Andrew wrote: But the format itself - giving the top seedings to the division winners and not reseeding the teams in the second round - has been in place for decades and that technicality has come into play before.
They aren't reseeding the teams in the second round. They're reseeding the top four teams based on record, so the three division winners and the other best team.
When there were only two divisions it was fine because the second and third seeds would play in the second round regardless. So if New Jersey only had 47 wins and got the second seed for winning the division, the Pistons 54 was good enough for third. But with three divisions in 2004 it would've resulted like this:
1. Pacers (61-21) vs 8. Celtics (36-46)
4. Pistons (54-28) vs 5. Hornets (41-41)
2. Nets (47-35) vs 7. Knicks (39-43)
3. Heat (42-40) vs 6. Bucks (41-41)
So the Pistons won 7 more games than the third best team but as a result they have to play Hornets-Pacers-Nets/Heat for the Finals. The toughest route of any team. Nets would only have to beat Knicks and Heat/Bucks to get to the East Finals.
Under the new plan the Pistons would be rewarded with the number two seed and thus get the second easiest first round matchup, still have to face the Nets in the second round, while the Pacers get rewarded for their number one seed by getting the Heat in the second round.
We have to consider how teams get to the Finals. If the Suns were to have coasted through the Lakers and Nuggets/Clippers in five games (three of the four worst West teams in the playoffs), while the Mavericks had to take down Memphis and the Spurs both in seven (two of the four best West teams in the conference), the Suns would have a distinct advantage in getting to the Finals despite being the weaker team. The East has taken advantage of the easy path to the Finals in recent years. If the Cavaliers can beat the Pistons, then the Heat's toughest series could be their first against the Bulls and they'd have coasted into the Finals. While a Dallas/San Antonio/Phoenix (even Clippers!) will have come through the fire, especially Dallas which despite being posting the second best record in the conference would have to have beat the fourth, first and if Suns, third best teams in the conference.
Yes, if Dallas can do it, it adds to their legtimacy as a powerhouse, but it reduces their chances at winning it. And reducing the chances of the best teams due to a technicality that could/would occur for the next five years seems silly. (And it would've probably been this way for a while, what with Lakers-Kings at the top of the Pacific and the Mavericks previous tussle with the Spurs for the top of the Midwest)
Then again, I've swung to the other extreme after being opposed to changes and now I'm in favor of seeding the entire playoffs regardless of conference because of the path issue. And only taking a minimum of five-six teams from a conference. So I don't have to see too many Eastern teams being chewed up in the first round. Even if the Northwest is the worst division in the league.
They changed to the three division format because they wanted to better geographically align the teams. Which aside from out of place teams like Minnesota, Phoenix and Washington they managed to do quite well.
Just because the Mavericks might beat the Spurs 4-2, I don't see how you can not say it's the real Western Finals matchup. It's the two best teams in the conference by far. I mean in 2001, the Lakers swept the Spurs in the West Finals. You could make a case for the Kings being the second best team in the conference during the season, but the Lakers went through them to get to the West Finals, they didn't just avoid them. And they were the defending champions, and Spurs the champions the year prior. Even though it was lopsided after the Spurs aside from Duncan fell apart, it was still the matchup that was the Western Finals in any regard and the one everyone had been anticipating all season.