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Northwest Division (NBA)

Division of the National Basketball Association


Summary

Division of the National Basketball Association

FieldValue
titleNorthwest Division
conferenceWestern Conference
leagueNational Basketball Association
sportBasketball
inaugural2004–05 season
teams5
championOklahoma City Thunder (8th title)
most_champsOklahoma City Thunder/Seattle SuperSonics (8 titles)

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The Northwest Division is one of the three divisions in the Western Conference of the National Basketball Association (NBA). The division consists of five teams: the Denver Nuggets, the Minnesota Timberwolves, the Oklahoma City Thunder, the Portland Trail Blazers and the Utah Jazz. The Northwest Division is by far the most geographically expansive of the six divisions, and is geographically similar to the Northwest Division in the National Hockey League which predated the NBA's by six years before it was dissolved in .

The division was created at the start of the 2004–05 season, when the league expanded from 29 to 30 teams with the addition of the Charlotte Bobcats. In doing so, the league realigned itself from two divisions in each conference to three divisions in each conference. The Northwest Division began with five inaugural members: the Nuggets, the Timberwolves, the Trail Blazers, the SuperSonics and the Jazz. The Trail Blazers and SuperSonics joined from the Pacific Division, while the Nuggets, the Timberwolves and Jazz joined from the now-defunct Midwest Division. The SuperSonics moved to Oklahoma City prior to the 2008–09 season and became the Thunder, but remained in the Northwest Division. Other than this franchise re-location, the division's membership has remained unchanged since its creation.

The most recent division champions are the Oklahoma City Thunder, having won an eighth division championship in the 2024–25 NBA season. The SuperSonics-Thunder franchise has won the most Northwest Division titles with eight, while the Nuggets have won six, the Jazz have won five, the Trail Blazers have won two, and the Timberwolves have never won the Northwest Division title. In the 2009–10 season, all four teams that qualified for the playoffs each had more than 50 wins, and in 2018–19 all four teams that qualified for the playoffs had at least 49 wins.

Since the 2021–22 season, the Northwest Division champion has received the Sam Jones Trophy, named after Hall of Famer Sam Jones, who notably spent his career playing for the Boston Celtics and did not play for a team currently in the division, though he was assistant coach for the Jazz during their first NBA season in 1974–75 when they were based in New Orleans.

2025–26 standings

Main article: 2025–26 NBA season

Notes

  • z – Clinched home court advantage for the entire playoffs
  • x – Clinched playoff spot

Teams

TeamCityYearFromJoined
Denver NuggetsDenver, ColoradoMidwest Division
Minnesota TimberwolvesMinneapolis, MinnesotaMidwest Division
Oklahoma City Thunder (–present)
Seattle SuperSonics (–)Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Seattle, WashingtonPacific Division
Portland Trail BlazersPortland, OregonPacific Division
Utah JazzSalt Lake City, UtahMidwest Division

Sam Jones Trophy

Beginning with the 2021–22 season, the Northwest Division champion has received the Sam Jones 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 1957 to 1969, Sam Jones was an integral part of a Boston Celtics dynasty that won 10 NBA championships during that span. The Jones Trophy consists of a 200 crystal ball.

Division champions

^Had or tied for the best regular season record for that season
SeasonTeamRecordPlayoffs result
Seattle SuperSonics52–30 (.634)Lost conference semifinals
Denver Nuggets44–38 (.537)Lost First round
Utah Jazz51–31 (.622)Lost conference finals
Utah Jazz54–28 (.659)Lost conference semifinals
Denver Nuggets54–28 (.659)Lost conference finals
Denver Nuggets53–29 (.646)Lost First round
Oklahoma City Thunder55–27 (.671)Lost conference finals
Oklahoma City Thunder47–19 (.712)Lost NBA Finals
Oklahoma City Thunder60–22 (.732)Lost conference semifinals
Oklahoma City Thunder59–23 (.720)Lost conference finals
Portland Trail Blazers51–31 (.622)Lost First round
Oklahoma City Thunder55–27 (.671)Lost conference finals
Utah Jazz51–31 (.622)Lost conference semifinals
Portland Trail Blazers49–33 (.598)Lost First round
Denver Nuggets54–28 (.659)Lost conference semifinals
Denver Nuggets46–27 (.630)Lost conference finals
Utah Jazz^52–20 (.722)Lost conference semifinals
Utah Jazz49–33 (.598)Lost First round
Denver Nuggets53–29 (.646)Won NBA Finals
Oklahoma City Thunder57–25 (.695)Lost conference semifinals
Oklahoma City Thunder^68–14 (.829)Won NBA Finals

Titles by team

TeamTitlesSeason(s) won
Seattle SuperSonics/Oklahoma City Thunder8, , , , , , ,
Denver Nuggets6, , , , ,
Utah Jazz5, , , ,
Portland Trail Blazers2,
Minnesota Timberwolves0

Season results

×Denotes team that qualified for the NBA play-in tournament
Denotes team that did not qualify for the 2020 NBA Bubble season restart
Seasoncolspan="5"Team (record)1stwidth="150"2ndwidth="150"3rdwidth="150"4thwidth="150"5th
Seattle* (52–30)
Denver* (44–38)
Utah* (51–31)
Utah* (54–28)
Denver* (54–28)
Denver* (53–29)
Oklahoma City* (55–27)
Oklahoma City+ (47–19)
Oklahoma City* (60–22)
Oklahoma City* (59–23)
Portland* (51–31)
Oklahoma City* (55–27)
Utah* (51–31)
Portland* (49–33)
Denver* (54–28)
Denver* (46–27)
Utah* (52–20)
Utah* (49–33)
Denver^ (53–29)
Oklahoma City* (57–25)
Oklahoma City^ (68–14)

Notes

  • Because of a lockout, the season did not start until December 25, 2011, and all 30 teams played a shortened 66-game regular season schedule.
  • Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the 82-game regular season schedule was suspended on March 11, 2020. The season was restarted on July 30 under an eight-game seeding format in the 2020 NBA Bubble to conclude the regular season and determine playoff berths. Games were played inside the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida.
  • Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the season did not start until December 22, 2020, and all 30 teams played a shortened 72-game regular season schedule.

References

Specific

General

References

  1. (November 17, 2003). "NBA Approves Realignment for 2004-05 Season". National Basketball Association.
  2. (November 17, 2003). "Expansion Bobcats prompt change". ESPN Internet Ventures.
  3. (April 11, 2022). "NBA unveils new trophies for division winners named after 6 NBA legends". Turner Sports Interactive, Inc.
  4. Conway, Tyler. (April 11, 2022). "NBA Unveils Division Winner Trophies Named After Black Pioneers from League History".
  5. Jenkins, Lee. (December 5, 2011). "'tis The Season". Time Warner Company.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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