Yes, but how many half-court teams have focused on efficiency and o-boarding vs. 3 point shooting?
Ok. So find the championship team that built their team the way you're suggesting. I'll await your findings.
Well, we don't have Kobe, Shaq, Duncan, or Jordan, so that pretty much leaves Detroit. So I went back and looked at their 2004 finals:
Nobody hit more than 2 3 pointers in a game for them. Billups and Wallace both hit 2 contributing to a team 6-12 in a game one win. Billups and RIP both hit 2 contributing to a team 6-12 in a game two loss. Billups and RIP both hit 2 contributing to a team 5-15 in a game three win. Billups hit the only 2 in a 2-13 team effort in a game four win. Their game 5 and clinching win was a team 2-14 effort that saw Sheed and Mehmet Okur each hit one.
Let's see what the Sixers have that is like the 2004 Pistons:
Crafty PG who can make things happen when the team really needs it: check
SF who grabs boards, is long, and plays good defense while getting lots of opportunity buckets: check
PF (if we get Brand) who can put points on the board: check
C who grabs boards and plays good defense: check
So we have a more legitimate post option than that team (Brand vs. Sheed). The only question is can Iggy give what RIP did. And I think with good teammates around him, he can. So there, a team that shot a combined 15-54 from outside in their 4 finals wins that now have a ring. How did they win it: offensive efficiency, stifling defense, and good rebounding on both ends of the floor. I think with Brand, this team has that. Plus, looking at their bench from 2004, LouWill is easily better than anybody they had unless you really like Elden Campbell or Lindsay Hunter.
Is that a good enough example of a team that didn't really have a lights out 3 point shooter that won the title?