The West’s Generational Handoff Is Happening In Real Time

Hunter Tierney
By Hunter Tierney
May 14, 2026
The West’s Generational Handoff Is Happening In Real Time

There’s a point with every league where you stop talking about “the future” coming and realize it’s already here. Not because the old guard suddenly forgot how to play, either. More because the younger teams stop looking intimidated by any of it. The jerseys, the banners, the MVP trophies, the history — none of it seems to matter anymore. And these Western Conference playoffs have felt like that moment over and over again.

Nikola Jokic is out. LeBron James and the Lakers are out. Kevin Durant and the Rockets were out before they could even really get going. And the weird part is, none of it felt shocking once the games actually started. These weren’t miracle upsets or random hot streaks. It felt more like the younger teams just looked faster, deeper, more relentless, and honestly a little less afraid of the moment than the groups that used to own this conference.

That’s really been the story of the West through two rounds. The next generation didn’t just arrive — they started taking control of the bracket one series at a time. Oklahoma City is steamrolling people. Anthony Edwards and Minnesota just sent Jokic home. Victor Wembanyama already looks like he’s bending playoff games to his will at 22 years old in just his first postseason.

The conference still has the familiar names, but for the first time in a long time, it doesn’t really feel like it belongs to them anymore.

Minnesota Might’ve Ended More Than Denver’s Season

May 14, 2025; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Timberwolves guard Anthony Edwards (5) celebrates with Minnesota Timberwolves forward Julius Randle (30) after making a shot against the Golden State Warriors in the first half during game five of the second round for the 2025 NBA Playoffs at Target Center.
Credit: Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images

The Timberwolves-Nuggets first-round series wasn't supposed to be the heavyweight matchup of the entire bracket. Even with Minnesota getting healthier late in the year, this still felt like Denver’s series to lose. Jokic is still the best player alive to a lot of people. The Nuggets had beaten the Wolves three times in four regular-season meetings. And honestly, there was still this feeling around Denver where people kept waiting for them to flip the switch because they’d done it before.

That’s what made the way the series actually played out feel so jarring. Minnesota didn’t sneak by them. They didn’t survive because Jokic had some awful series either. They beat them because over six games, they looked like the younger, deeper, faster, more desperate team. That’s a weird thing to say about a Denver core that won a title not that long ago, but that’s exactly how it felt watching it.

Jokic still looked like Jokic. He averaged 27 points and 15 rebounds and had stretches where he felt completely impossible to deal with. The problem was everything around him started cracking. Jamal Murray shot just 33 percent from the field across the series — 46-for-139 over six games — and once that two-man game loses rhythm, Denver looks way more ordinary than people are used to seeing. That offense is built around those two controlling everything. When Murray isn’t creating separation or knocking down shots, it forces Jokic to carry possessions over and over again, and eventually even the best player in the world starts looking exhausted trying to hold all of it together.

What made it even worse for the Nuggets was how beat up the Nuggets were by the end of the series. Anthony Edwards and Donte DiVincenzo both left in game four and didn't play again in the series. DiVincenzo ruptured his Achilles in and was done for the year. Most teams lose their starting backcourt like that against Denver, and the whole thing spirals fast. Especially against Jokic, because he’s usually the guy who makes tired or shorthanded teams completely unravel.

Minnesota just kept coming anyway. Somebody different stepped up every night. Ayo Dosunmu came off the bench and dropped 43 in one game. Rudy Gobert had one of the best defensive playoff performances of his career in Game 4, holding Jokic to 7-of-26 shooting while Minnesota’s bench completely buried Denver’s depth in the second half. Jaden McDaniels made life miserable for Murray for two straight weeks.

And eventually, Denver just ran out of answers.

SGA Sweeps the Lakers Into Uncertainty

The Lakers-Thunder second-round series honestly felt over before it was officially over. Oklahoma City swept Los Angeles in four games, and outside of a few stretches here and there, it never really felt like the Thunder were in danger. The scores — 108-90, 125-107, 131-108, 115-110 — kind of tell the whole story. The Lakers would hang around for a quarter or two, maybe make a little push, and then OKC would hit another gear in the third quarter, and suddenly the game felt out of reach again.

The Thunder just looked younger, fresher, deeper, faster — all the things people used to say about the teams LeBron was running through the East with a decade ago. There were moments where you could feel the Lakers trying to slow the game down because that was their only real chance. OKC just wouldn’t let it happen.

LeBron still competed. That part deserves respect no matter where you stand on him. He went for 24 and 12 in the elimination game at 41 years old, which is just absurd when you stop and think about it. Austin Reaves had 27 and nearly tied Game 4 with a three in the final seconds before it rattled out. The effort wasn’t the problem. The Lakers fought. They just didn’t have enough answers once Oklahoma City started rolling downhill.

And Shai Gilgeous-Alexander looked completely unfazed by any of it. Legacy franchise? Doesn’t matter. LeBron on the other side? Doesn’t matter. National TV? Doesn’t matter. He dropped 35 in the closeout game and played the entire series like somebody running errands on a Tuesday afternoon. No panic. No wasted movement. No sense at all that the moment was too big.

They look like a machine. Chet Holmgren keeps making winning plays. Ajay Mitchell stepped into a bigger role with Jalen Williams hurt and didn't look rattled. Cason Wallace has been a menace defensively. Somebody different shows up every night, which is why this team feels impossible to wear down over a seven-game series.

And now they’re 8-0 in the playoffs.

Gobert Knows Better Than Anyone What Wemby Is Becoming

Apr 4, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic (15) shoots the ball over San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) in overtime at Ball Arena.
Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

This may not be the same kind of generational handoff between true superstars like some of the other series in these playoffs, but there’s something really fascinating about what’s happening in Spurs-Wolves.

On one side, you’ve got Victor Wembanyama at 22 years old doing stuff that honestly still doesn’t look real when you watch it live. He dropped 39 points, 15 rebounds, and five blocks in Game 3 like it was just another night at the office. Then two days after the first ejection of his career — that elbow on Naz Reid was nasty — he comes right back in Game 5 with 27 points, 17 rebounds, five assists, and three more blocks while absolutely steamrolling Minnesota early. At one point in the first quarter, Wemby was personally outscoring the entire Timberwolves team 16-11.

And on the other side is Rudy Gobert, one of the defining defensive players of this era and a four-time Defensive Player of the Year, trying to figure out how you’re even supposed to guard somebody built like this. Gobert helped mentor Wembanyama through the French national team. You can see pieces of Gobert’s influence in the way Wemby thinks defensively, rotates, protects the rim, all of it. But now they’re squaring off in a playoff series, and it almost feels like Gobert is getting a front-row seat to the next evolution of everything he helped create.

And the truth is, Gobert hasn’t even been bad. That’s what’s kind of unfair about all of this. Wemby is just doing things that nobody really has answers for yet. He’s scoring over Gobert, around him, through him. One possession he’s fading away from 15 feet because his release point is untouchable. The next he’s putting the ball on the floor like a wing. Then he’s erasing shots on the other end five seconds later. Gobert has spent years making elite NBA scorers look uncomfortable, and there are stretches in this series where he looks stuck guessing like everybody else.

Whatever happens in Game 6 or a possible Game 7, this has probably been the best series of the West so far. And the craziest part is, it feels early for all of them. Edwards is 24 off back-to-back conference finals appearances, trying to make it three straight. Wemby is 22 and in the playoffs for the first time. These guys aren’t supposed to be this polished.

The East Is a Different Kind of Story

Flip over to the Eastern Conference, and it's a completely different story. The West has felt like the younger generation kicking legends out of the bracket one round at a time. The East feels more like a giant fight between teams that all believe their window is just opening.

And that’s what makes it fun. Nobody in the East really feels untouchable right now. There’s no LeBron looming over the conference every spring. Giannis probably would’ve been the closest thing to that over the last few years, but injuries and the way Milwaukee’s roster has aged have kind of taken the fear factor out of the Bucks for now. And with all the rumors around his future, who even knows if he’s still in the East in two months.

So instead, this side of the bracket just feels like a bunch of young stars planting flags and trying to claim the conference for themselves.

The Magic lost in the first round, but even in defeat, you could see the pieces starting to come together. Paolo Banchero still looks like a future superstar. Franz Wagner keeps getting better. That team feels annoying in the exact way young playoff teams are supposed to feel before they fully break through. Detroit feels even further along than that. Two years ago the Pistons were winning 14 games. Now Cade Cunningham looks completely comfortable carrying playoff offense in huge moments. Suddenly, a team built around Cunningham, Jalen Duren, and Ausar Thompson doesn’t feel far away at all.

The Knicks aren’t really young in the same way Detroit is, but they also don’t feel like some aging old guard hanging onto the conference either. They're a team that finally figured themselves out at the perfect time. Jalen Brunson is playing with ridiculous confidence right now. Karl-Anthony Towns has given them another layer offensively. Their defense has an edge to it. And for the first time in a long time, the Knicks actually feel built for a deep playoff run instead of just surviving regular seasons.

Even Philly ended up becoming part of this younger movement because Embiid’s injuries forced the Sixers to lean on younger legs and younger creators more than they probably expected. Tyrese Maxey feels more and more like the engine there every postseason.

They're Just Getting Started

Apr 21, 2025; New York, New York, USA; Detroit Pistons guard Cade Cunningham (2) dunks against New York Knicks guard Josh Hart (3) during the third quarter of game two of the first round of the 2024 NBA Playoffs at Madison Square Garden.
Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

That’s really the biggest difference between the conferences right now. The West feels like the old era getting shoved aside. The East feels like a bunch of teams looking around and realizing nobody really owns this thing anymore.

And because of that, every series kind of carries the same energy. Cleveland still has Donovan Mitchell in his prime, but Evan Mobley is only 24. Detroit feels ahead of schedule. Orlando feels close. New York looks like a real powerhouse. Even teams losing series still feel dangerous moving forward.

There’s no singular legend sitting on top of the East for everybody else to chase anymore. It’s just wave after wave of younger stars trying to establish themselves as the next face of the conference. And barring some massive trade or seismic shift this summer, most of these teams are probably going to line right back up next postseason and do it all over again.

All stats courtesy of NBA.com.


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