Here’s much more insight on the Sixers from Brown:
WHAT THE NUMBERS SAY:
SIXERS OFFENSIVE PHILOSOPHY
TRANSITION GAME: "Sixers rank 18th in pace. Maxey is a tremendous finisher on the break, weaving through retreating defenders. Tobias Harris and Oubre have proven in their careers that they can get ahead of the field and score out front. They can leak out as well. Cameron Payne, in his spot minutes, can push the pace make or miss; will anyone run with him though?"
SECONDARY BREAK/FLOW: "Very key part of Sixers offense. Embiid is almost always the trailer; he can make that top of the key three with time and space. They go to a lot of simple two-man games or dribble-handoffs at the sideline here. Embiid clears people out on dribble handoffs. As secondary scorers, Oubre and Harris are more productive in the flow than in more traditional halfcourt possessions. Harris will find spaces to drive and get to the rim. They are not a huge drag screen team. They set step-ups for Embiid handling the ball on the sideline."
HALFCOURT SETS: "They have a wide variety of actions here. They can direct post or drop for Embiid on either side. He reacts well to quick double-teams but will force shots against late doubles. Bad things usually occur with a late double. They love to isolate Embiid at the top with a simple dribble-handoff to him, which becomes a clearout situation. They run several different pick-and-rolls – they’re staggered and all versions of side and high. They will use (Kyle) Lowry as a screener in side guard/guard pick-and-roll and high guard/guard pick-and-roll to bait switches onto Maxey. They run a fair amount of high guard/big man pick-and-roll lifted where Embiid posts on the foul line after a short roll; it’s the same as (Kristaps) Porzingis in Boston. Maxey is the tough cover in pick-and-roll sets because he attacks in many ways. He uses screen/rescreen and will shoot all the way behind picks if he’s feeling good. He can turn the corner at any time and can split defenders in a more aggressive coverage. Nick Nurse also has some one-timers that are really odd."
SPECIALS: "Nurse is pretty creative with after timeout plays- drawing on the board. There is usually a lot of window dressing to get to the desired scoring option. They will set up Maxey coming off the ball. They will also run elaborate post plays- sometimes to get Oubre or Harris an extra touch. Have to defend through the clock on these actions. Sideline and baseline out of bounds are pretty standard- splits and dribble handoffs."
THINGS TO THINK ABOUT
SIXERS PACE: "Considering Embiid’s condition, what pace can the Sixers play? They are somewhat reliant on fast-break points but they generate a lot of steals and blocks to do so. The Knicks blew their doors off in the only game Embiid played; it was an up-tempo game. How the Sixers choose a pace style is vital; their general scoring beyond Embiid and Maxey is reliant on players that flourish in transition or in the flow. Which way do they go? Walk or run?"
SHOULD KNICKS PLAY ZONE?
"The Knicks do not really play zone defense, but considering the Sixers ran 10 different patterns against Miami’s zone with limited success on Wednesday night, would you just have a basic zone defense to use? The Sixers went five-out later vs the amoeba zone, and that freed up better looks at three. So, just general spacing worked; the cutting patterns were mostly ineffective."