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Are the 76ers true threats?

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By Zach Lowe
March 14, 2011
Philadelphia, PA After Philadelphias 89-86 win over Boston on Friday the fifth straight game between the two teams decided by four points or fewer reporters asked Celtics coach Doc Rivers whether the Sixers are the sort of low playoff seed whom elite teams fear playing in the first round. The question made sense because Philadelphia is 31-19 over its last 50 games and looks to be in an entirely different league from whichever team wins the sad race for the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. But Rivers wouldnt bite, according to Chris Forsberg of ESPN Boston:
I hear that all the time. You know, its usually the ninth team. Nobody wanted to play us, and I always say, Actually, they really did. They didnt want to play the eighth team. You know what I mean?
I dont think anybody cares who they play. We dont, I can tell you that. At the end of the day, weve just got to play.
Rivers is a candid guy, so I wouldnt dismiss this as empty bluster. Still: Playing the Pacers (or the Bobcats, or the Bucks) instead of the Sixers would seem to be a key secondary benefit of earning the Easts top seed. The Sixers are playing better than .600 ball after a 3-13 start, and their point differential over their last 50 games is about +3.5 a mark that would rank them ninth in the league, right above the Thunder and just a tick below the Mavericks and Nuggets. Take out their fluky 28-point loss to the Bucks on Saturday the Sixers fifth game in seven nights and their scoring margin since the 3-13 start jumps to a little more than +4. Only six teams have a better mark over the full season.
Only an incredible early-season streak of bad luck and weird incompetence in close games has the Sixers sitting at 34 wins instead of a total closer to 40. They found improbable ways to blow last-second leads in two November overtime games to the putrid Wizards; they scored three points in the last eight minutes in an early December choke job against the Hawks; a few days later, the Celtics took them out on a Kevin Garnett buzzer-beater; and in January, they blew games against the Pistons (Lou Williams missed two free throws that would have iced it) and Orlando (yielding a game-tying, four-point play to Jason Richardson) they indisputably should have won. They even lost to the Cavs in November twice!
The Sixers appear to have shaken their late-game jitters, or at least benefited from some happy regression to the mean in clutch situations. Theyve settled on a shortened rotation and managed to thrive as a small-ball team that rebounds at a very good level; lineups including the undersized Elton Brand/Thaddeus Young front line have actually been better at cleaning the defensive glass than the Sixers overall, according to Basketball Value, and Philly has cracked the leagues top 10 in defensive rebounding rate. Thats in part because teams often feel they have to go small against the Sixers or risk getting run off the court.
But its also because coach Doug Collins has turned a team that used to crash the offensive glass into a more disciplined, defense-oriented club with guards who work hard at rebounding. If you consider Evan Turner a guard (a bit questionable, since he plays small forward a lot), he leads all NBA guards in defensive rebounding rate, and Jrue Holiday fares well here, too. And then theres Brand, whose rebounding levels have jumped back to their career norms after dropping into disaster range last season.
Brand told me earlier this year that it has taken this long to recover from the left Achilles tear he suffered in the summer of 2007. His left calf, shrunken down by years of injury-related inactivity, still isnt as big as his right calf, but its getting close, he said. (When Philly played Utah earlier this season, Brand and Mehmet Okur, also recovering from an Achilles tear, joked about how much smaller their injured calves are compared to their healthy ones.) The dislocated shoulder that derailed Brands 2008-09 season also hindered his Achilles recovery because he couldnt work as hard to strengthen his left leg. That turned last season into one long recovery phase, and it took until this season for Brand to finally feel healthy.
Its the atrophy, Brand said. I couldnt really jump off of the leg last season or do the things I was accustomed to. But Im healthy now.
After some early hiccups, the teams offense also seems better off with Andre Iguodala splitting point guard duties with Holiday (and, to a lesser extent, Williams). Iguodala and Holiday have figured out how to work with each other, so each is an active part of most offensive sets even though only one can be the primary ball-handler. Jodie Meeks has provided the perimeter threat that Philadelphia sorely lacks otherwise, and Young, shooting 55 percent and passing on three-pointers, has been perhaps the most efficient bench scorer in the league.
And yet, its their offense that has me hesitant to push the Sixers as a truly scary first-round opponent. Because heres the thing: Philadelphia has not been able to score against the leagues best defenses. In 26 games against the leagues top dozen defensive teams, Philly has hit its average in points per possession only six times, and three of those games have come against the Pacers, according to Hoopdata. Its been held to less than one point per possession the rough average of the leagues worst offenses in 15 of those 26 games.
This is the main reason the Sixers are 13-20 against likely playoff teams and 21-12 against everyone else. Everyone loves to say that defense wins championships, and Philadelphias ninth-ranked defense has been solid (if inconsistent) against the leagues best offenses. But you have to score, too, and the offense has collapsed against the leagues top defenses exactly the sort of defense itll face in the first round, no matter if it finishes sixth or seventh.
Elite defenses will keep the Sixers out of transition, which in turns makes Philadelphia (relatively) easy to defend. When Meeks is off the court, the team has problems spacing the floor. Spencer Hawes helps when hes playing well, but he has not done that enough to stay on the court consistently. The Sixers are in the bottom 10 in both offensive rebounds and attempted free throws, so there arent many extra chances or free points to be had, either.
Theres a ton of dynamic talent here, so this team can look at times like an offensive beast. But those times have seldom come against the leagues elite, and until that happens, its tough to see the Sixers as legit candidates to upset Boston, Chicago or Miami. Theyll be more trouble than the Pacers or Bobcats, for sure, but the smart money would be on four competitive losses in five or six games.
10 THINGS I LIKE AND DONT LIKE
1. Phillys offense when Williams is on the court without Holiday or Iguodala
Of the 10 lineups featuring Williams but not Holiday or Iguodala (minimum of 10 minutes together), six of them, including the three that have played the most minutes together, have put up points per possession marks below Philadelphias season average, according to Basketball Value. And only two have positive overall plus/minus scores.
Collins doesnt use Williams in this role much, and he may have already decided to ditch this strategy when the postseason starts.
2. James Harden emerging
The Thunders Harden has scored in double figures in 12 straight games, and hes topped his season average in 11 of those 12 games. Hes attacking the rim more, and though his drives still veer out of control now and then, he is finishing close shots at a much better rate this season. Hes also developing as a secondary pick-and-roll ball-handler, flashing some nifty pocket-passing ability. Ive long said that the Thunder will not reach their ceiling this season until Harden supplants Thabo Sefolosha as the teams fourth-quarter shooting guard. That is happening.
3. The pouting of Dwyane Wade
His declaration during the Heats five-game losing streak that the world is getting what it wants with Miamis mini-tailspin was pathetic and showed a remarkable lack of understanding of just how obnoxious Miamis July celebration really was. But Wades whining has reached new levels on the court, too. I know it only seems like he gives officials an angry, entitled glare after every missed jump shot, but, man
it really seems like that, doesnt it? Its a trait Wade shares with lots of elite scorers, but only he and Kobe Bryant show officials the same level of cold fury. Go easy, Dwyane. Youre better than this.
4. The movement in Dallas
Casual fans probably think the Mavs are boring, but theyve become my favorite team to watch, in part because of how creatively coach Rick Carlisle has his guys moving the ball and moving off the ball on offense. Theyll break out three-man-weave-style movement on the perimeter, they are experts at simultaneous off-ball movement on both sides of the court and they use the defenses fear of Dirk Nowitzkis jump shooting to create looks for others.
Against the Lakers on Saturday, they ran a pick-and-pop set I havent seen much from them or from anyone else in the league. It started with Jason Kidd dribbling along the left sideline while Jason Terry stood in the left corner. Suddenly, Kidd dribbled straight at Terry while Terry cut straight at Kidd. The two basically set screens for each other, and Kidd continued dribbling toward the rim. End of action, right?
Not in Dallas. As Terry curled out to the perimeter, Tyson Chandler popped out to nail Terrys guy with a surprise screen, freeing Terry for a possible three-pointer. Gorgeous stuff from a team that manages to create offense despite the creative limitations of its personnel.
5. The Tony Allen Show
If there is a single player who should have a camera on him at all times, its Tony Allen. On defense, the Memphis guard is such a menace that it makes me uncomfortable just to watch him defend a guy chest-to-chest. Hes creating an insane number of steals that turn into transition buckets, and in the half-court offense, he cuts off the ball well and offers the possibility of an out-of-control drive to the hoop that may result in a half-dozen players falling to the floor.
And on the bench? Lets put it this way: When Hamed Haddadi scored inside during garbage time a week or so ago, Allen was standing halfway on the court and waving a towel over his head. As the ball went through the hoop, he just tossed the towel straight over his head, not even attempting to catch it. He couldnt have had any idea whether it would fly on the court, but he ignored its flight path anyway.
6. DeMar DeRozan at small forward
I realize there arent any good options in Toronto, but I cringe when the Raptors shift DeRozan to small forward alongside either their two point guards (Jerryd Bayless and Jose Calderon) or one of the two point guards and Leandro Barbosa. And its something coach Jay Triano has done more of over the last couple of months. Even without looking at the numbers, it just feels like a lineup that doesnt work, particularly on defense.
The numbers bear this out, as these kinds of lineups have mostly been disastrous on defense. Then again, almost any kind of Toronto lineup has been disastrous on defense, so I guess it doesnt matter.
7. Monty Williams suit jackets
Williams might not be the best-dressed coach in the league (Im no fashion expert, obviously), but hes probably the most entertaining dresser, unless you have a passion for what Stan Van Gundy does in Orlando. A couple of weeks ago, Williams broke out a thick tan jacket featuring intersecting brown stripes that looked like a fancy version of something a young college professor would wear on his first day of class. When you watch the Hornets, take a second to monitor Montys fashion choice for the night.
8. Andrei Kirilenko shooting jumpers
The Jazz are just about out of the playoff race after weekend losses to the Wolves (an embarrassing blowout) and the Bulls, but that doesnt make me any less annoyed when I see Kirilenko brick another 20-footer. Kirilenko is shooting just 33 percent on long two-pointers, a huge drop-off from his last three seasons, and a Kirilenko jumper just seems like a wasted possession given the talent elsewhere on the floor and his own skill at cutting off the ball to get better shots.
9. Lamar Odoms bank shots
Tim Duncan gets all the love as the leagues preeminent bank-shot artist. But that may be a disservice to Odom, whose bankers come less predictably and from closer range and thus might not draw the attention of Duncans patented angled jumper. Odoms one-handed bankers have a craftiness and level of difficulty that Duncan cant touch. There are so many times when Odom will appear trapped under the rim or blanketed by a long-armed defender at the end of one of his drives to the hoop. And then his left arm will rise into the picture, from under the backboard, beneath his defenders armpit or between his defenders arms, and Odom will flick up a banker from a weird angle and with a funky trajectory. And it will go in. Hes an underrated shot-maker.
10. Kyle Lowry from deep
Before this season, Houstons Lowry had never attempted more than 136 threes in a season or hit better than 28 percent from deep. (Note: That last bit excludes his rookie year, when he went 3-of-8 in 10 games.)
This season? Hes jacking four per game (double his previous career high) and hitting 38 percent an above-average mark. Weve seen lots of guys have fluky three-point seasons before, so lets hold out on declaring Lowry a permanently dangerous deep threat. But Lowry hasnt gotten the same sort of attention as Derrick Rose for developing a legit three-point shot, and hes out-shooting Rose from distance by a significant margin. Did you see those seven threes Lowry rained on Phoenix last Tuesday? Yikes.
It wasnt a huge fluke, either; Lowrys two threes against the Spurs on Saturday ended a six-game streak in which he had hit at least three triples.
NBA News Archive: 2011, 2010, 2009
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