NBA playoffs 2024: Which teams can make it out of the play-in tournament

ByESPN Insiders ESPN logo
Wednesday, April 17, 2024
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After the Western Conference took center stage Tuesday night, it's the Eastern Conference's turn in the 2024 NBA play-in tournament.

A year after emerging from the play-in to reach the NBA Finals, Jimmy Butler and the Miami Heat are back, with Joel Embiid and the Philadelphia 76ers standing in their way. The winner will advance to face the New York Knicks in the first round, while the loser will face the winner of the Atlanta Hawks-Chicago Bulls game in an elimination game Friday.


Our NBA experts break down those two matchups and take a look ahead to Friday's Western Conference elimination game between theNew Orleans Pelicans and the Sacramento Kings.

MORE: All you need to know ahead of the playoffs

Can Jimmy Butler drag this Heat team out of the play-in for another deep run?

Chris Herring: Can he? Sure. Will he? I don't think so this time. The Sixers matchup is already a huge challenge, given how well Embiid and Philadelphia are playing. That's without even mentioning how banged up the Heat are, with Terry Rozier and Duncan Robinson having missed the past several games for Miami (Rozier has been ruled out for Wednesday's game). If the Heat do manage to snag the No. 8 spot, the uphill battle to take out the Boston Celtics looks a lot steeper than it was last season.

Jamal Collier: I'll never bet against Butler channeling his inner Michael Jordan come playoff time, but it does seem even more unlikely this time around. Miami had a few chances to win big regular-season games to get out of the play-in near the end of the season and lost just about all those games. To make a deep playoff run, the Heat almost certainly need to grab the No. 7 seed instead of falling to eighth, which would set them on a collision course with Boston right away.

Tim MacMahon: Absolutely he can. It would be foolish to rule out the possibility, especially if the Heat beat the 76ers to claim the seventh seed, putting Miami on the opposite side of the bracket from Boston. The Heat are a more talented team than a year ago, with Rozier,Jaime Jaquez Jr. anda healthy Tyler Herro getting the minutes that belonged to Gabe Vincent and Max Strus. But there's a big difference between possible and probable. Miami isn't a good bet to get out of the first round.

Andrew Lopez: If he does, it might be his most impressive "Playoff Jimmy" feat yet. The Heat have struggled to find their footing offensively (25th in scoring and 21st in offensive rating) while the team dealt with multiple injuries and lineup fluctuation. They used 35 starting lineups, had only two players with more than 70 games played and had just two five-man lineups with more than 80 minutes played together the entire season. Granted, the team was last in scoring a season ago and 25th in offensive rating before making it to the Finals, so to do it again it will need to rely on Playoff Jimmy and its fifth-ranked defense.

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