In case you didn’t know

In his annual All-Star Weekend press conference, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver mentioned that in the hope of seeing the two best teams play in the NBA Finals, the league is considering seeding all Playoff teams 1 to 16, instead of the current Conference format.

Heart of the matter

After the All-Star Break, all teams returned back to practice on Wednesday. In a post-practice interaction with the media, James wasn’t too enthusiastic about the new format.

James is coming off of seven straight Finals experience, four with the Miami Heat from 2011 to 2014 and then three consecutive with the Cavaliers, and given the team’s mid-season trades, he looks poised for his eighth consecutive appearance.

The four-time league MVP wasn’t for the change and stated the fact that six out of the 14 championships teams during the career have been from the East.

While James did break it down to championships, Adam Silver had another agenda on mind regarding the new format :

What’s next?

The new-look Cavaliers will try to continue their good momentum (2-0 win streak) against the Washington Wizards at home on Thursday evening.

With respect to the new Playoffs format, it is definitely not being implemented this season.

Author’s Take

Facts are facts. Since Michael Jordan retired in 1998, the Eastern Conference has been weaker, to say the least. It’s happened way too often that the Western Conference Finals have been more competitive than the Finals itself.

Although James is right, in terms of numbers (East won 6 out of 14), what he isn’t right about is whether each time the two best teams in the league met in the Finals. The aim, on the part of Adam Silver, is not to see whether both conferences are equal in terms of championships, it’s to ensure the two best teams in the league meet on the grandest stage of them all - the NBA Finals.

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