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Postseason

The postseason is the portion of a sports season that takes place after the regular season when teams compete to determine a league or tournament champion. Postseason competition can involve playoffs, knockout tournaments, or series of games, depending on the sport and league.

Qualifying teams are usually those with the best regular-season records or those earning automatic berths from

Formats vary widely. Common models include single-elimination brackets, best-of series (for example, seven-game series in baseball

Examples include the NBA playoffs, NFL playoffs, MLB postseason, and NHL playoffs in North American professional

Postseason games are often highly anticipated and can be financially significant for leagues through ticket sales

divisions
or
conferences.
Seeding
determines
matchups,
home-field
or
home-court
advantage,
and
sometimes
byes
for
top
seeds.
The
format
is
chosen
by
the
league
and
can
influence
competitiveness
and
scheduling.
and
basketball),
and
double-elimination
tournaments.
Some
leagues
also
use
conference
or
division
brackets
or
wild-card
rounds
to
determine
entrants.
Postseason
structures
may
be
organized
within
a
division
or
conference
or
across
an
entire
league.
sports.
In
college
sports,
the
NCAA
basketball
tournaments
(men’s
and
women’s)
use
a
single-elimination
format
known
as
March
Madness;
other
sports
rely
on
conference
tournaments
or
national
qualifiers.
Some
leagues
designate
finals
or
championship
games
to
crown
the
ultimate
champion.
and
broadcasting.
On-field
success
in
the
postseason
is
central
to
a
team’s
legacy,
and
postseason
performance
can
yield
awards
such
as
a
Finals
MVP
or
World
Series
MVP.