NBA
East - Atlantic |
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Boston Celtics |
Brooklyn Nets |
New York Knicks |
Philadelphia Sixers |
Toronto Raptors |
East - Central |
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Chicago Bulls |
Cleveland Cavaliers |
Detroit Pistons |
Indiana Pacers |
Milwaukee Bucks |
East - Southeast |
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Atlanta Hawks |
Charlotte Hornets |
Miami Heat |
Orlando Magic |
Washington Wizards |
West - Northwest |
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Denver Nuggets |
Minnesota Timberwolves |
Oklahoma City Thunder |
Portland Trailblazers |
Utah Jazz |
West - Pacific |
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Golden State Warriors |
Los Angeles Clippers |
Los Angeles Lakers |
Phoenix Suns |
Sacramento Kings |
West - Southwest |
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Dallas Mavericks |
Houston Rockets |
Memphis Grizzlies |
New Orleans Pelicans |
San Antonio Spurs |
Clippers @ 76ers
Nets @ Kings
Mavericks @ Heat
Timberwolves @ Celtics
Raptors @ Cavaliers
2 days without a Raptors game. I'm looking forward this one!
Thunder have been off for five days. Don’t get it.
WTF? That's an all-star break. I think now that computers do the scheduling, the schedules make less human sense (e.g., 1-game roadtrips, or geographic back and forths on roadtrips). That's what I'd chalk the five straight off-days to. There'll have to be more back-to-backs gamenights to compensate, which is detrimental re: injuries. Of course, these criteria could probably be added to the algorithms that generate the schedules, but the schedules look wonkier the last few years than they have in years prior; MLB baseball too. It'd be interesting to see what the criteria are, besides the obvious (e.g., 82 games, arena availability) to evaluate whether the NBA is displacing some common-sense criteria for league-friendly criteria, such as positioning projected marquee matchups to try to maximize TV ratings, etc.
There was talk by the league before the start of the season about not calling as many silly fouls, but I feel that's just translated into more late whistles. Also, I don't really like the pause in play to reset a shot clock outside of clutch time. Grumble grumble