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Stretch out and get ready. We go again.
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stormi wrote:(game time TBD)
Arsenal wrote:stormi wrote:(game time TBD)
Game 1 is Monday 7:30pm ET
https://www.nbcsports.com/philadelphia/sixers/sixers-vs-heat-series-schedule-nba-playoffs-2022-joel-embiid-james-harden-jimmy-butler
mjkvol wrote:Games are all on TNT and ESPN. Thank you !!!!!!!!!
stormi wrote:Joel let himself get hit so he could clasp the mask back on.
Stretch out and get ready. We go again.
eyeatoma wrote:stormi wrote:Joel let himself get hit so he could clasp the mask back on.
Stretch out and get ready. We go again.
Bro, you Nostradamus now?
Kobblehead wrote:Time for Jim Harden to start building on his legacy. He gets knocked all the time for not having enough playoff moments. Being a catalyst for us getting passed Miami in this round would be huge for him.
rocketsfan100 wrote:Game 1 in particular the Sixers need to come out all guns blazing and play freelance basketball. Go hell for leather and play with no pressure as no one is now giving them any chance. Harden and Maxey should just shoot the ball everytime they have an minuscule of a open look and put pressure on the Heat defenders. Who knows maybe the big guy can return by game 3 or 4 and go from there .
Play loose and pressure free ball and maybe you get a split In Miami where the whole pressure spectrum is on the Heat and hope the big guy can return by game 3 or 4
Tony Franciosa wrote:With Lowry out tonight, I think we have a good chance to steal Game 1. Let's do it!
Ferry Avenue wrote:Tony Franciosa wrote:With Lowry out tonight, I think we have a good chance to steal Game 1. Let's do it!
They have a chance to steal game one for the same reason they beat the Heat in Philly in the regular season when Embiid and Harden were resting -- the Heat are likely to be more complacent than they otherwise would be, with Embiid out. It's human nature. That doesn't mean they're going to go out there and lay down and get walloped -- it just means their intensity is likely to be less than it would be with Embiid on the court, and that may make the difference.
A team with less than normal intensity against a team with greater than normal intensity (to compensate for their star's absence) can easily make the difference when there isn't a tremendous difference in physical talent between two teams. This was likely part of the equation in Boston yesterday, with Middleton out, and Embiid's absence creates an even stronger dynamic in that regard.