The NBA's playoff chase enters its
final days. Here's a look at what's happening
[April 04, 2025]
By The Associated Press
It’s playoff-positioning time in the NBA.
Going into Thursday, there are 89 games left in the season. The 10
Eastern Conference postseason teams are set; Cleveland, Boston, New
York and Indiana are in the playoffs, Detroit and Milwaukee are on
the brink of joining them, while Orlando, Atlanta, Miami and Chicago
are in the likely play-in field.
In the Western Conference, Oklahoma City is the No. 1 seed and
Houston is in the playoffs. The Los Angeles Lakers, Denver, Golden
State and Minnesota enter Thursday holding playoff spots, with the
Los Angeles Clippers and Memphis chasing them and trying to stay out
of the play-in. Dallas and Sacramento are fighting for play-in
berths, with Phoenix, Portland and San Antonio still alive for those
as well.
Add it up, and 23 of the 30 teams are still playing for something
other than lottery odds with a week-and-a-half to go in the regular
season.
Thursday’s games
Orlando at Washington — Big for the Magic in terms of East play-in
seeding.
Milwaukee at Philadelphia — The Bucks are on the brink of clinching
a playoff berth.
Minnesota at Brooklyn — Not a must-win, but might feel like it for
Wolves in their quest to avoid the play-in.
Memphis at Miami — Grizzlies are sliding (lost four straight), Heat
are sizzling (won six straight).

Portland at Toronto — Blazers’ slim hopes for West play-in probably
would require winning out.
Golden State at LA Lakers — Potential first-round matchup. Stephen
Curry. LeBron James. Need we say more?
National TV schedule
It’s a TNT doubleheader Thursday, with Grizzlies-Heat at 7:30 p.m.
Eastern and Warriors-Lakers at 10 p.m. Eastern.
NBA TV has a doubleheader Friday: Phoenix at Boston (7:30 p.m.) and
Denver at Golden State (10 p.m.).
Betting odds
Oklahoma City (+175) is favored to win the NBA title, according to
BetMGM Sportsbook, followed by Boston (+190), Cleveland (+500), then
Denver and the Lakers (both +1400) and Golden State (+1600).
Key dates
April 11 — All 30 NBA teams play.
April 12 — No games.
April 13 — All 30 NBA teams play, end of regular season.
April 15 — The No. 7 and No. 8 finishers in both conferences play to
start the play-in tournament. Winners are the No. 7 seed for the
playoffs; losers will host play-in elimination games on April 18.
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Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, right, Detroit
Pistons forward Tobias Harris, left, during the second half of an
NBA basketball game, Wednesday, April 2, 2025, in Oklahoma City. (AP
Photo/Kyle Phillips)

April 16 — The No. 9 and No. 10 finishers in both
conferences play. Winners move on to April 18; losers are finished
for the season.
April 18 — The April 15 game losers play host to the April 16 game
winners. Winners are the No. 8 seed for the playoffs; losers are
finished for the season.
April 19 — NBA playoffs begin.
Numbers watch
—Oklahoma City’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has 69 consecutive 20-point
games, something only Wilt Chamberlain (who twice had 80-game
single-season streaks), Oscar Robertson (who had a 76-game
single-season streak) and Michael Jordan (who had a 69-game
single-season streak) have done in the same season. OKC plays Friday
at Houston.
—The league record for 3-pointers made in a season is on pace to
fall on Sunday. There have been 30,853 made 3s so far this season;
the record is 31,579, set last season.
—Boston (1,356) is seven 3-pointers away from matching the
single-season team record, set two years ago by Golden State. The
Celtics are on pace to break that mark Friday at home against
Phoenix.
—For the first time, the NBA could have three players make 300
3-pointers in a season. Detroit’s Malik Beasley has 295, Minnesota’s
Anthony Edwards has 292 and Golden State’s Stephen Curry has 282.
Stat of the day
San Antonio’s Chris Paul, a month or so shy of turning 40, is the
NBA’s second-oldest player behind LeBron James. And Paul is on pace
to start all 82 games this season — which would make him the
second-oldest player in NBA history to do so, behind Utah’s John
Stockton.
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