Mailbag: The 8 Teams That Came Back From a 3-1 Deficit
Posted by Neil Paine on May 25, 2011
Yesterday, Kenneth wrote:
"I am seeking more information on NBA playoff series where one team fell into a 1-3 hole, but was able to win the next 3 games and the series. As per the TV NBA analysts, in past NBA playoff series, 200 of them reached the point where one team was up 3-1; only 8 of those series concluded with the down team ultimately winning the remaining 3 games and the series.
[Who were] the teams in those 8 series? I know the 1995 Houston Rockets were one of those teams (their 1-3 down situation occurred against the Phoenix Suns) and ended up winning the title. I'm also curious how many of the 8 teams who managed to claw their way back from a 1-3 hole ultimately played in the Finals that year and how many won the title."
This became even more pertinent last night when the Bulls fell behind the Heat 3-1, giving us two teams currently facing 3-1 deficits. Here were the 8 series where teams dug their way out of a 3-1 hole:
1968 Eastern Division Final
Game 1 | April 5 | Boston Celtics | 127 | @ Philadelphia 76ers | 118 |
Game 2 | April 10 | Philadelphia 76ers | 115 | @ Boston Celtics | 106 |
Game 3 | April 11 | Boston Celtics | 114 | @ Philadelphia 76ers | 122 |
Game 4 | April 14 | Philadelphia 76ers | 110 | @ Boston Celtics | 105 |
Game 5 | April 15 | Boston Celtics | 122 | @ Philadelphia 76ers | 104 |
Game 6 | April 17 | Philadelphia 76ers | 106 | @ Boston Celtics | 114 |
Game 7 | April 19 | Boston Celtics | 100 | @ Philadelphia 76ers | 96 |
(Celtics won series 4-3)
1970 Western Division Semifinal
Game 1 | March 25 | Phoenix Suns | 112 | @ Los Angeles Lakers | 128 |
Game 2 | March 29 | Phoenix Suns | 114 | @ Los Angeles Lakers | 101 |
Game 3 | April 2 | Los Angeles Lakers | 98 | @ Phoenix Suns | 112 |
Game 4 | April 4 | Los Angeles Lakers | 102 | @ Phoenix Suns | 112 |
Game 5 | April 5 | Phoenix Suns | 121 | @ Los Angeles Lakers | 138 |
Game 6 | April 7 | Los Angeles Lakers | 104 | @ Phoenix Suns | 93 |
Game 7 | April 9 | Phoenix Suns | 94 | @ Los Angeles Lakers | 129 |
(Lakers won series 4-3)
1979 Eastern Conference Final
Game 1 | May 4 | San Antonio Spurs | 118 | @ Washington Bullets | 97 |
Game 2 | May 6 | San Antonio Spurs | 95 | @ Washington Bullets | 115 |
Game 3 | May 9 | Washington Bullets | 114 | @ San Antonio Spurs | 116 |
Game 4 | May 11 | Washington Bullets | 102 | @ San Antonio Spurs | 118 |
Game 5 | May 13 | San Antonio Spurs | 103 | @ Washington Bullets | 107 |
Game 6 | May 16 | Washington Bullets | 108 | @ San Antonio Spurs | 100 |
Game 7 | May 18 | San Antonio Spurs | 105 | @ Washington Bullets | 107 |
(Bullets won series 4-3)
1981 Eastern Conference Final
Game 1 | April 21 | Philadelphia 76ers | 105 | @ Boston Celtics | 104 |
Game 2 | April 22 | Philadelphia 76ers | 99 | @ Boston Celtics | 118 |
Game 3 | April 24 | Boston Celtics | 100 | @ Philadelphia 76ers | 110 |
Game 4 | April 26 | Boston Celtics | 105 | @ Philadelphia 76ers | 107 |
Game 5 | April 29 | Philadelphia 76ers | 109 | @ Boston Celtics | 111 |
Game 6 | May 1 | Boston Celtics | 100 | @ Philadelphia 76ers | 98 |
Game 7 | May 3 | Philadelphia 76ers | 90 | @ Boston Celtics | 91 |
(Celtics won series 4-3)
1995 Western Conference Semifinal
Game 1 | May 9 | Houston Rockets | 108 | @ Phoenix Suns | 130 |
Game 2 | May 11 | Houston Rockets | 94 | @ Phoenix Suns | 118 |
Game 3 | May 13 | Phoenix Suns | 85 | @ Houston Rockets | 118 |
Game 4 | May 14 | Phoenix Suns | 114 | @ Houston Rockets | 110 |
Game 5 | May 16 | Houston Rockets | 103 | @ Phoenix Suns | 97 |
Game 6 | May 18 | Phoenix Suns | 103 | @ Houston Rockets | 116 |
Game 7 | May 20 | Houston Rockets | 115 | @ Phoenix Suns | 114 |
(Rockets won series 4-3)
1997 Eastern Conference Semifinal
Game 1 | May 7 | New York Knickerbockers | 88 | @ Miami Heat | 79 |
Game 2 | May 9 | New York Knickerbockers | 84 | @ Miami Heat | 88 |
Game 3 | May 11 | Miami Heat | 73 | @ New York Knickerbockers | 77 |
Game 4 | May 12 | Miami Heat | 76 | @ New York Knickerbockers | 89 |
Game 5 | May 14 | New York Knickerbockers | 81 | @ Miami Heat | 96 |
Game 6 | May 16 | Miami Heat | 95 | @ New York Knickerbockers | 90 |
Game 7 | May 18 | New York Knickerbockers | 90 | @ Miami Heat | 101 |
(Heat won series 4-3)
2003 Eastern Conference Quarterfinal
Game 1 | April 20 | Orlando Magic | 99 | @ Detroit Pistons | 94 |
Game 2 | April 23 | Orlando Magic | 77 | @ Detroit Pistons | 89 |
Game 3 | April 25 | Detroit Pistons | 80 | @ Orlando Magic | 89 |
Game 4 | April 27 | Detroit Pistons | 92 | @ Orlando Magic | 100 |
Game 5 | April 30 | Orlando Magic | 67 | @ Detroit Pistons | 98 |
Game 6 | May 2 | Detroit Pistons | 103 | @ Orlando Magic | 88 |
Game 7 | May 4 | Orlando Magic | 93 | @ Detroit Pistons | 108 |
(Pistons won series 4-3)
2006 Western Conference Quarterfinal
Game 1 | April 23 | Los Angeles Lakers | 102 | @ Phoenix Suns | 107 |
Game 2 | April 26 | Los Angeles Lakers | 99 | @ Phoenix Suns | 93 |
Game 3 | April 28 | Phoenix Suns | 92 | @ Los Angeles Lakers | 99 |
Game 4 | April 30 | Phoenix Suns | 98 | @ Los Angeles Lakers | 99 |
Game 5 | May 2 | Los Angeles Lakers | 97 | @ Phoenix Suns | 114 |
Game 6 | May 4 | Phoenix Suns | 126 | @ Los Angeles Lakers | 118 |
Game 7 | May 6 | Los Angeles Lakers | 90 | @ Phoenix Suns | 121 |
(Suns won series 4-3)
Of the eight teams, five (1968 Celtics, 1970 Lakers, 1979 Bullets, 1981 Celtics, 1995 Rockets) went on to the Finals and three ('68 & '81 Celtics, '95 Rockets) won it all.
Also of note: 6 of the 8 played Game 5 at home, which is encouraging news for the 2011 Chicago Bulls, but not so for the Thunder, who will have to play their Game 5 in Dallas tonight.
May 25th, 2011 at 12:04 pm
So if it is 8/200 overall, how many of those teams had homecourt to start the series? Looks like 6 of the winners, but how many losers? Seems like it would probably only be 50 or 60. Which makes the Bulls chances not look so bad.
May 25th, 2011 at 1:25 pm
Arbitrarily excluding the BAA (which had 4 3-1 deficits and 0 comebacks) for my own dataset convenience, you get 196 total series where somebody went down 3-1. Of those teams, 61 played Game 1 at home. Teams that played Game 1 at home and went down 3-1 came back 6 times, or 9.8% of the time. Teams that played Game 1 on the road and went down 3-1 came back twice, or 1.5% of the time.
It's dire for both OKC and Chicago, but if you had to pick one team to come back, the Bulls would be a far better bet than the Thunder.
May 25th, 2011 at 1:30 pm
Also, how about the 1-1-1-1-1-1-1 format in that 1968 series? Sounds great on paper, until you consider the insanity of the travel involved.
May 25th, 2011 at 1:43 pm
The last couple of times were in the first round. I don't think it is happening this year Neil.
May 25th, 2011 at 2:03 pm
I wonder how much point differential can tell us, if anything, about a team's chances of coming back. On the one hand, close losses (especially in OT) probably mean the match-up is more even than 3-1 would indicate, but it also seems like there is usually an emotional sucker-punch involved for the team finding itself in a hole.
May 25th, 2011 at 2:29 pm
Regular Season SRS might be telling here. More talented teams have a better chance of coming back.
The 05 Suns against the 05 Spurs for example, not as much. Even though the Suns won more games the Spurs had a better point differential.
May 25th, 2011 at 3:14 pm
Great info here. How many times has the team down 3-1 even forced a game 7? [even if they lost the deciding game]
May 25th, 2011 at 11:25 pm
The 1981 ECF series between Philly and Boston is the best playoff series I ever saw. Two hated rivals, plenty of great players, great drama and last-minute heroics - last 4 games decided by 2, 2, 2 and 1 points. McHale saved game 6 with a block and rebound of a Toney drive after Bird's high-bouncing leaner gave Boston the lead.
Bird's banker in the final minute won game 7 91-90. Over the last five minutes or so Boston shut out the 76ers from the field with some of the fiercest defense in NBA playoff history.
Boston almost did it again the next year to the 76ers. After blowing them out by 40 in game 1, Philly took control and won the next 3 after Nate Archibald went down with a separated shoulder. Boston won the next two but Philly rose up and took game 7 in Boston, making them (at the time) the only team other than the 73 Knicks to win a game 7 in the Garden.
Ironically, Boston was also down 1-3 in that series too after another shoulder injury, this one to Havlicek. Both times the Celtics had the best record in the league but didnt win it all. With all the titles they have won, it is even more ironic that they year they posted the best record in franchise history (68-14) that Boston didnt win it that time.
Of course, with a healthy Havlicek, league MVP Cowens and Jo Jo White they likely would have won it all over LA. Wilt retired after getting a chery pick dunk with 1 second left in the game 5 Finals loss to the Knicks.
May 25th, 2011 at 11:50 pm
I'd like to see the NBA give a conference playoff MVP, like baseball does for its LCS (League Championship Series), only in the NBA it would be for the 3 total rounds performance. Sometimes a guy gets the Finals MVP but isnt the total playoff MVP.
For this year of course Dirk would be the West playoff MVP. If things keep going the same in the East, LeBron would likely get it, or Wade. Rose if Chicago came back to in it probably.
I'd like to see retro-active playoff MVPs given too, from 1947-68. Jerry West got the first MVP in 69, and is still the only man to win it from a losing team. I suspect Russell would have a boatload of Finals MVPs.
Bird would have won the East playoff MVP in 1981-84-85-86-87.
May 26th, 2011 at 9:19 am
#8. I'm very glad I wasn't around to be a Sixers fan in 1981, though I guess the '83 title could help soothe things.
To go up 3-1 only to lose 3 consecutive games by a combined 5 points must really, really hurt.
May 26th, 2011 at 4:59 pm
More! More game logs from pre-1985!
May 26th, 2011 at 5:51 pm
The 1997 series deserves an asterisk -- Stern suspended 5 Knicks starters for the last two games due to the game-5 brawl. The Knicks team that lost the last two games was very different from the team that was up 3-2.
May 27th, 2011 at 2:57 pm
12 - I agree it deserves an asterik, but it wasn't 5 starters for 2 games. LJ, Houston and Ewing were starters. Ward and Starks were both coming off the bench at that point, although they were getting about 45-50 minutes combined a night. And only Starks and LJ were suspended for Game 7.
I remember watching that series, and being amazed that the Knicks still had a lead in the 4th.