Ben Simmons converted barely more than one-third of his 73 free-throw attempts this postseason, the worst percentage in NBA history for anyone w/ 70+ attempts. (All-Pro-Reels/Wikimedia Commons).

Subscribe on Apple PodcastsSpotify | Stitcher | RSS

Dan Morgan of the Process Potables podcast joins Loren and Aaron to break down the Philadelphia 76ers’ unexpected elimination at the hands of the Atlanta Hawks. From Ben Simmons’ offensive disappearing act to Joel Embiid playing through injury to Dan’s faith (or lack thereof) in head coach Doc Rivers to President of Basketball Operations Daryl Morey’s offseason task ahead, this episode has everything. Enjoy some excerpts below:

11:57-13:49: “Unfortunately, Philadelphia is one of the most negative markets that I think probably exists in major sports in North America, even when things are going well. People in this city have wanted to tear the team down from before even rising up. … Depending on who you talk to, the process ranged anywhere from three to 37 years, so it’s unclear about when it started, it’s unclear about when it ended and then every season when they lose, it’s “Welp, the process is over.” The process was over three years ago, two years ago, this year. It’s an absolute mess. It’s unfortunate but the reality of it all, honestly, is that the team is in really good shape. It is very unfortunate that they blew an opportunity like this when it seemed like the stars were aligning for them. … It felt like everything was working for the Sixers, and then Trae Young comes in and shuts it all down. But they have Joel Embiid, who if you take out the games played argument was the MVP of the league. You have Ben Simmons who is a 24-year-old transformative player, both sides, should have been the Defensive Player of the Year in my opinion. You have Tobias Harris… They have things they can do. They have promising young players in Matisse Thybulle and Tyrese Maxey…

15:02-16:26: “‘Can they [co]exist, Ben Simmons and Joel Embiid?’ Well, that’s been the question for a long time. They did enough to be the No. 1 seed in an improved East this year, so there’s something to be said for that. I still don’t know that you can say, ‘No, it absolutely can’t work.’ But the problem is year after year, the conversation happens, and of all of Ben Simmons’ shortcomings, this was the worst, and I don’t think it’s close at all. This was far and away one of the most atrocious things I’ve ever seen. … The one lesson that I think I’ve already learned and I’m not gonna get fooled again is believing that Ben Simmons is gonna add something offensively this offseason.”

23:53-24:15: “It’s not people overreacting at this point because the argument has been ‘every other part of his [Simmons’] game is there.’ But in this series, in fourth quarters, in second rounds of the postseason, it hasn’t been. … There’s been a lot of other gaping holes, and that is where the concern lies with this franchise.”

26:59-29:21: “Ben Simmons is gonna be the guy that is blamed for this, so Doc Rivers is gonna get a pass because he wanted the chance to make them work. I think you just realize he can’t do it either. And now Ben Simmons will be the scapegoat. Next season, Rivers won’t have the Ben Simmons excuse. … While I don’t believe in Doc Rivers, and I’m pretty sure I don’t believe in Ben Simmons anymore, I do believe in Daryl Morey. … Now it’s time for him to prove why that’s the case.”

32:13-32:30: “If you trade Ben Simmons, you really can’t trade Matisse Thybulle because Matisse Thybulle made second-team All-Defense off the bench. That’s how good he is on the defensive end. … You can’t trade ‘em both.”

36:06-37:04: “The Sixers’ third-most played lineup during the playoffs was George Hill, Shake Milton, Matisse Thybulle, Tobias Harris and Dwight Howard. … One starter and four bench guys, two of which cannot shoot a basketball at all. That lineup finished with a net rating of negative 16 points per 100 possessions, per Clean the Glass. That is an atrocity! … You’ve gotta play your horses.”

42:50-44:21: For all the Embiid turnovers and poor shooting nights, he’s the only guy really on the team that was willing to be the person to go to. … After everything he did, playing on the injury, putting up the numbers he did, as soon as everything was done, he came out, said in his pressers, ‘I have to do better. I can be better. I’m gonna work on things’ etc., etc. He went on social media. He said, ‘Philly, I love you. I’m sorry I let you down. I can do better.’

*Process Potables spoke with Marty Teller the day after Atlanta eliminated the 76ers, and it was a terrific discussion if you’re so inclined to check it out.

Sponsor: Use code TBPN during sign-up at DraftKings.com to claim your free shot at millions of dollars in total prizes.


Subscribe to, rate and review On the NBA Beat on Apple Podcasts.

Follow @OntheNBABeat and your hosts (@byAaronFisch, @LorenLChen, @JJtheJuggernaut) on Twitter.

Discover the rest of The Basketball Podcast Network at thebasketballpodcastnetwork.com.

Music: “Who Likes to Party” by Kevin MacLeod.