The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Celtics teach Sixers where they need to go

- By David Murphy

If they were going to lose, this was how they needed to do it: unequivoca­lly. They needed it to be an expose, a revelation, a thorough accounting of who it is that they really are. Over the previous week and a half, it had been all of that, and on Wednesday night, the Celtics finished it off an exclamatio­n point that should echo through the Sixers’ offseason. This wasn’t a series so much as it was a self-inventory, a report card, a 50-point inspection whose conclusion­s can now be stated with no uncertain terms.

1) This is not a championsh­ip roster.

2) It is not particular­ly close.

If either one of those statements makes you bristle, consider the point proved, because neither one is the least controvers­ial for a team at the Sixers’ juncture. Short of a berth in the NBA Finals, the best thing this postseason could have yielded was a reminder of the reality of their situation. By the end of a 114-112 loss to the Celtics that sent them home for the summer, the exact nature of that reality was impossible to ignore.

Lurking beneath all that the Sixers accomplish­ed this season was a danger inherent in any preternatu­ral success. Self-delusion is a destructiv­e state of mind and winning 52 games and a playoff series is an easy way to inhabit it.

It starts with Ben Simmons, who made things look easy enough throughout the regular season that it was fair to wonder whether he would

fool himself into thinking that’s how easy things in the profession­al game really are. More than anything, his performanc­e this postseason should lay to rest any such notion. This was somewhat true in the first series, but in the second there was no doubt. The Celtics spent all five games walling him off in the transition game, and packing the lane in the halfcourt. They dared him to shoot, and he didn’t, and the result was one of the game’s most electric rookies looking too much like a bystander in too many possession­s.

That’s a good thing. Repeat it again. Because for Simmons to achieve his potential, he

was always going to need to expand his offensive game. Maybe he’d already realized that, but there is certainly a chance that he did not realize the extent of it. Throughout the regular season, asking him about his reticence to shoot was one of the few ways to elicit a bristle in his flat-line facade.

Against the Celtics, though, the lack of a jumper was a serious issue, the primary reason they were able to take away his angles and clog his path to the rim. Without their point guard’s ability to penetrate, the rest of the Sixers’ offense looked like a flat tire. Their shooters were blanketed, their big man smothered.

All of it starts at the point.

That is the first lesson: that Simmons needs to start his summer early and spend all of it attempting to develop some semblance of a jump shot. That might require a significan­t mechanical change, rotating the flared elbow on his shooting arm in to remove the tilted spin on the ball that acts like kryptonite on the rim.

The second lesson is for the men in charge of building the roster. Against the Celtics, it was obvious that the Sixers need the player that Markelle Fultz was supposed to be: a two-way combo guard capable of spacing the floor

with a jump shot, penetratin­g to the rim, and playing defense against the big, athletic perimeter players that a team like the Celtics throws at you for 48 minutes.

What the Sixers did not learn is whether Fultz will be that guy, and it’s difficult to envision them doing so before the time comes to make some critical offseason decisions. JJ Redick was everything they hoped he would be this season, but they hoped that they would be able to supplement him with a more athletic guard who could shoot and dribble and matchup on defense. Against the Celtics, the Sixers learned that they need to find

a player like that in case the continued struggles of Plan A necessitat­e the implementa­tion of Plan B.

They also must replace Redick, either by re-signing him or by finding another shooter of his caliber. They might need two such players, since Marco Belinelli will also be a free agent.

There are a lot of directions they can turn. You’ll hear plenty of talk about LeBron James this offseason, but there’s a case to be made that Paul George is a better fit as a 3-point shooting fourman with tons more athleticis­m than Dario Saric. That’s no knock on Saric, who was one of the main reasons the Sixers were able to climb back from a halftime hole in Game 5. But this team’s goal has always been to win an NBA title, and given the talent of the teams standing in their way, a championsh­ip roster might feature Saric anchoring the second unit as a 25-minute-a-game player off the bench.

There will be plenty of time to dissect all of these things. Yet as the Sixers packed up the visitor’s locker room and prepared to head south for the last time, October was just five months away. They did beneath a significan­t silver lining: the knowledge of the things they need to do to make next year last a little longer.

 ?? MADDIE MEYER/GETTY IMAGES ?? The 76ers’ Dario Saric takes a shot against the Celtics’ Jaylen Brown during Game 5 of the Eastern Conference semifinals Wednesday at TD Garden in Boston.
MADDIE MEYER/GETTY IMAGES The 76ers’ Dario Saric takes a shot against the Celtics’ Jaylen Brown during Game 5 of the Eastern Conference semifinals Wednesday at TD Garden in Boston.

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