New Orleans held a 17-point lead over Golden State with six minutes remaining in a first-round playoff game on Thursday night. The Warriors tied the score on Steph Curry's three at the end of regulation, and won 123-119 in overtime.

I'll have to take other people's word for it that this was great drama. I wasn't watching.

I'm a basketball fan. I prefer the NBA to today's college game. Yet, I can find no earthly reason to watch more than snippets of the NBA's opening round of playoffs.

What fun is it when you know beforehand which team is going to advance?

OK, the Pelicans hold on and win Game 3. All that would've meant — unless Curry or Klay Thompson was to break an ankle — is that the Warriors win in five games, rather than a four-game sweep.

Cleveland vs. Boston. Why bother to win a game, Celtics? Same with Chicago vs. Milwaukee, Houston vs. Dallas, Atlanta vs. Brooklyn. Why bother, Bucks, Mavericks and Nets?

Everyone knows how those series are going to turn out. There's some mystery in San Antonio vs. the L.A. Clippers, and in Toronto's complete flop vs. Washington, but that's it for the most imbalanced league in pro sports.

Heading into the weekend, there were five NBA series at 3-0, two at 2-0 and one at 2-1. In the NHL, there had been a 4-0 sweep (Anaheim) and a 4-1 victory (N.Y. Rangers), there were five series at 3-2 and one series at 2-2.

The teams opening at home were 17-5 (.773) in the NBA and 22-16 (.579) in the NHL.

The simple reason is this: When you play to 105, the better team usually wins. When you to play to 3, either team can win.

It goes beyond that. In an 82-game season, the NBA had 10 teams win 50 games or more and eight teams lose 50 or more. The NHL had six teams win 50 or more and four teams lose 50 or more (including extra-time losses).

The unknown is what makes playoffs interesting. The NHL has that from the get-go. The NBA won't have much of that for another month.

Plus Three from Patrick

Three roster moves the Twins should make before Detroit arrives Monday:

• Lester Oliveros for Tim Stauffer. Oliveros can get a strikeout. He's about to turn 27. Find out now.

•  Josmil Pinto for Eduardo Nunez. Pinto offers righthanded power; more valuable as a designated hitter than a catcher, so Chris Herrmann stays.

•  Eddie Rosario for Jordan Schafer. Rosario can play left field, center field and second base and can hit. Schafer is fast and … that's it.

UPDATE: After watching Kennys Vargas reach a new low in his season-long futility on Saturday night, we have modified these recommendations and changed No. 2 as follows:

Josmil Pinto for Kennys Vargas. The DH then can be mixed-and-matched with Pinto, Oswaldo Arcia and Nunez.