 3, benching starting center Steven Adams for wing Kyle Anderson. The Grizzlies used the same lineup to start Thursday that it deployed for the beginning of the third quarter in Game 2.

Anderson has guarded Towns. So has Jaren Jackson Jr. So has Clarke, who burst with energy Thursday and finished with 20 points and eight rebounds off the bench.

Towns has a history of struggling more against smalls. Surely, the Timberwolves will come with changes in Game 4, though letting go of what they can only feel like was multiple 25-point advantages, even if the Grizzlies never took the lead the first time, is a 5 a.m. alarm clock: It either breaks you or it wakes you up.

There was a Memphis squad that once knew this.

It’s been 10 years since the Nick Young game, a moment when Grizzlies fans were the ones funneling whiskey. Memphis let go of a 27-point lead in Game 1 of their first-round series against the Clippers. At the time, it was the biggest fourth-quarter comeback in playoff history. Young didn’t miss from the corners. Reggie Evans lofted in a game-winning layup for a one-point Clippers victory.

That night was so long ago that the final basket came from a career-long rebounding specialist. Remember when teams used to have those?

Sometimes, the basketball gods take a while to even things out.


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 (Photo of Ja Morant and Karl-Anthony Towns: David Berding / Getty Images)

FUTMINNA NUGA EXPERIENCE

 

Having departed Niger state  on 15th March 2022 there was a stir of optimism among team futminna as most of the athletes and sports rep will be having their first ever taste of the national University games association(NUGA), well for some others the first time they will represent the university for an event as prestigious as this.

Probably it wasn't a farce when big things were expected of them because they went prepared and with lagos state hosting this year's edition it gave more room for added optimism. Were they going there for the experience and fun or were they going there to make a statement?(it's Eko we are talking about here everyone wants to be there).

*NUGA OPENING CEREMONY*

 
Having arrived Lagos safely amidst all the hiccups associated with travelling by road to Lagos State, team futminna had the required tests and checked into the provided lodges, the NUGA opening ceremony was grande premiere, it was worth all the hype that is always associated to an event as big as this one as team Futminna presented themselves via the compulsory match pass led by the institution's sports director in person of comrade Ayanda oyewunmi oladipupo(Observer) to the hundreds or maybe thousands of waving and ecstatic fans and personnels at the University of Lagos sports complex.

The opening ceremony of the 26th edition of the Nigerian University Games Association (NUGA) hosted on Saturday by the University of Lagos (UNILAG) at the sports complex may well go down as one of the best in the annals of the competition since inception in 1966. 

No fewer than 75 private and public institutions from across the country took turns to file out in different colourful kits for the mandatory match past which was witnessed by dignitaries. 

Among the personalities at the occasion were Femi Gbajabiamila, Speaker House of Representatives, Sunday Dare Minister of Sports, Segun Agbaja, CEO, Guaranty Trust Holding Co Plc, Senator Lanre Tejuosho, pro-Chancellor, UNILAG, Pastor Tunde Bakare, and Pastor Ituah Ighodalo.

A major highlight of the occasion was the lighting of the NUGA Flames by Honourable Femi Gbajabiamila who was flanked by eminent personalities at the occasion. 

This was preceded by a torch relay by notable athletes and sports personalities such as Olympic Gold Medalists, Chioma Ajunwa and Enefiok Udo-Obong, Olumide Oyedeji, ex-NBA star, Hameed Adio, a UNILAG alumnus and 1980 Olympian among others.





*FUTMINNA NUGA EXPERIENCE*

Having arrived the NUGA games, team futminna was geared up as the athletes and every sports rep in every category didn't just want to have a fun filled and memorable experience they also want to make a statement of intent. Boasting amatures but hungry and talented athletes in almost every category team futminna was very much ready for the experience as all the staffs devoted their time and energy to make sure everything was in place and all hands were on deck for this experience. 

*FUTMINNA UNICORNS*



 

Dealing with the disappointment of the renowned Futminna transformers (male Football team) not qualifying for the national University games this year as they lost out in the qualifying rounds, all attention was fixed on the newly formed futminna unicorns(female football team) who had a free pass to the main event due to being the only female soccer team in that zone. Less than a year old this team although very inexperienced as they have never been involved in any major or minor competition can boast of some really good, talented young ladies who were ready to represent. Headed by the experienced coach Idris and with support from ubah, this team was prepared not just to play and represent futminna in a prestigious event being their maiden event but also to make a statement and lay groundwork for other events, the future is bright.

Having being grouped in what we can regard as the group of death with other schools like University of Lagos, university of ibadan and bayero university Kano 

With a very unexpected start for them defeating bayero university Kano by 4 goals to nil

What a start that was, and then the bigger results was drawing dramatically against arguably the tournaments favourite University of Lagos female soccer team 1:1 in a hotly contested game of football, it was all rosy from there but it wasn't to be as the domineering UNICORNS painfully lost out to unibadan female team 4:2. With 4 points gathered from 3 games it wasn't enough for the unicorns to progress because of results from other games as unilag and unibadan both progressed to the knockout stages with 7 and 6 points respectively Futminna unicorns bowed out with 4 points in 3rd position with their heads held high, yes they have made a statement and everyone was impressed with the character on display from this ladies.

THE GOLDEN EXPERIENCE and other accolades

Having arrived NUGA games 2022 with what we can call a bizzare record in previous editions by standards team futminna can only boast of a gold medal in this event as far back as 11 years ago at the NUGA games hosted by university of Benin, Edo state 2011 in javelin and  taekwondo, so taking a gold was always part of the experience for team futminna.




 The gold finally came as Okechi chidinma jane-francis a 100 level student of the institution delivered a dominant and superb performance in the taekwondo (Welter weight category) as she defeated  yusuf Fatima of Ambrose Alli university, ekpoma by 22 points to 7 points in the final match having previously dispatched temitope ajayi of university of Lagos to book her place in the final. This is exactly how you write your name in the history books as she will definitely be considered to sometime represent the nation in a Continental or world event sooner than later.

Futminna also clinched other accolades as odofin barakat clinched bronze in the taekwondo (middle weight category) with a very brilliant performance slightly missing out on the final spot.



 The medals continued to come into the coffers of team futminna as ilegieuno Justus a computer engineering student clinched silver medal in the chess competition at 26th nuga games Lagos State. A performance to be proud of as he came up against pros who has had some years of experience in the game.



Well, in conclusion criticisms are normal and they come naturally but team futminna went to the 26th edition of the national University games with a clear intent, goals may have not been met but they had the experience, they made a statement, a clear statement of intent ahead of further events. An anonymous reply to some of the vast criticisms they recieved was that the people Criticizing are those that haven't felt the experience of representing a prestigious institution in a very prestigious event as the university games, this is an event that hosts the very best sportsmen and women in the country where some of them are already professionals representing the nation in continental and world events, this is no doubt a wonderful experience for futminna and credits has to go to all officials, staffs and players of every sports and game events that represented futminna at NUGA 2022. In no small mention to the athletics team and and the board games like Scrabble and chess and every other sportsmen that represented futminna. Team futminna departed Lagos State on 25th and 28th March 2022 respectively with their heads held high after such an EXPERIENCE.

Shortsightedness of football when it comes to seeing vision and possibilities

 

It is the night before the United States’ opening game of the 2010 World Cup finals, and Jay DeMerit is scared.

Not because of the magnitude of the match against England, or because the Watford centre-back is going to be marking Wayne Rooney. It’s because, with less than 24 hours until kick-off, he is struggling to see.

The problems began nine months earlier when DeMerit, then aged 30, woke up on the morning of a Championship match against Plymouth Argyle with a red and pus-filled eye after he accidentally scratched it with a contact lens on the team bus.

He was unable to play that September evening, and the eye was swollen shut by the time of Watford’s journey back to London. Taken to hospital, DeMerit was diagnosed with a corneal infection. He ended up losing 70 per cent of his eye tissue in just under 48 hours.

“I was captain of Watford, starting for the national team — we’d just beaten Spain,” DeMerit tells The Athletic. “We’re ready to go to a World Cup, and I’m suddenly blind in one eye?”

Emergency surgery saved his sight, although he was confined to a darkened bedroom for three months — except for one trip to a Jay-Z gig in a pirate costume, a fancy-dress outfit chosen so his eye patch would blend in.

All that mattered was making the World Cup, but after the US squad’s arrival in South Africa, things began to unravel once DeMerit had an uncomfortable eyeball stitch removed two days before a warm-up friendly against Australia in Johannesburg.

“Halfway through, I was missing headers, misjudging the ball,” DeMerit says. “By the end of the game, I was just trying to see the man I was marking. I went to the doctor, and my cornea had almost collapsed on itself. The eye doctor said I was legally blind.”

Head coach Bob Bradley still named DeMerit in his starting team to face England a week later, but logistical issues hindered the delivery of specialist contact lenses.

A crisis was only averted five hours before kick-off, thanks to a mad dash involving London doctors, motorcycle couriers, and secret packages.

 JAY-DEMERIT-WAYNE-ROONEY-
Jay DeMerit had an eye scare before being able to mark Wayne Rooney at the 2010 World Cup (Photo: Timothy A Clary/AFP via Getty Images)

The United States earned an impressive 1-1 draw after a mistake from England goalkeeper Rob Green, with DeMerit and centre-back partner Oguchi Onyewu crucial to keeping Fabio Capello’s men scoreless after Steven Gerrard’s fourth-minute opener.

“I was freaking out,” says DeMerit. “But I’m also like, ‘This is wild. This is the craziest shit I’ve seen in my life’. I got these contacts at 3pm (that day). I played the best game of my life at eight.”

So, how important is eyesight to elite footballers?


Answering this question is personal.

Since birth, I have had extremely limited vision in my left eye, despite surgery and other attempts to strengthen it.

In the early noughties, while sporting a dashing dinosaur-pattern eye patch, I attempted to stumble after a ball on various playing fields. The main memory is of staring up at the sky, the wind knocked out of me, with a bump on my head.

Playing recreational football with, effectively, one eye was hard. Playing professional football seemed impossible.

Gordon Banks reached a similar conclusion, England’s 1966 World Cup winning-goalkeeper ending his top-flight career after suffering a major eye injury in a 1972 car crash.

Another injury, sustained in a childhood accident, could have stopped Dean Shiels.

The former Rangers and Hibernian midfielder enjoyed a 15-year pro career, including 14 senior caps for Northern Ireland. He achieved this despite having the injured eye replaced with a glass one at 19, after leaving Arsenal’s academy.

In 2017, Falkirk players Joe McKee and Kevin O’Hara were given four- and eight-match bans respectively for taunting Shiels, then with Dunfermline, about his disability.

Dean Shiels received abuse against Falkirk in 2017 over his disability (Photo: Paul Devlin – SNS Group\SNS Group via Getty Images)

“It was really difficult to compete and be successful,” Shiels, who now manages Dungannon Swifts in Northern Ireland’s Premiership, says. “I played in midfield, where most of the bodies are, where there’s less space to play.

“If you’re playing as a goalkeeper or defender, the players are in front of you, so you can see most of the play. But when you’re a midfielder, you’ve got to turn your body, turn your head, you’re constantly scanning, scanning, scanning.”

Scanning — gathering information while looking away from the ball — is linked with high-quality midfield play.

Arsene Wenger, who oversaw a young Shiels at Arsenal two decades ago, judged players on their scanning frequency, explaining at the 2019 Sport Innovation Summit in Paris how the best will “scan six to eight times in the last 10 seconds before they receive the ball, and the normal players three to four”.

This action is heavily reliant on peripheral vision, as Jude Bellingham, rated as one of football’s top scanners, revealed after scoring a solo goal for Borussia Dortmund against Arminia Bielefeld in October 2020: “With football, you never really see the full picture. Everything is in the periphery of your vision”.

“It’s not like cricket, where everything happens in front of you,” explains Aaran Patel, an optometrist who works with Premier League club Brentford. “In football, you need better peripheral vision. Not so much razor-sharp vision, but a 360-degree outline of what’s occurring.”

Difficult then for a player such as Shiels, whose field of vision is half that of a typical player. But scanning was not the only impediment: “When you’re on the ball, they say the best players can see the whole pitch, spy the long pass. Pep Guardiola says Johan Cruyff told him, ‘When you’re on the ball, look as long and far as you can’. And your vision dictates that.”

DEAN-SHIELS-
Shiels, right, celebrates with Kyle Lafferty after scoring for Northern Ireland in 2014 (Photo: Paul Faith/PA Images via Getty Images)

Shiels was also told that using only one eye may affect how he times contact with the ball, such as when attempting to head away a cross. DeMerit noted a similar effect.

To address this, the club doctor at Hibernian, Shiels’ club at the time, made contact with Tottenham Hotspur. Dutch international Edgar Davids had signed for the Premier League side in 2005, bringing with him bespoke eyewear he wore during matches because of glaucoma, a condition in which pressure within the eyeball causes blurriness and tunnel vision.

“That was never something I was going to entertain,” says Shiels. “I didn’t want to draw attention to the eyesight, or to myself.”

Instead, he would find his own solution.


Shiels’ story is not unique.

Hannah Hampton, a goalkeeper for England and Aston Villa in the women’s game, has no depth perception. At Manchester United, goalkeeper David de Gea is long-sighted. The Old Trafford club also had Paul Scholes miss most of the 2006-07 season because of a blocked vein in the retina of his right eye, while Ryan Giggs struggled with the peripheral vision on his right-hand side.

On average, optometrists working at clubs have noted that players have better eyesight than the general population, which they put down to lifestyle factors — footballers will be on the training pitch or in the gym, rather than staring at screens for hours.

Encouragingly for those players who do have vision problems, this indicates that above-average eyesight does not confer a significant advantage on whether an individual will become a professional.

Nevertheless, sight deficiencies still present a challenge.

“My view has always been that sport is very simple: Hit the ball, catch the ball, kick the ball,” Amar Shah, an optometrist who has worked with Arsenal as well as the England cricket and rugby union teams, says. “If you can see the object clearer, you’ve got a better chance of doing all of that.”

Professional teams first began to work on vision with optometrists and sport-scientists in the 1990s.

The most high-profile of these is Dr Sherylle Calder, who has worked with three Rugby Union World Cup-winning sides, the Australian cricket team, Formula One driver Valtteri Bottas, and helped Ernie Els win The Open in 2012 at age 42.

SHERYLLE-CALDER-ERNIE-ELS-
Dr Sherylle Calder helped golfer Ernie Els later in his career (Photo: Andy Lyons/Getty Images)

In football, she has been hired by SouthamptonWolverhampton WanderersBournemouth, and the Tottenham academy, as well as helping her native South Africa to the 1996 Africa Cup of Nations title.

“Lots of players have great peripheral vision, but are really slow in their responses,” Dr Calder tells The Athletic. “So peripheral vision has a role, but you need information from scanning around you. I call that peripheral awareness — it’s the ability to respond to your peripheral.

“If the eyes take in information early, you have more time on the ball. That’s the basis of Lionel Messi’s performance, for example. Valtteri, he always talks about how when he’s in the car it feels like slow-motion.

“I’ve worked with lots of players with some deficit in their sight — but I don’t specifically work on sight, I work on taking in information. I can improve visual motor performance, and that helps to counter the visual deficit.

“It’s a trainable skill. If a human has a deficit in a certain area, you compensate by hyping the other skills.”

This chimes with Shiels’ experience.

“It was forced,” he admits. “I always had to be aware, to know my next pass, where the opposition was coming from: Simple things I needed in congested areas to overcome my vision.”

Several Premier League teams, including Brentford and Chelsea, use visual training drills to try to develop players’ peripheral awareness. Last summer, Liverpool’s Trent Alexander-Arnold told The Athletic about how these drills helped him improve his decision-making on the pitch.

Examples of these are walls fitted with flashing lights, where the participant has to slap each trigger as it glows.

“It’s all about reaction time,” says Brentford optometrist Patel. “If you can be half a second quicker than someone else, that’s an advantage. If you’re sprinting, that gives you five metres.”

Some players, desperate for an edge, have taken this on board.

Frank Lampard worked with a behavioural optometrist during his playing days at Chelsea to help him time his trademark runs into the opposition penalty area. Arsenal goalkeepers Jens Lehmann and Manuel Almunia trialled Nike-made contact lenses specially manufactured to highlight the colours of the Jabulani ball used at the 2010 World Cup.

Shiels relays a story from his former Hibernian manager Tony Mowbray, who was told by Sir Alex Ferguson that Manchester United had Giggs’ eyes tested, feeling his vision was better when moving from left to right than right to left. “They asked him to cut in from the left onto his right foot as a result.”


But, in general, football is being left squinting at the investment made towards training and testing the eyes of athletes in other sports.

A medical before a transfer does not typically include an eye-test, despite the sometimes vast sums of money at play. Due to the ethnic make-up of the Premier League, this can leave large swathes of the top flight exposed. “While most football players shouldn’t have too many problems, there are much higher rates of glaucoma within players of an Afro-Caribbean background — up to eight times more likely,” Patel says.

Additionally, despite the prevalence of studies linking screen use to visual deterioration, today’s players spend more time on phones and other devices.

“We (humans) were never designed to work on small devices, but to look far and be aware of what’s around us,” says Dr Calder. “By looking at these devices, we’re detraining the ability. We’re trying to work in this little environment, so when we get on-field and have to scan, use peripheral awareness, judge, all those skills, they’re harmed.”

As managers search for ‘one-percenters’, pre-game phone use is not banned — yet ketchup is outlawed at some club canteens.

Several optometrists spoken to by The Athletic put football’s lack of interest in the field down to concern over the media blowback they felt they would receive. Comparing the keenness of rugby and cricket to collaborate, former Arsenal optometrist Shah calls football teams “tricky”.

“They are very focused on the negative press that they might get. A few years ago, we were dealing with Ipswich and West Ham, and they were very focused on not wanting any headlines — ‘Blind As Bats,’ that kind of thing.”

As a result, things are missed. Patel raises the issue of training under floodlights. “I can only think of one Brentford player who’s got a lazy or underdeveloped eye,” he says. “This player has said they have issues when it’s floodlit — it’s hard to see things quickly because it’s almost too bright.

“Because teams rarely train in the evenings, it doesn’t give those players a chance to improve their awareness in the dark. It’s only matches (that happen at night).”

Shiels believes that the majority of players will not want to reveal any vision issues they have: “I wouldn’t hide it, but I never felt it was for me to bring up.

“No player wants to show weakness. If they misplace a pass, get caught on the ball, turn into pressure, they don’t want a narrative attached to them that it’s because of their eyesight.

“Lots of players go and get laser treatment privately.”


So, The Athletic asked the experts — how might football look if more attention was paid to players’ vision and visual awareness?

“There are physios, nutritionists, a team doctor, specialists who look at injury prevention,” Patel says. “There will be another pocket which optometry will come into. If you’re able to spot things quicker in the six-yard box, it will have a real impact.

“Also, with academies — kids now start at a young age, when vision is so fluid. If parents are desperate for kids to be a footballer from the age of eight or nine, training their eyesight could really provide a significant difference.”

Research could help care for players post-retirement.

In 2020, scientists at Indiana University in the US linked heading footballs to visual deterioration, finding subconcussive impacts impair neuro-eye function. Rapid eye tests could become a clinical tool for monitoring players’ exposure to the repeated blows linked with the onset of dementia.

However, for the most part, the experts stressed one thing: Poor vision does not preclude you from professional football.

But football is still short-sighted when it comes to seeing vision’s possibilities.

(Photo: Getty Images; graphic: Sam Richardson)

NBA play-in tournament: How it works, and is it a good thing for the league?

  

Welcome to the Play-In Tournament!

It’s the area of the NBA calendar that both exists and doesn’t exist at the same time. The NBA had been kicking around this idea and a midseason tournament idea around for years when the pandemic threw a wrench into everything back in March 2020. As part of the restart of the 2019-20 season, the league implemented a rough sketch for a Play-In Tournament in the bubble in Orlando. At the time, a team needed to be within four games of the No. 8 seed to trigger a Play-In game.

The Memphis Grizzlies were in a battle with the Portland Trail Blazers for the No. 8 seed, and the Phoenix Suns were showing us a sign of things to come with an 8-0 bubble performance that nearly threw them into the mix as well. Ultimately, the Blazers and the Grizzlies played for the right to lose to the Los Angeles Lakers in the first round of the playoffs. The Blazers used a massive fourth-quarter push and 20-point games from four of their starters to outlast Ja Morant and the Grizzlies. In the Eastern Conference, we didn’t get this madness because nobody finished within four games of Orlando.

Things have changed since that bubble Play-In action. Last season, the league expanded the Play-In Tournament, and the rules are the same this season. Let’s jump in to get you ready for the Play-In action, if you’re unfamiliar. If you are familiar, you can check my work here and tell me I got it right or wrong in the comments.

OK, so how does this work?

Pretty simple. The top six teams in each conference are guaranteed a first-round playoff series, and the seeding matchups are the same as always.

  • No. 1 seed plays the No. 8 seed
  • No. 2 seed plays the No. 7 seed
  • No. 3 seed plays the No. 6 seed
  • No. 4 seed plays the No. 5 seed

The Play-In Tournament is here to determine the No. 7 and No. 8 seeds. The teams finishing seventh through 10th in each conference go into the Play-In Tournament pool of contestants. If you finished 11th through 15th, enjoy the lottery. Four other teams will be joining you shortly.

The battle for the No. 7 seed comes from the teams in each conference that finished with the seventh- and eighth-best records. The winner of that game wins the No. 7 seed in its respective conference.

The battle for the No. 8 seed happens with the teams in each conference that finish ninth and 10th. They play each other for a chance to play for the No. 8 seed in a second game. They play the loser of the game between No. 7 and No. 8 in the conference.

So if a team loses, it’s out?

Yes and no. If you finish seventh or eighth in the conference, you have to lose twice in the Play-In Tournament to miss out on the playoffs. Think of the Golden State Warriors last year. They lost to the Lakers and the Grizzlies before Steph Curry and company were eliminated.

If you’re in the No. 9 versus No. 10 matchup in either conference and you lose that first game, you’re out immediately. Your extra life in the video game has been used up. If you win that No. 9 versus No. 10 matchup but lose the next game, you’re out, because we need to get to the playoffs already, and we’ve delayed the first round long enough.

Who is in the Play-In Tournament?

These are the four teams we’ve got in the Play-In Tournament in the Eastern Conference:

These are the four teams we’ve got in the Play-In Tournament in the Western Conference:

Wait, the Lakers didn’t make it?

Buddy, that is a whole drama altogether. No, they did not make it. It was a whole thing. Jovan Buha has what you need to know. Or you can read what Frank Vogel thinks of the season via Bill Oram.

Wait, so did the Knicks make the Play-In Tournament?

OK, back to who is actually in this thing. Is this considered the playoffs?

It’s actually not considered the playoffs. The league deemed that last year when we were asking about how to classify this. For example, think of the Sacramento Kings. OK, please stop laughing, this is serious. But think of the Kings. Are you done yet? We good? OK. Think of the Kings … thank you. Let’s say the Kings made the Play-In Tournament but lost out on getting the seventh or eighth seed. Legally, their playoff drought would still be active. It’s actually the longest active playoff drought in the NBA. This is the 16th straight year they haven’t made the playoffs. The next longest streak is the Charlotte Hornets, although if they win two games in the Play-In Tournament, that streak will be snapped at five years.

Though this Play-In Tournament is the postseason, it’s also not the playoffs.

Wait, there is a difference between the postseason and playoffs?

There is now. There didn’t used to be, but now that distinction kind of matters. Maybe this is all a pointless semantics game, but once we’re past the 82-game regular season, then we are legally “postseason.” But the league has made it clear this doesn’t count as the playoffs, so the postseason will probably have two meanings. People will still refer to the playoffs as the postseason, but the Play-In Tournament is simply the postseason and not the playoffs. Here’s an example of what I’m talking about.

Let’s say the Lakers had made the Play-In Tournament as the No. 10 seed. LeBron James plays, they win the first game against New Orleans and then they play in the second game. Those game totals, those point totals and any other stats from those Play-In Tournament games would not count toward LeBron’s playoff numbers for his career. He’d still be stuck at 266 playoff games and 11,035 playoff minutes played. Even if he dropped 100 points in those two games, it wouldn’t count toward his 7,631 career playoff points. These stats don’t register for the playoffs.

Wait, these stats don’t count?

They don’t. Perhaps the NBA will start counting them as their own leaderboard outside of the regular season or playoffs at some point, but they currently do not. Is Morant the all-time leader in Play-In Tournament points? Technically, nobody is. But he’s played in three Play-In Tournament games (there have been seven total games in the history of the Play-In), and he scored 90 points in those three games. Nobody has come close to that, other than maybe Dillon Brooks — his teammate — who has amassed 58 career Play-In points.

While we can easily go research and find out Jayson Tatum’s 50 points are an all-time high for points in a single Play-In game, that 50-point game doesn’t count toward his official career total of 50-point games. He has four of them in the regular season and one in a playoff game. But that 50-point game against the Washington Wizards to secure the No. 7 seed in the Play-In Tournament last year is essentially on that island from the TV show “Lost.” We don’t know how to get it back, and it has no idea what “4, 8, 15, 16, 23 and 42” mean. Are those other Play-In scoring numbers? Code to a bunker? Lotto numbers? It doesn’t exist.

Play-In Tournament points exist, but they don’t exist at the same time. It’s like eating food at a stadium or in an airport. Those calories aren’t real and don’t actually apply to your body.

Eventually, the NBA will have these stats readily available, but it’s probably looking to flesh out the history of the Play-In a bit more.

Is this a good thing for the NBA?

Overall, I believe it is. Yes, there were already probably too many playoff teams allowed in the NBA with more than half the league making it. Yes, extending that now to essentially 20 of the 30 teams and then just pretending the four who didn’t make it were always in a lottery situation is an odd way to go about filling out your playoff bracket as a league. If you think that’s too many teams after the regular season, you’re really not wrong.

The Play-In Tournament does seem to be curbing tanking in the short term. It’s not fixing it completely, but it’s helping. More teams are engaged for a longer time. We might have seen some bad practices from teams like New Orleans and even San Antonio if they had no chance to make the postseason over the final three or four weeks of the regular season. It keeps teams more engaged and aggressively acquiring players at the trade deadline. It provides more hope, even if that hope can be obliterated with one bad game between a No. 9 and No. 10 seed.

The Play-In is here to stay, and now you’re all caught up on what it means and how it works. Enjoy!