Western Conference Play-in
(7) Lakers vs. (8) Warriors
If the Lakers advance past the play-in round—as they do in 86 percent of simulations from
The Ringer’s NBA Odds Machine—they will not be a typical no. 7 or 8 seed. However, it’s worth considering
just how unprecedented a path they’ll have to trace if they want to repeat as champions.
No team seeded seventh or eighth has ever won the NBA title. In fact, only one team seeded lower than fourth—the 1994-95 Rockets, seeded sixth—has ever lifted the trophy. Since the playoff field expanded to 16 teams in 1984, only one no. 7 seed and one no. 8 seed have won more than a single series.
Playoff Outcomes for Low Seeds, 1984-2020
Result | 7-Seeds | 8-Seeds |
---|
Lost in First Round | 69 | 69 |
Lost in Second Round | 4 | 4 |
Lost in Conference Finals | 1 | 0 |
Lost in Finals | 0 | 1 |
Won Championship | 0 | 0 |
Both of those longest-lasting teams benefitted from strange circumstances. The 1986-87 SuperSonics finished with a losing record and the no. 7 seed, but upset the no. 2 Mavericks in the first round—at the same time that the no. 6 Rockets upset the no. 3 Trail Blazers, giving Seattle an easier second-round opponent. The Sonics reached the conference finals before losing to the Lakers in a sweep.
The other team, more famously, is the 1998-99 Knicks, who
reached the Finals as the East’s no. 8 seed. That was a weird season, with a shorter schedule due to the lockout and no clear favorite after the
collapse of the Bulls. Like those Knicks, the 2020-21 Lakers are a veteran team with ample playoff experience, playing in a weird shortened season with no clear favorite. And like the 1986-87 SuperSonics, they could benefit from another upset too, if they beat the Warriors to grab the no. 7 seed and then the no. 6 Blazers beat the Jamal Murray–less Nuggets in the first round.
But the Lakers’ path won’t be easy. Only two teams this season boasted a top-six offense and a top-six defense,
per Cleaning the Glass: the Jazz and Suns, a.k.a. the Lakers’ two potential first-round opponents.
The Warriors, L.A.’s opponent in Wednesday’s play-in game, don’t have even the Lakers’ slim ambitions of a title this season—not with Klay Thompson hurt and a thin rotation. But Steph Curry’s Herculean run has made more possible for Golden State than anyone imagined after their first few games.
Curry added one more resplendent stat to his long list this season with his 46-point performance in Sunday’s regular-season finale. That tally boosted his season scoring average to 32 points per game—allowing him to “score his age,” in his age-32 season. (Basketball-Reference defines a player’s seasonal age as his age on February 1.) He became the first player 32 or older to manage that feat, and only the fifth player age 30 or above:
- Rick Barry, Allen Iverson, and James Harden at 30
- Jerry West at 31
- Steph Curry at 32
As one might expect, scoring one’s age is much more common at lower totals. In addition to Curry, players to score their age this season were Anthony Edwards (19); Zion Williamson (20); Luka Doncic (21); Jayson Tatum, Trae Young, and Collin Sexton (22); De’Aaron Fox and Brandon Ingram (23); Donovan Mitchell, Devin Booker, and Jaylen Brown (24); Zach LaVine and Nikola Jokic (25); Joel Embiid and Giannis Antetokounmpo (26); and Bradley Beal (27). Curry has a half-decade or more on all of them.