Dalembert doesn't provide much offfensive punch at all. What he does do is enable the Sixers to have a man in to rebound when Elton takes a shot. Offensive rebounding is part of offense to me. Extending a possession is a big part of a successful offense.
And when I say offense is the problem, that doesn't mean that I intend to abandon defense. The Sixers are a decent defensive team when they have the chance to get set. But a bad offense prevents that from happening, which is how the Sixers managed to surrender 18 straight points to Houston. Not one decent shot during that entire stretch. Not one time-out. Not one substition to help Marresse Speights defend the paint. He didn't get a single post up the entire time he was in there.
I think the Sixers are already a good defensive team. They may help too much, but they understand how to guard the pick and roll. They are faster than most teams and have no trouble getting back. They force a lot of turnovers and block a good number of shots.
They are a bad rebounding team and invariably give up too many 2nd shots and get too few. The coach insists on running Thad Young as a power forward. That is really their biggest problem and the difference between the Sixers being an above .500 team or where they are.
Put in Brand and Dalembert and other teams can't get inside. Put one of them in there, and the defense falls apart- not enough of an inside presence to deter drivers or alter shots, or even slow up a slasher, so someone can poke the ball away. Now that Eddie is starting them together, they're finally winning. Now, the problem is with the 2nd group, Speights, Young, Carney, Williams and Holiday. That used to be the strongest group, when Brand was paired with Speights. All they need is to put another big, Jason Smith in at the 4 instead of Carney and they have adequate floor balance to defend the paint, and have a solid inside presence on offense.
Every good team has a big man they can throw the ball into in the post. Many of them even have a back-up big man who can come in to score. If the Sixers are going to be a good team, they should emulate that formula. I think this is why the Sixers go flat on offense. If they had a post presence at all times, it would free their offense. Other teams have to collapse in on Brand or Speights when they have the ball in the post. That opens the floor for their guards and small forwards to get open shots or driving lanes. They can't be at their best without decent rebounding off of missed shots. To get those rebounds you need bigs to get them. This is what I thought the Sixers season was going to be, we finally had enough men of size to compete.
For years the Sixers have been a .500 team that hustled and played good defense and scored in the open court. They realized that that's all a defensive running team will get you. So they went out and got Elton Brand to be a post presence. And they drafted two big man Speghts and Smith. The only problem is they don't get played enough.
Joe, I have great respect for your knowledge of the game. So you tell me, if you had a 6'8" 220 lb. player would you play him as a 4, ahead of a 6' 11' player and a 7-footer? And further would you keep doing it all season if it got you a .340 record?
I know that offense is the problem, because they score less then their successful peers. I also know that improving their offensive play will facilitate better defense. For the Sixers, who have the ability to play defense, further emphasizing half-court defense doesn't help if you don't get the chance to play it! No team successfully defends in the open floor off of turn-overs and long missed shots! A sound offense makes the Sixers better on both ends of the floor. If the offense continually sputters, no defensive effort will keep them in the game. Even a team with a bad defense stays even if they can score. You could say that a good offense is a defensive necessity.
Just watch a game and you'll see what I mean. Every time they fail, their offense fails them. When they play well, they're better than the Rockets good enough to make the playoffs. And, IMO, they could have played a lot better than they did against the Rockets.