The 1978 Philadelphia 76ers (#20) @ The 1976 Boston Celtics (#13)
Overall:
Record: '78 76ers, 55 wins (18th) > ‘76 Celtics, 54 wins (20th)
RSRS: '78 76ers, +4.87 (18th) > ‘76 Celtics, +2.25 (33rd)
PSRS: '78 76ers, +7.35 (13th) > ‘76 Celtics, +4.19 (26th)
When the '78 76ers have Possession:
Overall Comparison, '78 76ers' offense vs '76 Celtics' defense:
Regular Season: +4.1 Offensive Rating (4th) vs -1.6 Defensive Rating (24th): +2.5 expected
Playoffs: +2.7 Offensive Rating (12th) vs -4.4 Defensive Rating (13th): -1.7 expected
Lineup:
PG: Henry Bibby, 13.6% SS on -2.3% rTS, 8.4 / 2.9 / 5.3 / 1.1: -1.0 playoff OBPM
SG: Doug Collins, 22.4% SS on +5.3% rTS, 18.2 / 2.7 / 3.8 / 1.8: +0.9 playoff OBPM
SF: Julius Erving, 25.7% SS on +4.0% rTS, 19.0 / 6.0 / 3.5 / 2.9: +4.8 playoff OBPM
PF: George McGinnis, 27.3% SS on +0.6% rTS, 18.7 / 9.6 / 3.5 / 1.9: -0.6 playoff OBPM
C: Caldwell Jones, 11.8% SS on -0.6% rTS, 5.0 / 6.5 / 1.1 / 1.8: -0.7 playoff OBPM
6th: World B. Free, 24.5% SS on +2.4% rTS, 14.5 / 2.6 / 3.7 / 1.3: +1.5 playoff OBPM
7th: Steve Mix, 16.4% SS on +6.1% rTS, 8.5 / 3.3 / 1.9 / 1.0: +7.0 playoff OBPM
When the '76 Celtics have Possession:
Overall Comparison, '76 Celtics' offense vs '78 76ers' defense:
Regular Season: +0.6 Offensive Rating (26th) vs -0.6 Defensive Rating (34th): +0.0 expected
Playoffs: -0.2 Offensive Rating (32nd) vs -2.7 Defensive Rating (29th): -2.9 expected
Lineup:
PG: Jo Jo White, 22.0% SS on -2.0% rTS, 17.7 / 3.6 / 5.1 / 1.4: +2.1 playoff OBPM
SG: Charlie Scott, 22.4% SS on -0.9% rTS, 16.5 / 4.1 / 3.9 / 1.5: -1.5 playoff OBPM
SF: John Havlicek, 21.8% SS on +0.4% rTS, 15.9 / 3.8 / 3.5 / 1.6: +1.7 playoff OBPM
PF: Paul Silas, 14.9% SS on -1.6% rTS, 10.0 / 11.9 / 2.3 / 1.0: +1.9 playoff OBPM
C: Dave Cowens, 21.0% SS on +0.4% rTS, 17.8 / 15.0 / 3.9 / 2.0: +3.6 playoff OBPM
Thoughts:
- Injuries: John Havlicek will miss Game 4 for the Celtics.
- The ‘78 Sixers are an interesting team. In the regular season they didn’t give Caldwell Jones minutes (about 20 mpg) and instead played with more minutes of World B. Free and Darryl Dawkins. As a result their regular season defense was barely better than league average (and extremely low for this tournament). But their offense, with Erving, Mix, Collins, Dawkins and Free all getting solid minutes was excellent, the 4th best in this tournament. But in the playoffs they pulled those minutes back and played Caldwell Jones a lot more, which dropped their offense some, but boosted their defense considerably. So an advantage that the Sixers have is that they can play either style of ball.
Their playoff SRS makes them look like a really good team. And they were. But the number is a little misleading. In the semis they played the league average Knicks and obliterated them by almost 19 points a game. It was a truly dominant showing . . . but the Knicks weren’t actually any good. And in the Conference Finals the Sixers ran into the excellent postseason defense of the ‘78 Bullets. Pretty much every single member of the Sixers lost 3-5% in their true shooting (except for Mix). And while they slowed the Bullets considerably, they still lost in 6, by 3.1 points per game.
So what to conclude? The Sixers on their face appear to be the better postseason team, but most of that is from obliterating an average opponent. When they faced a stout challenge (and the ‘78 Bullets aren’t *that* different from the ‘76 Celtics) they regressed, and struggled to get their offense going. Was the Sixers’ offense simply un-resilient? Or was there a characteristic of the Bullet’s defense that the Celtics’ lacks here?
- The ‘76 Celtics won the championship. But it was a fairly lackluster season. 54 wins sounds great, but a +2.25 RSRS doesn’t. In the semis they faced the league average Braves and won in 6 by 3.6, a lackluster result. In the Conference Finals they faced another capable (but hardly great) team in the Cavs and won that one in six by 0.8 points per game. And when the Cinderella Suns faced the Celtics in the Finals, the Celtics prevailed in six by 4.3 points per game. They were all wins. But in none of these matchups did they face anyone particularly strong, nor in any of these matchups did they dominate. By the numbers, they look like a decent team that simply happened to be the best against mediocre opposition.
But is that fair? Granted, at this point John Havlicek was 35 and no all-star. Their youngest starter was 27. They were no spring chickens, but they’d also done this a long time. Cowens was as good as ever, and this was the core that had been tangling with juggernauts since the early 70s. Without prime Havlicek they had lost their fastball, but they were high-executing veterans that executed well on defense. Not unlike the ‘78 Bullets.
- Basically in every casual way the Sixers look better. But seeing them lose (reasonably convincingly) to a team not dissimilar from the Celtics does give me pause. What does everybody think?
I’m going to put this up for 48 hours, unless I need to keep it open for a tie-breaker.
Post with who you would pick to win this series, ideally with the number of games. And if you have any insight into these players or matchups beyond what is above please don't hesitate to post; the goal (as always) is for us all to walk away with more knowledge than we started with. We always have more to learn!
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