Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Southwest Division (NBA)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Division of the National Basketball Association

Southwest Division
ConferenceWestern Conference
LeagueNational Basketball Association
SportBasketball
First season2004–05 season
No. of teams5
Most recent
champions
Houston Rockets
(5th title)
Most titlesSan Antonio Spurs
(9 titles)
Map
About OpenStreetMaps
Maps: terms of use
240km
149miles
Rockets
Spurs
Pelicans
Mavericks
Grizzlies
Southwest Division Teams Location

TheSouthwest Division is one of the three divisions in theWestern Conference of theNational Basketball Association (NBA). Despite its name, the division is actually located in theSouth Central United States. The division consists of five teams: theDallas Mavericks, theHouston Rockets, theMemphis Grizzlies, theNew Orleans Pelicans and theSan Antonio Spurs. Three of the teams, the Mavericks, Rockets, and Spurs, are based inTexas.

Consisting of some of the most historically competitive teams in the NBA's Western Conference, the division was created at the start of the2004–05 season, when the league expanded from 29 to 30 teams with the addition of theCharlotte Bobcats. The league realigned itself into three divisions in each conference. The Southwest Division began with five inaugural members, the Mavericks, the Rockets, the Grizzlies, the Hornets (now Pelicans) and the Spurs.[1] The Mavericks, the Rockets, the Grizzlies and the Spurs joined from the now-defunctMidwest Division, while the Pelicans joined from theCentral Division.

The Spurs have been dominant since the division's inaugural season, having won the most Southwest Division titles with nine. The Rockets have won five, the Mavericks have won four, the Grizzlies have won two and the Pelicans have won one title. FourNBA champions came from the Southwest Division. The Spurs won the NBA championship in2005,2007 and2014, while the Mavericks won in2011. In the2007–08 season, all four teams that qualified for the playoffs each had more than 50 wins. In the2010–11 season and the2014–15 season, all teams in the division had winning percentages above 0.500 (50%). In the2014–15 season, the Southwest Division saw every one of its teams making the playoffs, a feat achieved only twice in the last 30 years.[2] The most recent division champions are the Houston Rockets.

Since the2021–22 season, the Southwest Division champion has received theWillis Reed Trophy, named after Hall of FamerWillis Reed, who notably never played for or coached for a team currently in the division.[3]

2025–26 standings

[edit]
Main article:2025–26 NBA season
Southwest DivisionWLPCTGBHomeRoadDivGP
San Antonio Spurs114.7338‍–‍23‍–‍25–015
Houston Rockets104.7140.55‍–‍25‍–‍22–114
Memphis Grizzlies611.3536.04‍–‍52‍–‍63–217
Dallas Mavericks512.2947.04‍–‍91‍–‍31–417
New Orleans Pelicans215.11810.01‍–‍81‍–‍71–417

Notes

  • y – Clinched division title
  • pi – Clinched play-in tournament spot (locked into a play-in spot but not able to clinch a playoff spot directly)

Teams

[edit]
TeamCityYearFrom
Joined
Dallas MavericksDallas, Texas2004Midwest Division
Houston RocketsHouston, Texas2004Midwest Division
Memphis Grizzlies(2001–present)
Vancouver Grizzlies(19952001)
Memphis, Tennessee
Vancouver, British Columbia
2004Midwest Division
New Orleans Pelicans(2013–present)
New Orleans Hornets(20022005,20072013)
New Orleans/Oklahoma City Hornets(20052007)[a]
New Orleans, Louisiana

New Orleans, Louisiana andOklahoma City, Oklahoma[a]
2004Central Division
San Antonio SpursSan Antonio, Texas2004Midwest Division

Willis Reed Trophy

[edit]

Beginning with the2021–22 season, the Southwest Division champion has received theWillis Reed Trophy. As with the other division championship trophies, it is named after one of the African American pioneers from NBA history. During his playing career from 1964 to 1974,Willis Reed became the firstHBCU graduate to win both theNBA MVP Award and theFinals MVP Award. The Reed Trophy consists of a 200-millimetre (7.9 in) crystal ball.[4]

Division champions

[edit]
^Had or tied for the best regular season record for that season
SeasonTeamRecordPlayoffs result
2004–05San Antonio Spurs 59–23 (.720)WonNBA Finals
2005–06San Antonio Spurs 63–19 (.768)Lostconference semifinals
2006–07Dallas Mavericks^ 67–15 (.817)LostFirst round
2007–08New Orleans Hornets 56–26 (.683)Lostconference semifinals
2008–09San Antonio Spurs 54–28 (.659)LostFirst round
2009–10Dallas Mavericks 55–27 (.671)LostFirst round
2010–11San Antonio Spurs 61–21 (.744)LostFirst round
2011–12[b]San Antonio Spurs^ 50–16 (.758)Lostconference finals
2012–13San Antonio Spurs 58–24 (.707)LostNBA Finals
2013–14San Antonio Spurs^ 62–20 (.756)WonNBA Finals
2014–15Houston Rockets 56–26 (.683)Lostconference finals
2015–16San Antonio Spurs 67–15 (.817)Lostconference semifinals
2016–17San Antonio Spurs 61–21 (.744)Lostconference finals
2017–18Houston Rockets^ 65–17 (.793)Lostconference finals
2018–19Houston Rockets 53–29 (.646)Lostconference semifinals
2019–20[c]Houston Rockets 44–28 (.611)Lostconference semifinals
2020–21[d]Dallas Mavericks 42–30 (.583)LostFirst round
2021–22Memphis Grizzlies 56–26 (.683)Lostconference semifinals
2022–23Memphis Grizzlies 51–31 (.622)LostFirst round
2023–24Dallas Mavericks 50–32 (.610)LostNBA Finals
2024–25Houston Rockets 52–30 (.634)LostFirst round

Division Titles by team

[edit]
TeamTitlesSeason(s) won
San Antonio Spurs92004–05,2005–06,2008–09,2010–11,2011–12,2012–13,2013–14,2015–16,2016–17
Houston Rockets52014–15,2017–18,2018–19,2019–20,2024–25
Dallas Mavericks42006–07,2009–10,2020–21,2023–24
Memphis Grizzlies22021–22,2022–23
New Orleans Hornets/Pelicans12007–08

Season results

[edit]
^Denotes team that won theNBA Finals
+Denotes team that won theConference finals, but lost theNBA Finals
*Denotes team that qualified for theNBA Playoffs
×Denotes team that qualified for theNBA play-in tournament
SeasonTeam (record)
1st2nd3rd4th5th
2004–05San Antonio^ (59–23)Dallas* (58–24)Houston* (51–31)Memphis* (45–37)New Orleans (18–64)
2005–06San Antonio* (63–19)Dallas+ (60–22)Memphis* (49–33)New Orleans/OKC[a] (38–44)Houston (34–48)
2006–07Dallas* (67–15)San Antonio^ (58–24)Houston* (52–30)New Orleans/OKC[a] (39–43)Memphis (22–60)
2007–08New Orleans* (56–26)San Antonio* (56–26)Houston* (55–27)Dallas* (51–31)Memphis (22–60)
2008–09San Antonio* (54–28)Houston* (53–29)Dallas* (50–32)New Orleans* (49–33)Memphis (24–58)
2009–10Dallas* (55–27)San Antonio* (50–32)Houston (42–40)Memphis (40–42)New Orleans (37–45)
2010–11San Antonio* (61–21)Dallas^ (57–25)New Orleans* (46–36)Memphis* (46–36)Houston (43–39)
2011–12[b]San Antonio* (50–16)Memphis* (41–25)Dallas* (36–30)Houston (34–32)New Orleans (21–45)
2012–13San Antonio+ (58–24)Memphis* (56–26)Houston* (45–37)Dallas (41–41)New Orleans (27–55)
2013–14San Antonio^ (62–20)Houston* (54–28)Memphis* (50–32)Dallas* (49–33)New Orleans (34–48)
2014–15Houston* (56–26)Memphis* (55–27)San Antonio* (55–27)Dallas* (50–32)New Orleans* (45–37)
2015–16San Antonio* (67–15)Dallas* (42–40)Memphis* (42–40)Houston* (41–41)New Orleans (30–52)
2016–17San Antonio* (61–21)Houston* (55–27)Memphis* (43–39)New Orleans (34–48)Dallas (33–49)
2017–18Houston* (65–17)New Orleans* (48–34)San Antonio* (47–35)Dallas (24–58)Memphis (22–60)
2018–19Houston* (53–29)San Antonio* (48–34)Memphis (33–49)New Orleans (33–49)Dallas (33–49)
2019–20[c]Houston* (44–28)Dallas* (43–32)Memphis× (34–39)San Antonio (32–39)New Orleans (30–42)
2020–21[d]Dallas* (42–30)Memphis* (38–34)San Antonio× (33–39)New Orleans (31–41)Houston (17–55)
2021–22Memphis* (56–26)Dallas* (52–30)New Orleans* (36–46)San Antonio× (34–48)Houston (20–62)
2022–23Memphis* (51–31)New Orleans× (42–40)Dallas (38–44)Houston (22–60)San Antonio (22–60)
2023–24Dallas+ (50–32)New Orleans* (49–33)Houston (41–41)Memphis (27–55)San Antonio (22–60)
2024–25Houston* (52–30)Memphis* (48–34)Dallas× (39–43)San Antonio (34–48)New Orleans (21–61)

Rivalries

[edit]
Main article:National Basketball Association rivalries § Southwest Division

Houston Rockets vs. San Antonio Spurs

[edit]
Main article:Rockets–Spurs rivalry

Notes

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Specific

  1. ^"Expansion Bobcats prompt change".ESPN.com. Associated Press. November 17, 2003. RetrievedMay 29, 2011.
  2. ^"Southwest Division's historical dominance".ESPN.com. April 15, 2015. RetrievedApril 16, 2015.
  3. ^"NBA unveils new trophies for division winners named after 6 NBA legends".NBA.com. Turner Sports Interactive, Inc. April 11, 2022. RetrievedJanuary 28, 2023.
  4. ^"NBA Unveils Division Winner Trophies Named After Black Pioneers from League History".Bleacher Report. April 11, 2022. RetrievedJanuary 28, 2023.
  5. ^Jenkins, Lee (December 5, 2011)."'tis The Season".CNN Sports Illustrated. Time Warner Company. Archived fromthe original on December 10, 2011. RetrievedApril 30, 2012.

General

External links

[edit]
Eastern
Conference
Atlantic
Central
Southeast
Western
Conference
Northwest
Pacific
Southwest
Annual events
History
People
Awards
and honors
Others
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Southwest_Division_(NBA)&oldid=1322930762"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp