OKLAHOMA CITY: It鈥檚 No. 25 Indiana vs. No. 47 Oklahoma City in the NBA Finals.
That鈥檚 not their seeding. That鈥檚 their media market ranking. To some, that might matter. To others, it probably won鈥檛 鈥 and probably shouldn鈥檛 鈥 matter whatsoever.
A title matchup that starts Thursday night between the Pacers and Thunder 鈥 two young, fun teams that score a ton and are led by marketable stars in reigning MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander for Oklahoma City and Olympic gold medalist Tyrese Haliburton for Indiana 鈥 is the type of series that real basketball fans clamor for. It has everything: star power, good coaching, All-Stars on both sides. And it adds to the NBA鈥檚 recent run of parity.
That鈥檚 the good news. Here鈥檚 the inevitable other side: The ratings, especially at the start of the series, probably aren鈥檛 going to be good because the home markets are so small. Those who like the NBA won鈥檛 be dissuaded by that. Those who don鈥檛 like the NBA will tout it as great failure.
鈥淚 think this finals is a great representation with the two teams that are in it,鈥 Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. 鈥淵ou know, they鈥檙e teams that play good, exciting styles of basketball. Players that have great individual stories, teams that have a great story collectively. And we鈥檙e proud to be a part of that.鈥
People are watching; they just may not be watching on television. The social media tracking site Videocites says NBA content is getting consumed at a 64 percent higher clip than last season 鈥 32 billion views and counting so far in these playoffs. Gilgeous-Alexander is the most viewed player, Haliburton is No. 3 and playoff clips of those two have about 1.5 billion views between them to this point.
That鈥檚 billion, with a B. And speaking of that, there are 76 billion reasons the NBA won鈥檛 be bothered by whatever the ratings are over the next couple of weeks.
The new media rights deals 鈥 an 11-year, $76 billion pact between the NBA and broadcast partners Disney (ABC/ESPN), Peacock (NBC) and Amazon (Prime Video) that kicks in at the start of next season 鈥 show that clearly somebody is watching NBA games or consuming NBA content. The days of straight relying on Nielsen ratings seem to be long gone, with more and more people ditching cable for streaming and more and more young fans just watching everything on their phones and often in condensed versions.
If the ratings tank for Pacers-Thunder, those deals are still worth $76 billion. The ad buys for these playoffs have long been paid for. So, the numbers for this series are largely irrelevant to the NBA鈥檚 bottom line.
Haliburton was asked Tuesday what fans who watch will see if they tune in to these finals.
鈥淚 think (they鈥檒l see) two high-level teams that play an elite style of basketball, who share the ball really well, a lot of different people that can chip in,鈥 Haliburton said. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 the exciting part about this. I don鈥檛 want to say it鈥檚 like a passing of the torch because the old heads are still here. They鈥檙e still playing very, very well. But definitely to see two young teams, two young organizations, fighting to win a championship, I think is a very big deal.鈥
Late in the regular season, as numbers were bouncing back from a slow start to the season, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said the league鈥檚 ratings were down about 2 percent from a year ago.
鈥淏ut in this environment, where particularly when you鈥檙e largely featured in legacy media and particularly cable, and no question cable subscriptions are going down, that seems like a victory,鈥 Silver said.
In short, nobody at the league office is panicking about ratings, especially right now. Whichever team wins will be the seventh different champion in the last seven seasons, and without question the Thunder and Pacers will be featured in more national broadcasts next season than they were this season and their ratings will be higher 鈥 as proven by recent finals runs by Milwaukee, Denver and Dallas. Go ahead and expect Indy and OKC in the Christmas Day package next season as well; neither team was among the 10 picked for that this season, which was probably a mild disappointment for the Pacers and was a huge disappointment for the Thunder.
鈥淚鈥檇 love to play on Christmas Day,鈥 Gilgeous-Alexander said earlier this season. 鈥淎nd I think we鈥檙e that caliber of team. The NBA makes their decisions. Can鈥檛 slight them for it. Ball鈥檚 in our court to prove to them why we deserve to be in that game.鈥
It can easily be argued that both teams did it right: didn鈥檛 overspend, didn鈥檛 go into the luxury tax 鈥 it鈥檚 the first finals between two non-taxpayer teams in about two decades 鈥 and tried to build around young stars.
And the Thunder and Pacers were teams that combined to win 49 games just three seasons ago; their success now has to be a reason for hope for teams like Utah, Washington, Portland, Charlotte and others that have been sputtering. Turnarounds can happen, and they can be rewarded. Some people will watch, some won鈥檛, but true fans probably are expecting a pretty good series.
鈥淚 think that鈥檚 exciting,鈥 Haliburton said, 鈥渇or any basketball fan.鈥