HotelVitale wrote:LloydFree wrote:Milwaukee didn't learn a thing from losing that playoff series last year. They doubled down on the same formula instead of making improvements. Two guys and a bunch of one dimensional, standstill shooters works well in the regular season, but not deep into the playoffs. Bad teams can't defend that. Good teams run those "shooters" off the line and make them score off the dribble, then force the "playmakers" to shoot jumpers. The Celtics did that to the '18 Sixers and the Raptors did that to the '19 Bucks. Bucks just gonna do the same thing with older, lesser players and hope it works I guess.
True but the Sixers have probably been even worse with that these last couple years. The Sixers playoff offense two years ago was running around in circles until someone chucked up an off-balance 3, and last year it was mostly 'try the fastbreak, then try Embiid (or Embiid+Redick), then just let Butler do whatever he feels like.' Plus Embiid still gets massively thrown off when he doesn't have space to pull of his moves and Harris needs to be red hot to score against locked-in defenses. Lot of work to do to get some kind of system or systems that actually preps their talent to face up against real defenses.
That's not true. The 76ers have run two totally different offenses the last two years. The 76ers were the Bucks in 17/18. Covington, Redick, Belinelli, Saric, Illyasova... A bunch of average to above average, 3 point shooters, who couldn't put the ball on the floor against tough close-outs. Last year the 76ers ditched all of that and acquired players that could score off the dribble, and run pick-n-roll. They submarined their own offense by falling into the trap of letting Butler run the offense for longer and longer periods in the 4th quarter. Butler isn't a PG or a good shooter. He's an ISO scorer, who is good against most defenders not named Kawhi Leonard.
This year, without Butler, the 76ers have guys all over the court that can shoot, put the ball on the floor against close-outs, who are unselfish, and will move the ball when necessary. Totally different from the last two rosters. You can debate whether they'll be better, but they didn't double down on the same failure. That's for sure.