
Kelly IkoNBA reporterMon, April 13, 2026 at 3:16 AM UTC·6 min readOne hundred and seventy-three days later, from October’s opening night tipoff to Sunday’s regular-season finale, the time has come.
For the Oklahoma City Thunder, the blue-chip juggernaut built brick by brick, to attempt to propel their way back to June, enforce their will on the rest of the field and show why all roads lead through the reigning champs in Boomtown.
For the last of a dying breed, LeBron James and Kevin Durant, to hold off Father Time just a little while longer for yet another postseason campaign — which is a separate season unto itself.
For future Hall of Famers Steph Curry and Kawhi Leonard, celebrations of individuality and excellence in spite of aging, to endeavor to claw their way through the back door by way of the play-in tournament — an olive branch in a season full of thorns.
For the Detroit Pistons and San Antonio Spurs, the wide-eyed, brazen organizations way ahead of schedule who steamrolled their way to 60 wins and hope to cement their place among the NBA’s ecosystem for years to come.
For the forward-thinking braintrusts in New York, Denver, Minnesota and Cleveland, front offices that shaped their respective rosters with an admirable level of aggression, tact and hope, to see the fruits of their labor manifested.
And for the fans, the casual and hardcore alike, to convene under one umbrella — and 27 different streaming platforms — to enjoy the beautiful game they love and adore.
“That’s a whole ‘nother ball game,” Rockets head coach Ime Udoka said following Sunday’s 132-101 win. “The intensity, the possession battle, everything matters. And you can feel that even late in the season or in-season tournaments, you can feel a difference. Certain matchups as well you can get a playoff atmosphere, but the attention to detail, the scouting is way more in depth.”
The beauty of the postseason, sandwiched between 2,460 games of varying difficulty and the prolonged offseason, is that the very best of basketball is on full display. Regardless of creed — the book of analytics, the book of eye test or the book of both — the viewing public is temporarily shielded from the back alleys of the NBA.
It’s a necessary distraction of sorts. There is extreme difficulty in crowning these real-time moments as a golden era, despite the abundance of talent spread across 30 franchises, simply because of the underlying storylines that have undermined the tapestry of the sport.
In just a few weeks, commissioner Adam Silver will lead a Board of Governors meeting, in which tanking — and by virtue of attachment, the draft lottery — will finally be addressed once and for all. The 2025-26 season was an utter embarrassment unto basketball, with approximately one-third of the league’s teams fully embracing a losing mentality for the sheer purpose of hope. Shame and integrity have gone out the window because talents like Darryn Peterson, Cameron Boozer and AJ Dybantsa await at the end of the tunnel. Tanking, which became its own sport, must now be regulated by proposed rule changes, the most prominent of which involves expanding the draft lottery to 18 teams, the 10 teams that miss the play-in altogether and the eight teams that qualify, seeded seventh through 10th in each conference. Further breaking it down, the bottom 10 teams will each have an 8% chance at glory, while the other eight share a piece of 20 percent in descending order.
(What I’m most curious about — apprehensive is probably a better word — is what loopholes arise because of this likely change. After all, the initial systems put in place aren’t the issue; greed is, which stems from a humanistic need to find an advantage and maximize it, by hook or by crook. Shifting attention from the bottom of the barrel to the NBA’s middle class doesn’t scream solution at first glance.)
This season has also forced its consumers to reflect on the uncertain futures of Giannis Antetokounmpo and LeBron, albeit for different reasons. Milwaukee has been a conglomerate of confusion for months, leading to a clearly disgruntled Giannis, trade rumors and a dark cloud that engulfed an entire organization. That longtime head coach Doc Rivers is reportedly stepping away is the clearest sign that Antetokounmpo's saga became overbearing and less appealing than spending time with loved ones.
In James' case, a season that began with a fearful three-headed monster alongside Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves is now replaced with the 41-year-old alone at the altar, and a reminder that the more things change, the more they stay the same.
“Everything,” James said earlier this week when asked what his team needs from him. “Everything so nothing changes for me. Just back to the old ways.”
Despite James’ strong play to close the month on a high note, a huge uphill battle remains if the Lakers have any hopes of getting out of the first round, and another early playoff exit certainly thrusts his future in doubt — with major organizational changes and the end in sight.
Most importantly, however, these next few weeks of playoff basketball will highlight two centripetal forces: the young talent earmarked for the next collective “faces of the league” and the utter silliness of the 65-game rule. Working backward, it’s been a shame to see how detrimental the rule has been when evaluating and potentially awarding some of the brightest young players in the NBA. Shai Gilgeous- Alexander played 68 games. Victor Wembanyama and Cade Cunningham were essentially forced to return early from injury just to make the cut. Anthony Edwards finished with 61. Edwards aside — he likely would have made one of the three All-NBA teams — creating a system that pressures the game’s best players to be available for potential compensation (award-based contractual incentives) even at less than 100% is a perilous road. If this season and the circus around injuries aren’t indicators that the season should be shortened, nothing else will ever suffice.
But nothing can douse the fire that the stars put forth. The confidence of Wembanyama, challenging reporters on a nightly basis in search of the truth while redefining what a two-way player should be. The elegance of Gilgeous-Alexander, pacing the league in ways not seen in quite some time and cooler than the other side of the pillow. Jaylen Brown’s leadership in the face of a vastly different Celtics roster — and Jayson Tatum’s valiant return from an Achilles tear. The consistent, somehow underappreciated wizardry of Nikola Jokić. Durant’s longevity and efficiency, appearing in his most games in a season in over a decade. The list goes on and on.
The postseason will be the culmination of season-long trends wonderfully crammed into a 4x6 box. How do teams adjust to the rise of high pressure rates and putting two on the ball? What does the sudden offensive rebounding craze look like in games where every possession matters and then some? Why is it that the fast-paced teams struggle and the slower ones don’t? And is there truly a correlation between officiating, foul rates and performance?
Basketball is in a great and questionable place, depending on how you look at it. April, May and June provide answers and give way to even more unknowns. The playoffs are simply about your vantage point, your perspective and the expectations that fall in between. Enjoy the ride.
