The NBA's Real Contenders Are Finally Starting To Separate
Every year around this time, the top NBA teams start getting a dose of truth serum. The rotations get shorter. The games get tighter. And the teams that have been stacking wins all season suddenly have to answer a much simpler question: what are you actually good at when the game slows down and it's tight late?
This season has been especially weird. It still feels top heavy â especially with all the tanking going on at the bottom â but it also feels crowded at the top. Oklahoma City came into the year looking like the clear separator, ripped off a 24â1 start like they were about to run away with the whole thing, and now here we are with a handful of teams that all feel like they have a real path.
And the biggest reason it feels wide open is because there isnât just one way to win right now.
Some teams are built around dominant bigs. Some around star guards. Some win with depth and pace and shooting. Others win by making every possession miserable and refusing to beat themselves.
Thatâs rare. Usually the league gravitates toward one formula. This year, it hasnât.
But even with all that variety, one thing still hasnât changed.
When the playoffs hit and every possession turns into a chess match, elite halfâcourt offense is still the separator. It always comes back to who can create a good shot late.
These are the teams that donât need perfect conditions. They know exactly who they are, and more importantly, they donât panic when things get ugly. Their identity travels. And when the playoffs start squeezing every possession, they still have something reliable to fall back on.
Every one of these teams has a real, believable path to the Finals â even if those paths look completely different.
Oklahoma City Thunder
They started 24â1 as the defending champs. Thatâs not a heater. Thatâs not a lucky stretch. Thatâs dominance. It was the kind of run that had everyone quietly wondering if the rest of the league was just fighting for second.
Then reality hit â not because OKC got worse, but because the league adjusted. Every opponent circles them. Every road game turns into a playoffâtype environment. Every young player on the other side wants that moment. Thatâs the tax you pay when you win.
Why I Still Trust Them
First and foremost, Shai is the separator. When things get tight and the defense knows exactly whatâs coming, he still gets to his spots. Thereâs no rush. No wasted movement. It feels controlled in a way most stars donât.
The second piece is their depth and versatility. This team isnât fragile. They can win games where Shai is great, but they can also win games where heâs just good. Thatâs the kind of flexibility that keeps you alive over four rounds.
And maybe the most underrated part? They donât beat themselves. It sounds boring, but itâs not. Turnovers, bad shots, wasted possessions â those things lose playoff games. OKC lives on the other end of that. They make you earn everything.
The One Thing That Can Flip My Pick
Physicality.
This is still the playoffs. Eventually someone is going to try to drag OKC into the mud. Long possessions. Hard screens. Bodies every trip. Then do it again two nights later. Then again.
Thatâs where things get interesting.
The West isnât just talented â itâs layered. Different teams can stress you in different ways. Denver slows the game down and forces you to think. San Antonio changes angles and space with Wemby. Other teams try to speed you up and turn it chaotic.
If OKC gets a clean path, theyâre the safest pick in the league.
If the bracket forces them to go through multiple heavy, physical series backâtoâback? Thatâs when the conversation gets a lot more complicated.
Detroit Pistons
Detroit being here still feels weird to say out loud⌠and thatâs exactly why theyâre dangerous.
Because this isnât some cute young team story anymore. They check almost every real contender box.
They defend at an elite level.
They rebound like it actually matters.
They donât beat themselves.
They have a real offensive engine in Cade.
And theyâve got a legit second option establishing himself in Jalen Duren.
Detroit has lived in that topâtwo defense range all season, and you donât get there by accident.
Why I Believe
Cade is the biggest trust factor. Not just because he can score, but because he controls the tempo of the game. He knows when to slow things down, when to hunt a mismatch, when to keep the ball moving. Thatâs the difference between a guy who puts up numbers and a guy who actually drives winning.
And Duren is quickly becoming one of those guys every serious playoff team needs. When the game gets tight and nothing comes easy, having someone who can create chaos at the rim, steal extra possessions, and punish teams on the glass is a cheat code. You donât need perfect offense if youâre getting second chances.
This isnât a gimmick team. They donât rely on one hot shooter or one weird matchup. They win possessions. They win physicality battles. They win effort battles. They make every game uncomfortable.
And when you pair that with a young star who actually wants the ball late and looks comfortable in those moments, you start to see how this could translate in May.
Some Hesitations
Itâs not that I think they canât make it. Itâs the youth. The unknown.
Right now, Detroit looks like a team that wins regularâseason games the right way. They execute. They defend. They stay connected.
But the playoffs are different.
So the real question is this: what happens when a veteran team drags them into a slow, ugly, possessionâbyâpossession fourth quarter?
If Detroit ends up matched up against Boston, I still trust Boston more. Not because Detroit isnât real, but because Boston has more experience finding Plan B and Plan C when the first option disappears.
Detroit is real enough that Iâm not dismissing them asa shot to make the Finals. Not even close. And if they get the right matchup, the right momentum, and Cade keeps growing the way he has all season? Theyâre the type of team nobody wants to see once the lights get bright.
San Antonio Spurs
This one is simple: theyâre ready to win big because Victor Wembanyama is ready to make a name for himself in the postseason.
At some point, every contender conversation comes down to the same thing. Who has the guy that can bend the game when everything else breaks? San Antonio has that guy. And not in a âhe might be somedayâ way. Right now.
You can talk about roster. You can talk about coaching. You can talk about spacing, shooting, depth. All of that matters. But when you have the most ridiculous twoâway force in the league, the math changes.
And the wild part is the Spurs have quietly built a real team around him. This isnât just Wemby dragging a young roster along anymore. They defend. They compete. They have multiple ways to win. Some nights they run you out of the gym. Other nights they slow it down and turn the game into a grind.
Why Theyâre Terrifying
Wemby is the ultimate problem solver.
If your offense gets stuck, he can go get something. If your defense breaks down, he can erase it. If a team thinks they finally got a clean look, itâs gone before the ball even leaves their hands.
And itâs not just the highlights anymore. Itâs the consistency. Itâs the way he impacts every possession. He doesnât need 40 to control the game. He just needs to exist.
The Big Concern
The concern is the same as Detroit, just magnified.
Zero postseason experience as a group.
Wemby himself? Iâm not worried. He feels wired for this. The moment isnât going to scare him.
But the rest of the roster is about to see a version of basketball they havenât experienced yet.
The real test will come when a playoff defense says, âFine. Wembyâs getting doubled every touch. Now beat us another way.â
OKC Vs Spurs (The Matchup That Keeps Teasing Us)
San Antonio has had the headâtoâhead edge this season, but I actually think OKC matches up better in a playoff setting than people realize.
OKCâs pressure can bother young guards. Their length can disrupt timing. And they have a closer in Shai when the game gets tight.
But the matchup I keep coming back to is Spurs vs Nuggets.
Because if thereâs one player in the entire league who feels like the best possible option to slow Jokic down, itâs Wemby.
And Iâm still not saying Jokic wouldnât get his. He probably would. Thatâs what he does.
But that chess match? The angles, the counters, the adjustments over a sevenâgame series? That would be mustâwatch basketball.
Denver Nuggets
Nikola Jokic can completely control a game in a way Iâve never seen a big do. And thatâs not exaggeration. Weâve seen dominant bigs before. Weâve seen guys who could score, guys who could rebound, guys who could protect the rim. But weâve never really seen someone who can slow the entire game down, read every coverage, and bend the defense without looking like heâs even trying.
And as long as heâs playing like this, the Nuggets are a threat. Always.
Why Denver Is Still A Real Problem
Denver doesnât need to beat you with speed, or trying to bury you from three, or hope for chaos and wild momentum swings. In fact, theyâre most dangerous when none of that is happening.
You help too much? Jokic finds the open shooter. You stay home? He punishes you inside. You switch? He hunts the mismatch. You try to speed them up? He slows the game down even more.
That kind of control becomes priceless in the playoffs. Weâve seen it over and over.
The Concern
Denverâs concern has never been âdo they know how to win.â Theyâve already proven that.
Itâs always the same set of questions.
Health. Depth. And whether they can defend enough outside shooting for four straight rounds.
Because in todayâs league, eventually you run into elite guards and wings who force you to guard in space. And if youâre thin or banged up, thatâs where things can break.
Boston Celtics
Boston is the âI trust you⌠but I donât fully trust youâ contender.
Because the core issue hasnât really changed. They still live and die by the three.
When itâs working, itâs beautiful. The ball moves, the spacing is perfect, and defenses look overwhelmed. They can flip a game in five minutes. But when itâs not? It gets uncomfortable fast.
Last postseason was a crystal-clear reminder. In that Knicks series, they didnât just go cold once. They opened the matchup going 25-for-100 from three across the first two games and set a playoff record for missed threes in Game 1. And the part that stood out wasnât just the misses â it was the response. The offense didnât really change. They kept firing.
And thatâs the tension with Boston. From a process standpoint, it makes sense. Over a full season, the math works. But the playoffs arenât the long run. Theyâre small sample, high pressure, and momentum. One cold stretch can end your season.
To their credit, theyâve shown more balance this season. More willingness to get to the paint. More patience when the threes arenât falling. The offense has felt less stubborn. But itâs hard not to wonder what happens when Jayson Tatum works his way back into the lineup. Do they stay disciplined? Or does the offense naturally drift back toward launching threes, because thatâs been the identity for years?
Why I Still Trust Them More Than Most
And yet, even with all of that, I still trust Boston more than most teams in this league. Because if a defense takes away one option, they have another. And another. And another.
Theyâve got multiple creators. Multiple defenders. Multiple players who can take over a quarter. They donât rely on one single pressure point.
If Tatum has an off night, Jaylen Brown can carry stretches. If the wings struggle, Derrick White can swing a game. Their depth isnât just about numbers. Itâs about flexibility.
And that matters in a sevenâgame series.
If they prove they can win when the threes go cold, they might be the safest bet in the East.
All stats courtesy of NBA.com.