Why does the second round of the NBA playoffs have a staggered schedule?

· Yahoo Sports

And then there were eight.

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On Monday night, we'll see the second round of the 2026 NBA playoffs tip off. But when you go to watch each game and or check the schedule, you might notice something peculiar. Rather than ensuring every second-round matchup gets the full spotlight and 2.5-3 hours of breathing room in time between games, the schedule is ... staggered. Huh?

For example, on Monday, we have the Philadelphia 76ers visiting the New York Knicks at 8 p.m. Eastern with the San Antonio Spurs and Minnesota Timberwolvesstarting their matchup only 1.5 hours later at 9:30 p.m. Eastern. That means the second half of Knicks-76ers will be in full swing at the same time as the Spurs and Timberwolves are likely still feeling each other out. The same applies to Tuesday night's schedule. The Detroit Pistons and Cleveland Cavaliers rekindle their rivalry at 7:00 p.m. Eastern in the Motor City with the reigning NBA champion Oklahoma City Thunder starting their duel with the Los Angeles Lakers at ... 8:30 p.m. Eastern.

Uh, sure.

All of this is a bit weird, if I'm being candid. I'm sure diehard hoops fans will try to find a way to catch as much of the initial second-round action as possible, but asking folks to keep flipping back and forth or make a conscious decision about which game they'll watch as we cut down the field of NBA title contenders to eight feels so shortsighted. Some of these series could very well be heavyweight, prestigious matchups featuring some high-level basketball in each game.

And I, for one, would've liked to enjoy each game without worrying about flipping to any other on-court action. The second round of the playoffs deserves as much. Thankfully, this overlapping schedule seems to stop as we get deeper into each series.

As for why it's happening now, the NBA typically pays respect to the Central time zone. Because both the top-seeded Spurs and Thunder are in the Central time zone, the league doesn't want to tip off games too late for the home market hosting a game. That would explain why there are more natural scheduling gaps as Thunder-Lakers shifts to Los Angeles in the Pacific time zone, for example.

This NBA scheduling quirk is undoubtedly pretty frustrating. Fortunately, it seems to be fleeting, a minor annoyance before we get into the meat of the conference semifinals.

This article originally appeared on For The Win: NBA playoffs second round schedule is weirdly staggered. Here's why

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