When I'm talking about outside shots, I'm not just talking about threes. It's anywthing outside the paint.
McDyess didn't shoot like that during the regular season, and neither did Billups. Hamilton shot a great game last night, hardly missed anything. Detroit didn't average 50% from the field during the season, they're shooting over their heads.
The easy baskets are comming off of Sixer misses. Bad shots that shouldn't have been taken, and rebounds that bounce away from the Sixers players. You can't allways control where a missed shot is going to go, but the team is shooting without waiting for a player to get into position to collect the miss. This all comes down to execution within an offensive scheme, not Iverson taking any shot he can get. Webber isn't fighting for rebounds, and Jackson isn't quick enough. The refs aren't giving them any calls either, when a Detroit player goes over their backs for the board.
There is a lack of discipline in the Sixers offense, and Iverson is at the root of it, along with O'Brien who either tolerates it, or doesn't see it. The Sixers are better than they have played during this series. The inconsistency I noted during the regular season has manifested itelf in these games. This is why I wanted O'Brien fired before. The team isn't playing up to it's potential and that's why they're not winning these games.
I don't mind them loosing if they play their best game and don't win, but I haven't seen a good game from them yet in the series. The end of the first half and the beggining of the second, the team did not respond. Detroit is imposing it's will and the Sixers being a young team are not maintaing their composure. It is Iverson who's determining this, and it shouldn't be. The coach has to make sure the plays are being run and being run well, and if the players aren't gettting it done, like Jackson last night, or Iverson, they should be pulled.
The boards were even in the first half, but the discrepency widened in the second. The big part of it is bad shot selection by the Sixers, although it is clear that Detroit is a better rebounding team. Dalembert is the best rebounder on the floor, but he can't do it all by himself. In another year or two, he'll develop some post-up moves and the Sixers will be a force to be reckoned with, but they're going to need a real PF who can rebound and guard to go along with him. Webber isn't that player.