NBA playoffs: What to know about the play-in round, which runs Tuesday-Friday

After 1,230 games, here’s where things stand: 12 teams are in the playoffs, 10 teams are done and eight teams are about to fight for the final four postseason spots.

The NBA’s play-in tournament starts Tuesday with the Western Conference games. The eighth-seeded Los Angeles Lakers visit seventh-seeded New Orleans, and 10th-seeded Golden State plays an elimination game at ninth-seeded Sacramento.

The Lakers-Pelicans winner is the No. 7 seed and takes on Denver in Round 1; the Lakers-Pelicans loser will play host to the Warriors-Kings winner on Friday to decide who is the No. 8 seed and takes on Oklahoma City. The Warriors-Kings loser is eliminated.

The East play-in games are Wednesday. Eighth-seeded Miami visits seventh-seeded Philadelphia, and 10th-seeded Atlanta Hawks play at the Chicago Bulls. The Heat-76ers winner will face No. 2 New York; the other play-in survivor from the East will meet No. 1 Boston.

National TV schedule

Tuesday

  • Lakers at Pelicans, 6.30 p.m. (TNT)
  • Warriors at Kings, 9 p.m. TNT

Wednesday

  • Heat at 76ers, 6 p.m. (ESPN)
  • Hawks at Bulls, 8.30 p.m. (ESPN)

Friday

  • East play-in game, TBD (ESPN)
  • West play-in game, TBD (TNT)

Who’s in — and who’s out

Eastern Conference

  • No. 1 Boston vs. Friday East play-in game winner, series starting Sunday
  • No. 2 New York vs. Miami or Philadelphia, series starting Saturday
  • No. 3 Milwaukee vs. No. 6 Indiana, series starting Sunday
  • No. 4 Cleveland vs. No. 5 Orlando, series starting Saturday

Western Conference

  • No. 1 Oklahoma City vs. Friday West play-in game winner, series starting Sunday
  • No. 2 Denver vs. Los Angeles Lakers or New Orleans, series starting Saturday
  • No. 3 Minnesota vs. No. 6 Phoenix, series starting Saturday
  • No. 4 Los Angeles Clippers vs. No. 5 Dallas, series starting Sunday

Brooklyn, Toronto, Charlotte, Washington, Detroit, Houston, Utah, Memphis, Portland and San Antonio all saw their seasons end Sunday.

Betting guide

Boston has home-court advantage throughout the NBA playoffs and currently is the heavy favorite to win the championship, according to BetMGM. The Celtics are listed at +175, well ahead of defending champion Denver (+320). Next up: the Clippers (+1200), followed by Milwaukee (+1300) and both Oklahoma City and Dallas (each +1600).

Stat of the day

The NBA season-high for points in a game by a team this season was 157. It happened twice — both times by Indiana, and in both cases, the opponent was Atlanta.

The Pacers finished the regular season with 10,110 points. That’s fourth most in a regular season in NBA history. The others: Denver scored 10,371 in 1981-82, the Nuggets scored 10,147 in 1983-84 and Philadelphia scored 10,143 in 1966-67.

Quote of the day

“Indiana has had our number all year, right? So, perfect opponent. Listen, we’ve got to play somebody and they’re tough. They played great against us. They probably have great confidence against us.” — Bucks coach Doc Rivers, after learning his team will face Indiana in Round 1. The Pacers went 4-1 against the Bucks this season; the rare fifth game in the season series was part of the scheduling quirks created by the In-Season Tournament.

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