From The Inevitables to The Unraveling: NBA Power Rankings
Thereâs a point every NBA season where the noise starts to quiet down.
Opening week lies donât work anymore. âSmall sample sizeâ excuses get a little harder to sell. The rotation experiments have mostly stopped, and the standings start looking less like an accident and more like a reflection of who you actually are.
We're roughly a third of the season in. A chunk big enough to matter, but still early enough that one injury, one trade, or one heater from a role player can completely reshape the rest of a season. It's only right that we celebrate with our first power rankings of the season.
Some teams feel inevitable. Some teams feel like theyâre one players-only meeting away from a fire sale. Some are clearly building something, even if the win column doesnât show it yet.
And yes, we're looking at âchampionship ceilingâ more than raw resume. Thatâs how power rankings should work. Nobody cares who was the 2-seed on December 10 if theyâre going to be in the play-in come April.
The Inevitables
1. Oklahoma City Thunder
The Thunder arenât just winning â they look like they're bored doing it.
And thatâs the part that should genuinely grab your attention. Thereâs no smoke-and-mirrors shooting run, no lucky stretches against bottom feeders. They control possessions, control the pace, and handle all the little details that cost most teams games at the beginning of the season.
Itâs the kind of start that already has people whispering about the all-time wins record, and honestly, you get why. Itâs early, sure, but when a team piles victories the way OKC has â just the third team to ever start 23-1 or better â itâs hard not to at least acknowledge the conversation.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is the clear driver. Heâs still that slowâpaced, unbothered scorer who gets wherever he wants on the floor, and the midârange has turned into his personal office. Late in games, heâs been the most steady and reliable player in the league.
But the thing that really defines OKC is how lockedâin everyone else is. They donât drift through possessions. They donât take stretches off. Their defensive focus is outstanding, their rotations are crisp, and they get back in transition like it actually matters every single time.
If youâre trying to take them out in a sevenâgame series, you need an actual plan â not just hoping Shai has a few off nights. Through a third of the season, theyâve set the bar for everyone else, and they still look like a group with another level to reach.
2. Denver Nuggets
Denverâs season has had a few injuries, uneven stretches, and nights where the defense looks like it just didnât get the memo â and yet theyâre still 17-6 and top-three in the conference because their foundation is solid. When you have Nikola JokiÄ and a system that fits him perfectly, your baseline is always going to be high.
JokiÄ is still the biggest safety net in basketball. You can try whatever coverage you want â blitz him, switch everything, shade early, throw a second body late â heâll just calmly work his way into the opening and make it look effortless.
Whatâs stood out this year is Jamal Murrayâs tone-setting. When heâs assertive and locked in, Denverâs offense jumps a level. You can see the whole thing open up, and his confidence naturally spills over to everyone else.
Denver isnât a team you want to deal with in a seven-game series. Youâre not just trying to keep up with their talent â youâre trying to match their composure. They donât beat themselves. They donât rush. They donât unravel when things get weird.
So yeah, theyâll coast at times. Theyâll drop a random game in the middle of winter. But when youâre talking about real title chances, Denver still has that switch contenders need â and unlike a lot of teams, theirs actually works.
3. Houston Rockets
Everything about this team feels grounded in stuff that lasts. Theyâre physical. They compete on both ends. They win possessions. And theyâve built an identity around one simple idea: weâre getting more chances to score than you are.
They crush the offensive glass, and it changes the entire rhythm of a game. You can play perfect defense for nearly a full possession, force a tough miss, and still walk away emptyâhanded because Houston snatches the rebound, sprays it out, and buries a three. That wears on teams.
And the shooting is what brings it all together for them. Plenty of teams chase offensive boards. Very few turn those extra possessions into real firepower. Houston does. That combination of physicality and perimeter punch gives them a modern, sustainable blueprint.
Their biggest hurdle shows up when the pace slows and the game turns into execution instead of energy. They play fast, they play young, and that sometimes means turnovers pile up â especially without a real facilitator out there now that VanFleet is gone for the year. Against elite opponents, those mistakes turn into quick 10-0 runs that flip control of a game.
But thereâs no denying what Houston is right now. Theyâre not some cute earlyâseason story or a team padding wins against soft competition. They look like a real threat â a team with the tools, the depth, and the confidence to take a swing at the top of the conference.
The Threats
4. San Antonio Spurs
San Antonio has been one of the most impressive stories of the season, and a lot of it comes down to them looking like a complete team. Victor Wembanyama missing time couldâve been an easy builtâin excuse, but the Spurs didnât lean on it. They tightened things up instead.
DeâAaron Fox has been the steadying force. When you have a guard who can get downhill whenever he wants, it simplifies everything. He bends defenses, forces rotations, and makes life easier for everyone around him â even on nights where the jumper isnât cooperating.
Devin Vassellâs shooting has been huge too. Itâs not flashy, but those timely threes matter. When teams load up on Fox, Vassell is the guy who keeps them honest. And then thereâs Dylan Harper. The rookie already looks comfortable in ways most firstâyear guys arenât. Heâs strong, balanced, and rarely looks rushed.
What really stands out is how the Spurs handle lateâgame moments. Some teams get tight when things slow down. San Antonio doesnât. They look organized. They execute. They get to shots they actually want instead of just throwing something at the rim and hoping it lands.
Their biggest issue is pretty clear: perimeter defense and threeâpoint containment. When Wemby isnât back there erasing mistakes, those gaps become a lot more noticeable.
But with Wemby back, theyâre a different level of scary. And one underrated part of having a roster this young is that every week is real growth. By the time the postseason gets here, this group will have another full season of experience they didnât have when the year started â and you can already see that foundation taking shape.
5. Detroit Pistons
Detroit carried over everything they built last season and just kept climbing.
Cade Cunningham has been at the center of it. Heâs running the offense with real command, and you can feel how much the team trusts him.
Jalen Duren has been the perfect counterpart. He finishes everything, owns the glass, and gives Cade a pressure-release option whenever defenses try to overload. His presence inside gives Detroit a steady source of easy points, and thatâs huge for a young team trying to win close games.
And speaking of close games â Detroit has already banked a bunch of those grind-it-out wins that young teams usually let slip. Thatâs where you normally see inexperience show up. Instead, the Pistons have handled those moments with poise.
Their flaw is pretty clear: they still donât stretch the floor enough. If you pack the paint, shrink their driving lanes, and force them to beat you over the top, you can throw them off rhythm.
But the core of why theyâre winning is sustainable. They defend. Theyâre physical. They have a lead guard who organizes everything and can close games.
6. New York Knicks
The Knicks look every bit like a contender when things are flowing⌠and then have stretches where you can tell theyâre still ironing out who they want to be.
The numbers love them. Their net rating is strong, and theyâve been one of the best firstâquarter teams in the league. And when KarlâAnthony Towns is shooting with confidence, their ceiling jumps fast. The spacing opens up, the secondâside actions look cleaner, and defenses canât load up on the primary creator the same way. Everything becomes easier.
The problem shows up when games slow down. Their clutch offense hasnât been sharp, not because guys suddenly forget how to score, but because the process gets sticky. Possessions start to feel a little stagnant, a little too âyour turn, my turn,â and good defenses donât have to work hard to sit on it.
Even with that flaw, thereâs too much here to ignore. There's reason to believe this version of the Knicks is built to last. If they clean up the lateâgame structure and their defense keeps holding steady, theyâre absolutely capable of making another conference finals push.
7. Los Angeles Lakers
The Lakers are in a strange spot because when they're off, they're off. But when they're on, or the game is close, they always seem to pull it out
They have Luka Doncic, and that alone solves a huge chunk of the half-court puzzle. He bends defenses, gets to his spots, lives at the line, and forces rotations that open up real shots for everyone else. Heâs leading the league in scoring, sitting near the top in assists, and running the offense with total command.
LeBron isnât scoring the way he used to â that 19-year double-digit streak ending told us that â but the brain and passing are still elite. His timing, his reads, the way he organizes possessions⌠that part of his game hasnât slipped at all.
And then thereâs Austin Reaves, whoâs gone from ânice role playerâ to a serious scoring problem for everyone else. Heâs creating advantages, handling the ball, manipulating defenders, and punishing mismatches with veteran-like control.
The concern is the defense. They can clamp down in key moments, and when the game hangs in the balance their clutch numbers are absurd, but they give up too many clean looks throughout the night. And when teams start hunting matchups, the Lakers can get stretched thin.
Still, being undefeated in the clutch matters. Having Luka to close games matters. That combination alone wins you a lot of nights where the overall performance isnât perfect.
8. Minnesota Timberwolves
Minnesota is one of the few teams that genuinely feels balanced.
They defend. They have size. They have shot creation. They can win games ugly or win games with shotmaking.
Anthony Edwards is doing Anthony Edwards things â a walking highlight, but also a more complete offensive engine than he was a couple seasons ago. Heâs not just scoring. Heâs dictating.
Julius Randle has been a huge part of this. When heâs playing under control, heâs a nightmare: big enough to bully, skilled enough to pass, and confident enough to hit tough shots.
The main concern is the Rudy Gobert on/off reality. With Gobert, Minnesotaâs defense looks like a brick wall. Without him, they can bleed points because the rim protection drops, the rotations get later, and the opponent starts living in the paint.
Thatâs not a deal-breaker â every team has a âthis falls apart when our guy sitsâ issue. But itâs something playoff opponents will try to exploit with tempo and spacing.
Still, Minnesota is one of the teams I trust the most from an identity standpoint. You know what youâre getting.
One-third takeaway: Theyâre not flashy, but theyâre sturdy â and thatâs how you stick around deep into the spring.
The Cluster in the East
9. Orlando Magic
Orlando is everything you want from a young team on the rise â physical, competitive, and totally fine winning games in the mud.
When Jalen Suggs is healthy, their defense takes on a different level of intensity. They pressure the ball, rotate with urgency, and use all that length to make every possession feel like work. Nothing comes easy against them.
The free-throw gap is a big part of their identity too. They lead the league in attempts because they attack the rim with purpose and defend without giving away freebies. Thatâs not luck â thatâs discipline and buy-in.
And then thereâs the Paolo Banchero wrinkle. Orlando played some of its cleanest basketball during his absence because the offense sped up. The ball moved quicker. More guys touched it. The decisions were sharper.
Thatâs not a criticism of Paolo â heâs the franchise piece. Itâs just the natural balance every young team has to figure out. How do you feature your star without slowing down the rhythm that makes everyone else better?
If they can blend Paoloâs creation with that quicker pace they showed without him, this offense has another level waiting.
10. Toronto Raptors
When their perimeter guys are healthy, the Raptors can be a real matchup headache â long, athletic wings everywhere and enough downhill pressure to keep defenses honest.
Scottie Barnes has taken another step, filling up every part of the box score without forcing anything. Points, rebounds, assists, threes, steals, blocks â heâs doing a bit of everything, and that kind of versatility quietly raises your floor on nights when the offense isnât totally in rhythm.
But the freeâthrow battle is still their biggest issue. They donât get to the line enough, and they give up too many freebies on the other end. Over time, thatâs the kind of thing that swings close games away from you, no matter how hard you defend or how well you move the ball.
11. Boston Celtics
Even with Jayson Tatum out, the Celtics have kept their identity â pace, spacing, and a whole lot of threes. Their offense still hits stretches where it feels like everything is perfectly synced, and itâs never just one guy taking over. Itâs the system doing what itâs supposed to do.
Jaylen Brown deserves a ton of credit for that. Heâs scoring efficiently, making smarter reads, working out of the mid-post, and doing all the little things that round out his game instead of just hunting shots.
But the one thing Boston still hasnât solved is scoring from the paint. They live on the perimeter, and when the threes arenât falling, there arenât many easy points to fall back on. Thatâs how you end up dropping games you should probably win.
Come playoff time, their ceiling is going to depend on health and having the full group. Even short-handed, though, theyâre still one of those teams that can bury you from deep if you let them fire away uncontested.
12. Cleveland Cavaliers
Cleveland is a team I respect more than I trust.
They take care of business against the teams theyâre supposed to beat, and in a year where the middle of the league is packed, thatâs not nothing. But when they run into top-tier competition, things can get a little shaky, and the offense starts to feel predictable.
A lot of that swings on Darius Garland. When heâs rolling, Cleveland looks layered â multiple creators, multiple threats, and a whole lot harder to guard. When heâs off, the offense tightens up and too much lands on Donovan Mitchellâs shoulders. Even with Mitchell leading the league in made threes, you donât want him carrying that kind of load every night.
Defensively, theyâre solid. The structure is sound. The coaching is strong. Thereâs a real foundation here.
The question is whether they have that extra playoff gear â the one that lets you win a chess match over a two-week series. Cleveland absolutely has the talent to win a round, but if they want to beat the elite, they need Garland playing like a true second star.
13. Miami Heat
Miami is still Miami, which means the record never tells the full story.
There are nights where the offense looks clean, the ball moves, and Tyler Herro canât miss. And then there are stretches where everything bogs down, the pace crawls, and every basket feels like it needs three screens and a prayer.
Norman Powell has quietly been one of the guys who tilts their lineups in the right direction. When heâs out there, the spacing looks much better and the offense feels more intentional instead of just hanging on.
The real problem is consistency. The pace slows too often, the offense gets methodical, and when theyâre not generating easy points, the whole thing can feel like a grind.
But Miami has lived in this lane for years â winning ugly, dragging teams into their kind of game, and punching above their weight when it matters. Itâs hard to dismiss that kind of track record.
The Messy Middle
14. Phoenix Suns
Phoenix has been one of the nicer surprises of the season. A new coach, new structure, and suddenly a defense that looks far more organized than anyone expected. Theyâre not lighting the world on fire, but they look connected. And for a team that spent most of last year searching for an identity, thatâs a real step.
The depth has shown up in a way that matters. Theyâre getting real minutes from guys who werenât supposed to be nightly impact players, and thatâs how you survive an 82-game season.
The issue is still the same one itâs been for years: too much isolation when things bog down. When the ball sticks, the offense becomes predictable. It turns into a lot of "Booker, go make something happen" basketball, and that only takes you so far against defenses that are locked in.
15. Atlanta Hawks
Atlantaâs season has quietly shifted into the Jalen Johnson breakout tour â and honestly, itâs been one of the most fun developments of the year.
With Trae Young missing time, Johnson has stepped into the centerpiece role and looked completely at home. Heâs scoring, rebounding, playmaking, and carrying defensive attention like itâs nothing. Triple-doubles, big scoring nights â heâs playing with a confidence that makes you rethink what his long-term ceiling might be.
That emergence has real implications. If Johnson is this level of player, the Hawks suddenly have options they didnât before â including tough conversations about the Trae Young era and what direction the franchise wants to take.
Theyâre still a weird team, though. Better on the road than at home. Not a ton of size. Rebounding issues that show up in all the wrong moments.
16. Philadelphia 76ers
The Sixers are living in two realities at once.
On one hand, Tyrese Maxey has been a full-on franchise centerpiece. Heâs scoring like a superstar, creating like a lead guard, and carrying the kind of usage that usually breaks teams.
On the other hand, the roster construction still feels like itâs missing the physical answers you need in the playoffs. Joel Embiid has been an issue. Third quarters have been an issue. And the offense has had stretches where it looks like itâs searching for a second consistent creator.
The defensive improvement is the reason theyâre not lower. When you can defend at a high level, you give yourself a chance every night.
But if weâre talking ceiling, Philly still feels like a team that needs another move â or another layer of growth from someone â to be more than a âtough out.â
17. Golden State Warriors
Golden State being in this range feels wrong, but itâs where they belong.
Theyâre still surviving on defense and experience, but the offense has been too choppy for too long â slow starts, turnovers, and long stretches without any real pressure on the rim.
Steph Curry is still Steph. When heâs rolling, he changes everything â the spacing, the pace, the confidence of everyone around him. Heâs still capable of turning a tight game into a doubleâdigit lead in a blink.
But outside of him, this roster is in that tricky inâbetween stage. A little older, a little thinner, and trying to figure out how to win now while also giving the younger guys enough runway to develop. Jonathan Kuminga is at the center of that tugâofâwar. He needs minutes to grow, but the team also needs stability.
18. Dallas Mavericks
Dallas might be the toughest team in this tier to get a clean read on because the trajectory has zigâzagged all season.
Theyâve looked better lately, and Cooper Flagg has been a huge part of that spark. He plays with confidence, takes shots that matter, and never looks overwhelmed â exactly what you want from a rookie stepping into a real role.
Ryan Nembhard stabilizing the offense has been just as important. When the ball moves, Dallas looks like a functional team instead of one searching for answers.
But the bigâpicture issues havenât changed since the Luka trade. They still struggle to create shots consistently, and the spacing isnât strong enough to make life easier on their playmakers. When youâre not a great shooting team, every halfâcourt possession feels tight.
19. Memphis Grizzlies
Memphis has had a very Memphis kind of season â physical, chaotic, sloppy one week, locked in the next. Theyâll look like a lottery team for 10 days and then turn around and rip off a run that makes you wonder if theyâve figured something out.
Zach Edey has been the biggest turning point. When heâs rolling, the Grizzlies suddenly have a real identity again: bully-ball in the paint, secondâchance points, rim protection, and a size advantage most teams just donât have answers for.
But 11-13 tells you the truth. They handle bad teams. They get outclassed by good ones. Thatâs usually the mark of a team thatâs competitive, not dangerous.
And everything eventually circles back to Ja Morant. What does the long-term roster look like if Edey is real? How do the timelines match? Who are they building around, and how fast?
20. Milwaukee Bucks
Milwaukeeâs season has been rough, no way around it.
When Giannis is on the floor, you still see flashes of the team that can beat anybody. But he hasnât been able to drag this group where it needs to go.
And when heâs not available? The bottom falls out fast. The offense loses its structure, the spacing disappears, and the body language gets tight.
Kevin Porter Jr. giving them scoring punch has helped, but thatâs a BandâAid on a much bigger problem. This is a roster searching for an identity, not just points.
Milwaukee feels like itâs standing at a fork in the road. Either they stabilize and find a way to re-center the team around what works⌠or the noise around trades and long-term direction gets louder.
And honestly, the only reason theyâre not lower is because Giannis is the kind of trade chip that can flip a franchise if it did come to that.
The Bottom
21. Portland Trail Blazers
Portlandâs season has basically been a case study in âgood process, bad results.â They run real offense. They generate clean looks. They compete. But when the shots keep clanking, everything gets harder.
Deni Avdija has been the bright spot. He's really good at attacking the rim and drawing fouls, and can pass it well enough to add to the offense. Heâs the guy who keeps them in games even when the shooting goes sideways.
But the three-point struggles are suffocating. When a team canât hit open threes, the floor shrinks and driving lanes disappear. Itâs like trying to score in a phone booth â thereâs just no room to breathe.
22. Utah Jazz
Utah is living the full development-season experience â and you can see the flashes that make the future exciting.
Keyonte George looks more confident as a scorer and playmaker. Ace Bailey has moments where he looks like a future star â the kind of athlete and shot-maker you can actually build around.
But the defense⌠itâs rough. Not just young-team rough. It's historically bad. When opponents are running layup lines, it doesnât matter how many fun offensive possessions you string together.
For Utah, this year is about building good habits, figuring out which young guys are real long-term pieces, and making sure the defensive identity doesnât completely fall apart before the next phase of the rebuild kicks in.
23. Chicago Bulls
Chicago started the season with good vibes and then the floor completely fell out from under them.
Itâs been one of the more dramatic slides in the league, and the hardest part is the offense. Itâs devolved into isolation, turnovers, and tough shots â the exact stuff that makes a team feel miserable to watch.
And the weirdest part? Theyâve held up against good teams more than youâd expect. But against the bottom tier, theyâve stumbled.
That usually tells you a teamâs problem isnât talent. Itâs focus and consistency.
At some point, Chicago has to answer the obvious question: what is the plan? Because being stuck in the middle with a messy offense is the NBAâs worst place to live.
24. Los Angeles Clippers
The Clippers have been in constant turmoil to start this season. The Chris Paul situation set the tone early, and you can still feel the ripple effects in how they play â a little tense, a little disjointed, and never quite on the same page.
There was also the investigation into them trying to circumvent the salary cap for Kawhi Leonard.
On the court, the transition defense has been rough, and the bench minutes have been even worse. Any time Ivica Zubac heads to the sideline, they have no real rim protection. Thatâs not just a rotation hiccup â thatâs a system getting exposed.
25. Charlotte Hornets
Charlotte has some pieces you can talk yourself into, but theyâre still miles away from putting the whole thing together.
Kon Knueppel has popped in a good way, and Brandon Miller is taking the kind of steps you want from a young scorer. Thereâs skill here.
But LaMelo Ballâs efficiency slide has dragged everything down. When your lead guard isnât finishing plays cleanly, the offense is bound to steuggle. The spacing suffers. The shot quality dips. Suddenly youâre chasing the game instead of dictating it.
They rebound. They stay disciplined. But they donât create enough turnovers to make up for LaMelo's mistakes.
26. Indiana Pacers
Indiana plays hard, moves the ball, and makes the extra pass â all the things coaches love. But at some point, those touches have to turn into points; and without Tyrese Haliburton, that just hasn't been happening.
Right now, the Pacers feel like a group focused on taking steps forward, not stacking wins. And for where they are developmentally, thatâs fine â just not enough to lift them out of this tier.
The Unravelling
27. Brooklyn Nets
Brooklyn has been a tough watch, but there are at least a couple bright spots.
The defense has ticked up lately â not enough to swing the record, but enough to show theyâre buying into something. Offensively, whenever they get anything going, it usually comes from one guy catching fire and carrying them through a stretch.
The worst part of it all, is they still havent won a game at home this season. You can feel guys pressing, trying to force the spark instead of letting the game come to them.
Thereâs some growth happening, but itâs wrapped inside a whole lot of turbulence.
28. Sacramento Kings
Sacramentoâs season has felt like one long uphill walk in bad shoes. With the amount of individual talent they have, youâd expect the offense to at least look smooth in stretches â but nothing has clicked. Thatâs usually a sign that the pieces donât quite fit.
Theyâre constantly digging out of early holes and trying to get back into games with tough, contested shots, and that grind wears on you over a season. Even when someone pops â like Maxime Raynaud dropping 25 off the bench â it feels more like a temporary spark than something the team can build around.
The question now is less about what this group is and more about what theyâre willing to move to reset the direction at the deadline. But big decisions are coming.
29. New Orleans Pelicans
New Orleans has had a season full of frustration. Every year seems to circle back to the same issue: will Zion be healthy long enough for the franchise to build real stability around him? And when the answer leans toward âprobably not,â everything else starts feeling temporary.
Derik Queen has been a legit bright spot. His touch, feel, and offensive instincts jump out right away, and you can picture what he might become in a better environment.
But the rest of it? Rough. The defense has fallen apart on the inside, and when teams are scoring at the rim whenever they want and splashing threes on top of it, youâre stuck trying to outscore problems you were never built to solve.
30. Washington Wizards
Washington is sitting at the bottom because everything that could go wrong has gone wrong â and most of itâs selfâinflicted.
The defense has been brutal, not just from a talent standpoint but from a focus standpoint. Theyâll defend for a possession or two, lose track of the game plan, and all of a sudden the opponent is on a run without breaking a sweat.
There are vets here who can still play. CJ McCollum can get you buckets. Khris Middleton can still manipulate defenses in the midârange. Those guys will have some value as the deadline gets closer.
But this season is about the future â reps for the young guys, figuring out which pieces can stick longâterm, and putting themselves in the best spot for the draft. Thatâs where their energy has to go now.
All stats courtesy of NBA.com.
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