Boston just made a few more plays.
I mean, really, that was the difference in this game. They hit a few more shots down the stretch, they didn’t turn it over as many times as the Sixers, they finally won on the offensive glass, and they just executed better down the stretch.
It was an 85 to 82 shot disparity in favor of the Celtics, and while the Sixers made their looks at a higher percentage, they didn’t make ’em when it mattered.
Joel Embiid had a chance at the end. Dario Saric turned it over. JJ Redick missed an open three that would have extended the lead to five with 1:10 left on the clock. And when he did hit with a few seconds remaining, Philly could only throw a goofy Hail Mary down the court.
So it was a fitting end to a series where the Sixers just didn’t play their best. Nobody really did. Redick shot 5-13 last night. T.J. McConnell was good, but couldn’t replicate the game four magic. Dario Saric needed three games to wake up. Robert Covington was a total non-factor and the bench never really got going at all, did they? Ben Simmons was mostly ineffective and Embiid had really good stretches and really bad stretches.
Consider these two Tweets:
Both are wonderful cornerstone players who will bag a lot of wins in the future, but they looked like playoff rookies in this series. Simmons should come back next season with a better jump shot and Embiid will be fully healthy, sans mask.
Then there’s the coach, Brett Brown, who also did not have a great series. I think the McConnell addition in game four was too little, too late, considering the fact that he saw that spark in game two and decided to instead put Simmons back in the game in the fourth quarter. Timeout usage was not great (not just the second quarter game two debacle). He finally went to Justin Anderson in game four when they could have used him earlier in the series. And I would have liked to see some easier post entries for Joel Embiid and some more called plays, because when he did dial things up, the Sixers were pretty good mechanically.
For example, on the Redick missed three, that was a called play, not for JJ, but for a Simmons drive, and he found McConnell on the baseline for a kickout back to the arc.
Clank.
So I know the reactionary thing is to say that Brad Stevens “outcoached” Brett Brown, but I almost kind of feel like Brown out-thought himself more than anything. The things he did correctly identify weren’t put into motion until too late. Redick guarding Tatum was fixed in game two. McConnell was inserted in game four. Anderson game five. If each of those is addressed one game sooner, or a few quarters sooner, then maybe we’re still playing basketball.
And I would have played Markelle Fultz in this series. Absolutely. He wouldn’t have looked any worse than Covington out there. If one guy can put up 0-6, 0-8, 1-7, and 2-5 in four of five games, then surely you can get something out of an athletic rookie who can actually create off the dribble. I don’t know if playing Fultz gives you more understanding of what you have in him going into the offseason, but gluing him to the bench certainly doesn’t answer the question. You now approach the most important summer of the last 25 years with nothing but question marks surrounding your #1 pick, a guy you traded assets to… the Boston Celtics to acquire.
I think that also killed the Sixers, the fact they just don’t have the athleticism that Boston does, definitely not on the perimeter. Redick, Marco Belinelli, and others struggled to get decent looks all series long, and they were liabilities on the other end of the floor, with Boston able to throw incredibly athletic wings at them, “crawl into them” as Brown would say. They wanted the Sixers’ shooters to put the ball on the floor and become ineffective dribblers, and you saw that throughout the series.
All of that adds up to this – it’s a shame. It really is, because it didn’t feel like a 4-1 series loss. I think the Sixers dug their own grave and took waaaay too long to climb out of it. That’s not to discredit Boston, who was just fantastic this series.
Windhorst, I thought, summed it up really well:
Correct.
And Brad Stevens is a wonderful coach. Excellent ATO plays and an effective game plan to combat Ben Simmons – I think those were my two takeaways from the early games in the series. I think he “outcoaches” most others in the NBA, which is why I kind of roll my eyes at the “fire Brett Brown” narrative. I honestly think it’s less about Brett being a “bad coach” and more about Stevens being an amazing coach. Who out there really is better than Stevens? Is it NBCA Coach of the Year Dwane Casey, who just got swept by Cleveland? Is it Steve Kerr, who has more talent than anybody? D’Antoni? Pop? Spoelstra?
I know it’s not Lue or Malone or Donovan or about 20 other NBA coaches.
Anyway, this has sort of been a rambling, stream of consciousness type of recap, but it’s the 96th one I’ve written this season and the Sixers are doing their end of season player availability at 10 this morning, so I’ve got to haul ass over to Camden shortly.
I think there’s a proper “look at the bright side” story coming tomorrow, but consider this for starters:
Think about it. The future looks great for this team. The most important man in Philly sports is now Bryan Colangelo, and I know that scares a lot of you, but let’s all reserve judgment until the end of the draft and free agency, and then we’ll reconvene from there.
Seriously, Sixers basketball is back, and while I wasn’t on the beat during the Process years, I was working in the CBS 3 sports department, editing highlights of Alexey Schved and Tony Wroten and Hollis Thompson. And I was doing 8 seasons on the Philadelphia Union beat, so I know what a shitty franchise looks like. This is not a shitty franchise. This franchise, by comparison, has a ceiling somewhere in the stratosphere.
Couple more things:
Alright, that’s all I’ve got, gonna roll over to Camden for final player availability.
Time’s yours.