Disliked by LeBron, NBA’s Play-In Tournament Is a Fan Favorite

Fans are looking forward to seeing James take on Steph Curry and the Warriors in the play-in round

LeBron James drives on Stephen Curry

LeBron James drives on Stephen Curry at Staples Center.

By Evan Bleier

LeBron James may not like the NBA’s new playoff format, but it appears that fans of the league are also fans of the recently adopted play-in postseason model.

Per a recent Morning Consult survey, 63% of NBA fans, including 79% of self-identified avid fans, approve of the introduction of the play-in tournament to determine the final two playoff seeds in each conference. In contrast, only 12% of NBA fans said they disapprove of adding more teams into the playoff mix via the miniature round-robin tournament.

“Millennial and Generation Z sports fans were more likely to approve of the play-in tournament, which is scheduled to run Tuesday through Friday, than fans from Generation X and the baby boomer generation, but even older sports fans were more likely to support the idea than to oppose it,” according to Morning Consult.

A poll conducted in December 2019 when the league was discussing the concept with the NBA Players Association and its broadcast partners found 51% of NBA fans said they favored the play-in competition, while 21% dissented. 

This year’s edition of the play-in format, which was adopted last year after the league went into a bubble in Florida last summer to finish the season with the COVID-19 pandemic still surging, will begin for the Eastern Conference with No. 10 Charlotte at No. 9 Indiana and No. 8 Washington at No. 7 Boston this evening.

On Wednesday, the Western Conference will feature No. 10 San Antonio at No. 9 Memphis and No. 8 Golden State taking on James and the seventh-seeded Lakers in Los Angeles. The Warriors-Lakers game is shaping up to be the best game of the NBA season. It is also the first time James and Golden State’s Steph Curry — who led the league in scoring this season with 32 points per game — will face off in a playoff game that is not taking place in the NBA Finals. (They’ve played 22 playoff games against one another.)

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