Sports Illustrated matched one Brooklyn Nets player to every Western Conference playoff team as the first round moved farther along than the East, a sign that several nba teams were already looking past fit and into need. The piece focused on where a single scoring jolt, a cleaner shooting option or a larger wing body could matter most as the bracket tightened.
For Phoenix, the case was built around offense that had narrowed to Devin Booker, Dillon Brooks and Jalen Green in the series against the Oklahoma City Thunder. Booker and Green were both shooting under 29% from three-point range, and the story said Dёmin would force the Thunder to close out from beyond the arc after hitting nearly 39% from deep this season. That kind of shooting, in a series where every possession is shrinking, is exactly what makes the comparison useful.
Portland’s need was framed differently. Deni Avdija was described as a potential All-NBA talent for the Trail Blazers, but Scott Henderson had become the team’s go-to scorer in the playoffs. Even with that progress, Portland ranked 12th in field-goal percentage and 13th in three-point percentage, which is why the piece treated another creator as more than a luxury. The same logic ran through Minnesota, where Michael Porter Jr. was presented as the kind of go-to scorer the Timberwolves could use after Anthony Edwards and Donte DiVincenzo suffered gruesome injuries in Game 4 against the Denver Nuggets. Porter averaged 24.2 points this season on 46-36-86 shooting splits, numbers that explain why his name keeps surfacing in conversations about playoff-ready nba teams.
The story also pointed to how fragile Minnesota’s margin had become. Ayo Dosunmu scored 43 points to save the Timberwolves after Game 4, and questions still lingered about Julius Randle, who had not been up to par in the first round. That left the front office-style exercise less like a hypothetical and more like a snapshot of what happens when a contender loses its anchors and has to keep surviving anyway.
The Western Conference series were already described as farther along than the Eastern Conference matchups, with several nearing completion, so these roster fits landed at the moment when need is easiest to see and hardest to ignore. That is what made the piece work: not the novelty of matching names to teams, but the fact that the playoffs had already started separating the clubs that could keep scoring from the ones that needed help now.