Toronto, New Jersey and Golden State all have the same record at the end of the season? How does the league decide the draft order?
If two teams are tied they flip a coin. If it's three teams, they must use some other equal-chance method.
However, Toronto and New Jersey play each other the last night of the season, so they certainly won't be tied at 22 wins. That's why the Jazz need GS to win one more so they can keep up with the winner of the NJ @ Tor game and then hope for the best in the coin flip and lottery.
Vslice speaks the truth. And wasn't it last year we were all watching as NJ finished with the same record as Sacramento and Sacto won the coin toss for the one extra chance?
While it's true tiebreakers are broken pre-lottery - ultimately they make only a marginal difference as the number of draft combinations are split as equally as possible between the two teams. The coin flip is used to determine which team ends up with 1 extra combination of lottery balls..
Agreed, I was thinking in terms of winning the lottery but you're correct - it would impact the Jazz if GS finishes in a tie for 7th.The tie breaker becomes critical if neither team gets a top 3 pick. So if GS & & NJ finish 7/8, NJ wins the flip, neither gets a top 3 pick, then the Jazz get the 8th pick. If GS wins the flip, the Jazz do not get the 2012 GS pick.
Toronto, New Jersey and Golden State all have the same record at the end of the season? How does the league decide the draft order?
why do they flip a coin?
why do they flip a coin?
Stern will take all 3 owners back into a secluded room to play Russian Roulette. The winner gets the best pick. The losers not only lose their lives but their franchises will face contraction.