sixers4real wrote:As much as I like your posts, Stormi, that question doesn’t really make sense to me.
Yeah, Bam does not shoot threes, but you have to understand that Sixers would have three players that are not high volume theee point shooters. Embiid, Butler, Simmons.
While the Heat have only two. Bam and Butler.
Its very hard to run elite offense around Simmons, Butler and Embiid.
I was the one who argued with LloydFree about letting Butler go, I was furious. I was in the camp of trade Simmons early.
The idea that you couldn't build a successful offense around Embiid/Simmons/Butler is just statistically fallacious - but if we're simplifying the game down to shoot 3 + spacing then you can't make the argument that Butler plays in a Giannis type system. He makes it work playing big minutes around a bundle of non-spacers because he is genuinely great.
The Heat have ran a starting 5 man unit these playoffs of: Strus/Butler/Tucker/Adebayo and then Lowry or Vincent depending on who's healthy.
FTR, Bam Adebayo does not look at the rim at all and has no perimeter skill whatsoever and Butler is Butler.
PJ Tucker these playoffs is shooting 5.1 threes per 100 (not good). Joel Embiid's 3 career playoff frequency? 5.2 threes per 100.
There is no drop off in terms of volume perimeter shooting from 3 of the 5 starters on either team and those guys contribute in other ways. What these Heat did is they surrounded 3 of their gunshy starters with bombers Lowry/Robinson/Oladipo/Herro/Vincent/Strus who all shoot 8 or more three's per 100.
The only 76er to play regular minutes in those playoffs to hit the 8.0 three's /100 mark? JJ Redick and Mike Scott. We just lacked the horses and had too many non-specialists / non-shooters / non-defenders surrounding a core three that still nearly took down the champions.