Jayson Tatum Dominant, Celtics Cruise to 2-0 Series Lead vs. Joel Embiid, 76ers
Embiid #Embiid
Kevin C. Cox/Associated Press
The Boston Celtics sure look like a team set to cruise to the second round of the Eastern Conference playoffs.
The Celtics absolutely smashed the Philadelphia 76ers on Wednesday night 128-101, shooting 19-of-43 from three and taking a commanding 2-0 lead in the series. That spoiled a strong night from Philadelphia center Joel Embiid, who came out of the gate aggressively but wasn’t able to carry the Sixers to a much-needed win.
While Boston’s core group of Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown and Kemba Walker handled business without the injured Gordon Hayward, Philly didn’t get enough from Tobias Harris and Al Horford with superstar Ben Simmons sidelined.
The Sixers are now in serious jeopardy of an early playoff exit, which will call into question whether head coach Brett Brown has a future with the team. It could also lead to serious roster changes as the Sixers try yet again to find the winning formula around Embiid and Simmons.
The series isn’t over yet. But Philly needs to figure things out, and fast, against a talented Boston team that looks like a real contender thus far this postseason.
Key Stats
Jayson Tatum, BOS: 33 points, five rebounds, five assists, 8-of-12 from three
Kemba Walker, BOS: 22 points
Jaylen Brown, BOS: 20 points, five rebounds
Joel Embiid, PHL: 34 points, 10 rebounds, one block
Josh Richardson, PHL: 18 points
Shake Milton, PHL: 14 points, four assists
Tatum, Walker and Brown Were Fantastic
For all of the storylines about Philly’s angst after this game, the Celtics were damn good Wednesday. And it was their Big Three of Tatum, Walker and Brown leading the way.
Tatum was cooking early and couldn’t seem to miss from three.
Walker roasted the Sixers in the pick-and-roll.
And Brown was smooth and steady throughout.
Without Simmons in play, Boston’s top three is better than Philly’s top three. That much has become evident after two games.
Embiid Needs Help
OK, now to the angst.
The Sixers are a strangely built team. Horford, who signed for four years and $109 million this offseason, came off the bench in Game 2 and scored just four points, another reminder that he’s a terrible fit next to Embiid. Harris, who signed a five-year, $180 million extension, finished with 13 points on 4-of-15 shooting as Philly’s second option on offense. That’s not nearly good enough.
Not to mention that the Sixers don’t have guards capable of consistently creating their own shot. Or that a team built on defense seemed incapable of defending a high pick-and-roll for three quarters and was consistently roasted by Boston’s perimeter defenders in Game 2.
Embiid did what he could against Boston offensively, carrying that load, but even his defense was suspect Wednesday. And Philly’s offense outside of Embiid post-ups was wonky, at best, as it has been for much of the season. Outside of moments like the one below, Philly’s offense wasn’t a threat.
Having Simmons would help on defense and in transition, no doubt. But given how Philadelphia has looked offensively, even having Simmons and his hesitation to shoot from the perimeter would leave the Sixers with just as many questions as answers. The Sixers look like a team that could get swept unless somebody other than Embiid steps up in a big way.
What’s Next?
The series continues with Friday’s Game 3 at 6:30 p.m. ET on TNT.