jdm_dc_fan wrote:This is where Simmons should start upping his PPG and RPG significantly right?
No, this is where Simmons is still not attempting any 3's.
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jdm_dc_fan wrote:This is where Simmons should start upping his PPG and RPG significantly right?
Duke4life831 wrote:Russell and GS unprotected 1st pick this year starting to sound like it makes some sense...
PhilBlackson wrote:Fire Brown, trade Simmons for a legit 2nd scoring option that can also space the floor and PHI will be deadly.
the_process wrote:The chances the Sixers make some drastic in season move are almost nil.
Now, if they go out in the 2nd round again...
Wilfried wrote:the_process wrote:The chances the Sixers make some drastic in season move are almost nil.
Now, if they go out in the 2nd round again...
I'm pretty sure they will not make a lot of changes either this season. One of the things that kept them out of the CF last season was the lack of continuity.
If they can fight through their struggles, they could become dangerous.
Also, even if they finish 4th or 5th, I still feel that in the play-offs (and with a healthy Joel), none of the other EC-teams match up against them.
Not Milwaukee, not Boston (3-0 for Philly this season). Not Toronto or Miami because they lack the star power.
Maybe Indiana? Maybe.
the_process wrote:The chances the Sixers make some drastic in season move are almost nil.
Now, if they go out in the 2nd round again...

GeorgeMarcus wrote:New season, same old story... 21-10 (56-win pace) with Embiid and 4-6 (33-win pace) without Embiid. I could use this as more material to prop up my lord and savior, but I'm gonna take a different route this time: Brett Brown has got to go.
If Scott freaking Brooks can trot out the G League Wizards and look competitive, there should be no reason Brown can't salvage mediocrity (at a minimum) with Simmons/J Rich/Tobias/Horford. This isn't a new phenomenon or reactionary take. It was the same story last year going 8-10 with Simmons/Redick/Butler/Tobias.
Even when Embiid plays, we're consistently awful out of timeouts and have no sense of structure within the offense. How can we not blame the coach knowing all that we know? I like the guy- I really do- but enough is enough. He had to know his ass was on the line when the Sixers committed to win-now mode. My only worry is that his rapport with the FO will cloud their judgement and prevent them from making the right decision.
To answer the question that will inevitably arise: yes, I'm willing to gamble on an unproven coach in the event of a Brown firing. I get that it's slim pickens right now when it comes to known commodities, but it's better to take a risk on someone new than cling to a losing formula.
CoP wrote:I am not saying you are wrong, but what do you think he should do as a coach on offense with this roster? Whenever Simmons, Horford and Embiid are on the floor together, they are going to be great on defense but inevitably struggle on offense. It's just the way it is, I am not sure what the solution could be. Here are their shot charts in 2019 and 2020:
Simmons is actually taking more of his shots inside 10 feet, while both Horford and Embiid are taking more of their shots outside of 10 feet and fewer inside 10 feet. There's no space on offense when all three of them are on the floor, so Embiid and Horford get pulled out to the 3pt line when they should be operating most often in the paint.
GeorgeMarcus wrote:New season, same old story... 21-10 (56-win pace) with Embiid and 4-6 (33-win pace) without Embiid. I could use this as more material to prop up my lord and savior, but I'm gonna take a different route this time: Brett Brown has got to go.
If Scott freaking Brooks can trot out the G League Wizards and look competitive, there should be no reason Brown can't salvage mediocrity (at a minimum) with Simmons/J Rich/Tobias/Horford. This isn't a new phenomenon or reactionary take. It was the same story last year going 8-10 with Simmons/Redick/Butler/Tobias.
Even when Embiid plays, we're consistently awful out of timeouts and have no sense of structure within the offense. How can we not blame the coach knowing all that we know? I like the guy- I really do- but enough is enough. He had to know his ass was on the line when the Sixers committed to win-now mode. My only worry is that his rapport with the FO will cloud their judgement and prevent them from making the right decision.
To answer the question that will inevitably arise: yes, I'm willing to gamble on an unproven coach in the event of a Brown firing. I get that it's slim pickens right now when it comes to known commodities, but it's better to take a risk on someone new than cling to a losing formula.
GeorgeMarcus wrote:Tomjas wrote:Their shooting has been abysmal away from home
Today was 18% from 3
That might seem like something Brown has no control over, but 3pt% speaks volumes about the flow of the offense. Get this:
Tobias shot 43.4% from 3pt over 55 games for the Clippers last year, and 41.1% the previous year for DET/LAC combined. This is a guy who averaged 5.3 attempts during that 1 1/2 season stretch. I remember Tobi talking about how excited he was to demonstrate his improved 3pt touch before the 17-18 season. In 67 games for the Sixers however, he's shooting 33.9% on the same volume. It's not like he's drawing doubles on the perimeter, so what the hell is going on here?
I'll keep going...
- Mike Scott hit 40.0% for the Wizards and Clippers before arriving in Philly; since then he's down to 37.0%.
- Horford averaged 37.1% for the Hawks/Celtics after adding the 3pt dimension to his game in 15-16; he's shooting 34.0% so far for the Sixers.
- Richardson shot 36.8% throughout his career for Miami; he's averaging 34.1% in the City of Brotherly Love.
And that was our starting lineup tonight, besides Ben who can't hurt team 3pt% without actually taking anyIn theory Ben's inward gravity should open up the perimeter for his teammates (as should Embiid's when healthy). Instead, what I believe we're seeing are the fruits of a poorly designed and/or poorly implemented scheme. If true that falls on Brown.
GeorgeMarcus wrote:New season, same old story... 21-10 (56-win pace) with Embiid and 4-6 (33-win pace) without Embiid. I could use this as more material to prop up my lord and savior, but I'm gonna take a different route this time: Brett Brown has got to go.
If Scott freaking Brooks can trot out the G League Wizards and look competitive, there should be no reason Brown can't salvage mediocrity (at a minimum) with Simmons/J Rich/Tobias/Horford. This isn't a new phenomenon or reactionary take. It was the same story last year going 8-10 with Simmons/Redick/Butler/Tobias.
Even when Embiid plays, we're consistently awful out of timeouts and have no sense of structure within the offense. How can we not blame the coach knowing all that we know? I like the guy- I really do- but enough is enough. He had to know his ass was on the line when the Sixers committed to win-now mode. My only worry is that his rapport with the FO will cloud their judgement and prevent them from making the right decision.
To answer the question that will inevitably arise: yes, I'm willing to gamble on an unproven coach in the event of a Brown firing. I get that it's slim pickens right now when it comes to known commodities, but it's better to take a risk on someone new than cling to a losing formula.
GoCeltics123 wrote:Feels like the Sixers put everything team-building and resource-wise into beating the Celtics and forgot how to beat other teams, especially on the road.

Hussien Fatal wrote:GeorgeMarcus wrote:Tomjas wrote:Their shooting has been abysmal away from home
Today was 18% from 3
That might seem like something Brown has no control over, but 3pt% speaks volumes about the flow of the offense. Get this:
Tobias shot 43.4% from 3pt over 55 games for the Clippers last year, and 41.1% the previous year for DET/LAC combined. This is a guy who averaged 5.3 attempts during that 1 1/2 season stretch. I remember Tobi talking about how excited he was to demonstrate his improved 3pt touch before the 17-18 season. In 67 games for the Sixers however, he's shooting 33.9% on the same volume. It's not like he's drawing doubles on the perimeter, so what the hell is going on here?
I'll keep going...
- Mike Scott hit 40.0% for the Wizards and Clippers before arriving in Philly; since then he's down to 37.0%.
- Horford averaged 37.1% for the Hawks/Celtics after adding the 3pt dimension to his game in 15-16; he's shooting 34.0% so far for the Sixers.
- Richardson shot 36.8% throughout his career for Miami; he's averaging 34.1% in the City of Brotherly Love.
And that was our starting lineup tonight, besides Ben who can't hurt team 3pt% without actually taking anyIn theory Ben's inward gravity should open up the perimeter for his teammates (as should Embiid's when healthy). Instead, what I believe we're seeing are the fruits of a poorly designed and/or poorly implemented scheme. If true that falls on Brown.
I see you note the players who have regressed but what about the players who have improved their shooting???
Furkan went from low 30% to leading the team at 39%
Thybulle shot 30% his last year in college to shooting in the mid 40’s
Trey Burke shooting a career best from 3 in the mid 40’s
That’s just off the top of my head. As much as you want it to be the coach it isn’t it’s clearly the players and the flawed roster. Give brett a break he’s a very decent coach.