2022 NBA Play-In Tournament

Play-In Tournament preview: Tuesday's matchups

Key storylines to follow as Clippers-Timberwolves tips off the Western Conference Play-In Tournament.

Kevin Durant and the Nets face the feisty Cavs in an Eastern Conference Play-In Tournament matchup.


The teams comprising the opening series in the 2022 Play-In Tournament are full of surprises, starting with the Eastern Conference matchup.

Both teams sit in places nobody envisioned at the beginning of the season, making for a compelling matchup in Game 1 of Tuesday’s doubleheader. Finishing with just 22 wins last season, the Cleveland Cavaliers doubled up on that in 2021-22 with strong play from a promising young core that includes Darius Garland, Caris LeVert, rookie Evan Mobley, and Jarrett Allen, who hasn’t played since breaking a finger in March, but could be back in the mix for the postseason. Led by NBA Coach of the Year candidate J.B. Bickerstaff, the Cavs utilized a total of 26 players this season, which ranks as the second-most in franchise history.

The star-studded, veteran-laden Brooklyn Nets, meanwhile, came into the season as one of the favorites to win the East, before a variety of issues left the club scrapping to the end for a berth in the Play-In Tournament. Seven-time All-Star guard Kyrie Irving played in just 29 games due to his vaccination status affecting availability, while Durant sat out of 21 contests after spraining his left medial collateral ligament in January. Former MVP guard James Harden played in 44 games for Brooklyn, before the club traded him in February to Philadelphia for Ben Simmons, who hasn’t yet made his Nets debut. Simmons has been ruled out of the Play-In Tournament, but there’s hope he can return at some point in the playoffs if the Nets advance.

In the West, the LA Clippers and Minnesota Timberwolves will meet in a series that could prove to be a change from how things went in the regular season between them. Yes, the Clippers dominated the regular-season series against the Timberwolves 3-1, outscoring them in two victories by 20 points or more, with the latter finally winning Jan. 3 in a matchup missing Paul George, Nicolas Batum, Ivica Zubac, D’Angelo Russell, and Karl-Anthony-Towns. The first three matchups took place over a 10-day span in November.

After stumbling to a 16-20 season start, the young, brash Minnesota Timberwolves ran off a record of 30-16 to end the regular season brimming with confidence. But this Clippers team is different, too, after starting the season without superstar Kawhi Leonard, losing George for a major chunk (43 games) due to an elbow injury, and adding Norman Powell and Robert Covington at the trade deadline.


Cleveland Cavaliers vs. Brooklyn Nets (7 ET, TNT)

Kyrie Irving averaged 22.5 ppg on 42% shooting vs. the Cavs this season.

These teams matched up on four occasions in the regular season, with Brooklyn walking away victors in three of those outings, including Friday’s 118-107 win at Barclay’s Center. The Nets starting five of Irving, Durant, Seth Curry, Bruce Brown, and Andre Drummond scored 99 of the team’s points in that win with all five starters finishing with double figures in scoring. Brooklyn closed out the season on a roll, winning each of its last four games, while the Cavaliers defeated Milwaukee on Sunday for its first victory since Apr. 2. Both teams finished the season 44-38, but Brooklyn’s edge in the season series gave it the tiebreaker.

It’s almost automatic that Cleveland will often double Durant, one of the league’s deadliest scorers, who has averaged 28.7 points, 5.0 rebounds, and 5.7 assists per game in his three games this season vs. the Cavaliers. Mobley, meanwhile, missed the first two meetings in November between the teams due to a sprained right elbow, but participated in the final two, averaging 14.5 ppg on 50% from the field as well as 6.5 rpg and 1.5 bpg. Mobley returned from a five-game absence due to a sprained left ankle for Cleveland’s loss to the Nets on Friday. Allen’s presence would help tremendously, but Bickerstaff hasn’t provided a definitive update on the All-Star center’s status for Tuesday, saying after Sunday’s win over Milwaukee, “If he’s ready to go, he’ll go.” If Allen can’t play, it’s expected that Mobley will start at center.

The matchups are set for in the East for the Play-In Tournament.

The matchup in the backcourt between Garland and Irving should be pivotal, too. Surely, Garland will lean on veteran teammate Rajon Rondo for pointers on defending him. Irving sat out the first two games of the regular-season series between the teams, but he’s averaged 22.5 ppg on 42% from the floor with 6.5 rpg and 8.5 apg against the Cavs, and he played in Brooklyn’s lone loss to Cleveland on Jan. 17 without Durant. Garland started in all four games against the Nets this season, averaging 25.3 points on 42.7% from the field with 8.0 assists. Cleveland led Brooklyn by five points to start the fourth quarter on Friday, before the Nets rallied to win by 11.

“I like our chances when it comes down to a dog fight,” said Kevin Love on Sunday. “That’s what it’s going to be come Tuesday night.”


LA Clippers vs. Minnesota Timberwolves (9:30 ET, TNT)

Wolves guard Patrick Beverley (left) may be a key player to watch in Tuesday’s Play-In Game vs. the Clippers.

Veteran point guard Patrick Beverley provides plenty of juice for Minnesota and is familiar with the Clippers personnel, having spent four seasons there before he was dealt to the Wolves in the offseason. Beverley’s toughness and leadership will play a significant role in Minnesota setting a physical tone on defense, and you can bet he’ll do his best to get under the skin of George and Reggie Jackson. Minnesota will certainly lean on Beverley’s past postseason experience (59 playoff games, 31 with the Clippers), and he’ll serve as an emotional catalyst for Russell, Towns, and Anthony Edwards, who relishes high-stakes matchups.

“I’m not going through Pat,” George said. “We’re going through the T-Wolves. This is not a Paul George versus Pat Beverley match. This is not a Pat Bev versus Clippers matchup. I’m not even going to make that the narrative.”

LA can’t afford to fall into the emotional back-and-forth that Beverley is sure to spark against his former team. It’s unlikely, given the LA’s vast playoff experience and the leadership veterans like George, Jackson, Batum and Marcus Morris Sr. provide. Even without Leonard in the mix, the Clippers reached the West finals last season for the first time in franchise history. Still, the Clippers will need to find a way to slow down Towns, Russell and Edwards. Minnesota’s frontcourt possesses more athleticism and scoring prowess than its LA counterparts. But Morris, Batum, Zubac and Isaiah Hartenstein are scrappy on the defensive end, which should make for a fun matchup.

Depth could also turn into a major factor in this one, and the Clippers are certainly stocked in that department with Mann, Powell, Covington and Luke Kennard all owning double-figure scoring averages. Malik Beasley is the lone Minnesota reserve averaging more than 10 points.

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Michael C. Wright is a senior writer for NBA.com. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on Twitter.

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