It's NBA playoff time! Like last year, I wanted to take a quick look at each matchup based on record, net, offensive, and defensive ratings on NBA.com and also provide a trend or statistical note for each team. Lineup data is from NBA.com while individual splits are from Basketball Reference, and the matchups are listed in order of record.
#1 Thunder (68-14, +12.7, #3 O, #1 D) vs. #8 Grizzlies (48-34, +4.7, #6 O, #11 D)
Oklahoma City's big free agent signing Isaiah Hartenstein missed the start of the season, and then Chet Holmgren suffered his own injury early on, resulting in their ideal starting lineup of those two with my choice for MVP, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Williams, and Lu Dort surprisingly only playing 167 total minutes across 14 games together. OKC of course went 10-4 with a +15.0 net rating in those minutes, and overall the two bigs played 316 total minutes together to produce a +13.5 net rating. The Thunder's most used 5-man lineup was much smaller with Cason Wallace in place of Holmgren, and that actually juiced their already elite defense to an unbelievable 101.0 rating for a +15.9 net in 316 minutes. They just have so much versatility with a deep roster and the reigning Coach of the Year pulling the strings, and that combination helped produce the best point differential in NBA history. I think that they're the clear pick to come out of the West.
The Thunder finished the 2024-25 season with a point differential of +1,055.
— Nick Gallo (@NickAGallo) April 13, 2025
That's the biggest point differential in NBA history.
Memphis was able to advance in the Play-In tournament despite Ja Morant rolling his ankle in the first game, but the injury seemed to catch up to him in the second half en route to shooting just 7-24. Another injury that they have to deal with is rookie gem Jaylen Wells being out with a broken wrist after a scary fall late in the season. The Rookie of the Year contender played a big role as a lengthy defender, and in 543 minutes of him, Morant, and Desmond Bane as a perimeter trio, they had a +9.0 net rating. Scotty Pippen Jr., another breakout find, stepped up as a starter in Wells' place for the two Play-In games, but that's a pretty small group to go against OKC's big guards. Pippen with Morant and Bane had a -1.4 net rating in the regular season, albeit in only 98 minutes, so I wouldn't be surprised if that lineup changes now based on the matchup. However, I'm not sure what to expect out of interim head coach Tuomas Iisalo, who only went 4-5 to finish the season after the surprising dismissal of Taylor Jenkins so late in the season. Between the difference in coaching between these two teams and the fact that the Thunder have won 9 straight versus the Grizzlies, I'm going with a sweep here despite this being a strong #8 seed.
Thunder in 4
#1 Cavaliers (64-18, +9.2, #1 O, #8 D) vs. #8 Heat (37-45, +0.4, #21 O, #9 D)
I wrote in this piece a year ago about Evan Mobley's increase in three pointers to end the year, and he took that a step further this season to average 3.2 attempts while still making 37%. He also bumped up his free throw attempts to 4.3 per game even with spending more time outside the arc, which could be attributed to the new coaching staff utilizing him more as an attacker from the elbows. It's a bit ironic that Kenny Atkinson has a great case for Coach of the Year for improving this team by 16 wins to runaway with the top seed in the East, but he might lose to the coach that he replaced last year. One of the more interesting decisions that he made was to keep Max Strus in the starting lineup after he got up full speed, despite the big trade deadline move for De'Andre Hunter. With the former next to Darius Garland, Donovan Mitchell, Mobley, and Jarrett Allen, they had a +12.5 net rating in 243 minutes. That rises to +18.5 with Hunter, but that five man combination surprisingly only played a tiny sample of 39 minutes together.
Miami's new starting lineup has almost as small of a sample size with Tyler Herro, Alec Burks, Andrew Wiggins, Bam Adebayo, Kel'el Ware only playing 46 regular season minutes together...but to the tune of a +36.7 net rating in that limited time. Including the Play-In, that group is now 5-1 together after they made history to be the first #10 seed to make the playoffs. I'm only picking them to take one game here out of faith in Erik Spoelstra and their battle-tested veterans, though, because this group lacks consistent offense, as seen in the 4th quarter of the second Play-In game that they seemingly had in control like the first. That's partly why they might be my favorite of the rumored Kevin Durant destinations this summer, and they have up to three 1st round picks that they could potentially include with the matching salary of Terry Rozier, Duncan Robinson, and Kyle Anderson in the last guaranteed years of their contracts. Young players like Ware, Jaime Jaquez, Nikola Jovic, or Pelle Larsson could be mixed in to improve the offer and break up the salaries as a third team might need to be included to avoid Apron restrictions, but in any case, I can see a path here that makes sense once the Heat inevitably flame out in the playoffs with the talent disparity.
Cavs in 5
#2 Celtics (61-21, +9.4, #2 O, #4 D) vs. #7 Magic (41-41, -0.2, #27 O, #2 D)
Boston's traditional starting lineup of Jrue Holiday, Derrick White, Jaylen Brown, Jayson Tatum, and Kristaps Porzingis only played 357 total minutes together over 24 games (going 18-6), and amazingly, it had a 0.0 net rating. This comes after that same group posted a +11.0 net rating over 623 minutes last season, though, so I'm not too worried. The ability to plug in Al Horford and/or potential Sixth Man of the Year Payton Pritchard into various configurations to either play big or small gives their top-seven rotation valuable versatility, and adding in Sam Hauser's shooting and Luke Kornet's size helps round out their rotation nicely. Brown's lingering knee issue is a bit concerning, but both him and Tatum improving their career-highs in assists from 3.6 to 4.5 and 4.9 to 6.0, respectively, was an underrated storyline of Boston's season. I still think they're the team to beat in the East after they were mostly able to coast in their title defense and still reached 61 wins.
It may have surprised folks tuning into the Play-In game to see journeyman Cory Joseph as the starting point guard for Orlando with Jalen Suggs injured, but they went 11-4 down the stretch with him in the lineup before resting players on the last day. His numbers won't blow anyone away with 6.9 points, 3.1 rebounds, 2.7 assists, 0.9 steals, and 0.4 turnovers in just 22.2 minutes with 43.1%/38.2%/83.3% shooting, but that caretaker 3+D role fit with their main starters (Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Franz Wagner, Paolo Banchero, and Wendell Carter Jr) surprisingly well to post a +11.5 net rating in 216 minutes. I just don't trust their offense enough to keep up with Boston's firepower for a full series, so even though they were a tough matchup to win two of the three meetings this season, I'm going with a gentleman's sweep.
Celtics in 5