Porter: It's Not Brett Brown's Fault
PHILADELPHIA (CBS) -- When a child does something wrong, people blame his or her parents. That's the natural inclination.
When a sports team -- especially a professional sports team -- underperforms, people blame the head coach. That's the natural inclination.
But it doesn't make it right.
And I'm here to tell you, the Sixers' recent 1-7 stretch of basketball is not Brett Brown's fault.
The simplest way to defend Brown is to look at isolation points, the number of points scored by a team in isolation. Iso points are obviously important in basketball, because when the play breaks down so many NBA teams rely on their most talented players to give them consistent scoring in iso situations.
The Sixers are dead last in the NBA averaging a miserable 3.67 iso points per game. This is because the Sixers do not have a perimeter player -- other than Dario Saric, on occasion -- that can break his defender down off the dribble and score the basketball. J.J. Redick, Jerryd Bayless (aka Lord Baelish), and Robert Covington are all catch-and-shoot scorers.
For context, James Harden alone is averaging 10.6 iso points per game and 13 NBA teams have 220 total iso points or more, which doubles Philly's 110 in 30 games.
Here's the simplest way I can construct an argument on why it's NOT Brett Brown's fault. #Sixers are DEAD LAST in NBA in isolation points, with 110 in 30 games (3.67/game).
— Andrew Porter (@And_Porter) December 20, 2017
Harden alone is avg 10.6 iso pts/game.
13 teams have doubled PHI in iso pts https://t.co/xlVNArmc2q
As The Athletic's Mike O'Connor points out, the Sixers among the top teams in clutch situations and plays out of timeouts. They're also fourth in pace (103.33), first in rebounding (48.9/game), and third in assists (26.4/game).
"Can't coach in tight games!" Sixers have top-10 net rtg in clutch situations, for the second time in the Brown era.
— Mike O'Connor (@MOConnor_NBA) December 20, 2017
"Can't design plays!" Sixers are fourth in points after ATOs
"Team plays too fast!" [see Derek's tweet]
"Can't manage rotations" 5 of top 9 players are big men
And for the people that are upset with the team shooting too early in the shot clock? Here's Derek Bodner.
On the season, the #sixers shoot:
— Derek Bodner (@DerekBodnerNBA) December 20, 2017
- 67.6% on shots taken with 24-22 seconds left on the shot clock
- 55% with 22-18 seconds
- 53.6% with 18-15s
- 48.3% with 15-7s
- 55.3% with 7-4s (lowest sample)
- 32.5% with 4s or less left. https://t.co/nWvCLW0xva
In addition to all of that, Brown has dealt with multiple lineups over the past two weeks due to injuries to T.J. McConnell, newly acquired Trevor Booker, and Joel Embiid. Plus, the Sixers' only capable iso player on their roster -- No. 1 overall pick Markelle Fultz -- has given them nothing this season due to his shoulder issue -- or whatever we're calling it these days.
30 games into the season, the following #Sixers have missed at least one game due to injury:
— Andrew Porter (@And_Porter) December 20, 2017
Fultz
Simmons
Embiid
Covington
Redick
Saric
Holmes
Bayless
McConnell
Anderson
Stauskas
Booker
Korkmaz
Amir and TLC missed games too (not sure if it was inj or dnp)
so...EVERYONE!
Look, when you lose seven of eight -- four of which to the Suns, Lakers, Bulls, and Kings -- the coach should not be exempt from criticism. He needs to do something different, he knows that. But for people like myself, O'Connor, Bodner, and others that are defending Brown, we understand that he's not the issue here.
A. Brett Brown is going nowhere.
— Andrew Porter (@And_Porter) September 29, 2017
B. As it should be
C. Bryan Colangelo has done a pretty solid job https://t.co/UUZTgIJCfV
Firing Brown, which I don't think the Sixers will do (see above tweet from September), would not help the franchise in any way. It would only set The Process back further, and no one wants that.