*** -- PROCESSING Your Philadelphia 76ers -- ***

Options
1414415417419420523

Comments

  • The Juggler
    The Juggler Posts: 49,590
    RiotZact said:
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    “Casual” is to kind of an adjective. That just implies that you don’t pay attention. Picking and choosing which things to comment about in a sad attempt to grasp at straws because you need to find SOMETHING that doesn’t completely discredit your opinion on something that happened years ago is something entirely different. I’m not sure if there is an adjective for that.

    I can say that I personally held the opinion for a few years that Ben Simmons was treated too harshly and Embiid was over praised and under criticized. I am more than happy to admit that, after watching more basketball in this modern era and realizing how amazing Embiid is, I was a complete idiot, and that my former opinion was very dumb. 

    Some people just don’t have the equipment to admit that.
    I saw a stat that I thought was interesting ajnd posted it.   I made no comment other than to say I knew it wasn't great but didn't think it was that bad. Never once said he wasn't a great player.   But hey some made up stat says he's clutch so I guess the 1-29 means nothing.  
    LOL! You’re taking words out of your own mouth. You’re saying “that’s all I was saying” when that’s not all that you were saying. You threw in that bullshit about him being funny. Even in this very comment you had to say “made up stat”. You can’t just say “he’s a great player but I thought that stat was jarring”. You have to throw in extra nonsense.

    I love how the clutch stat is "made up" just because he never heard of it before. But I'd say gauging a players performance in the final 5 minutes of a 5 point game is way more intuitive to how clutch a player is than buzzer beaters, which obviously include half court and full court heaves. This article is old but speaks to the laziness of someone hearing a random stat somewhere and taking it for gospel. Notice how everyone on this list is a perimeter player too. 

    https://www.espn.com/blog/marc-stein/post/_/id/4396/clutch-shots-are-tough-just-ask-lebron-james

    Final-second shots are tough; just ask LeBron James

    Mar 1, 2016

    The stat began to circulate among ESPN's basketball brains not long after LeBron James airballed a potential winning hoist from 3-point range last Friday night in Toronto.

    The very contested miss lowered LeBron's regular-season success rate to a mere 10.6 percent in the past 10 seasons -- on 5-for-47 shooting -- when attempting a tying or go-ahead shot in the final five seconds of the fourth quarter or overtime.

    Yet to properly process a number that sounds so uncharacteristically low, it helps to have some context on what has to be considered some of the toughest circumstances that a shooter can face.

    So we consulted with Justin Page from ESPN Stats & Information, who informs us that the league average in that situation, in the same time frame, is more than double LeBron's conversion rate but still a rather modest 22.7 percent.

    ‎The following table ‎features the 21 players who, across the same 10-season span, have at least 25 attempts to tie or win the game in the final five ticks of regulation or OT.

    PLAYERFGMFGAFG%
    Rudy Gay173844.7%
    Dirk Nowitzki133834.2%
    Joe Johnson113928.2%
    Vince Carter93228.1%
    Damian Lillard72528.0%
    Kobe Bryant134827.1%
    Deron Williams103727.0%
    Monta Ellis93426.5%
    Raymond Felton72725.9%
    Kevin Durant125024.0%
    Kemba Walker73023.3%
    Carmelo Anthony94221.4%
    Chris Paul83821.1%
    Dwyane Wade94719.1%
    Russell Westbrook52917.2%
    Derrick Rose53016.7%
    Paul Pierce63716.2%
    Andre Iguodala53713.5%
    Brandon Jennings32711.1%
    LeBron James54710.6%
    Jamal Crawford33010.0%
    Total17376222.7%
    Minimum 25 attempts to tie or win the game
    in the final five seconds of regulation/overtime
    -- ESPN Stats & Information

    Two other notes that will surely interest you:

    Stephen Curry's name isn't on the list because, in his seven NBA seasons, he's had the opportunity to attempt only 19 such shots in the final five seconds of regulation or an OT period ... and has made six.

    As for Michael Jeffrey Jordan ...

    The only available data on such attempts covers MJ's two seasons in Washington and his last two seasons with the Bulls. He was 6 for 15 on such shots.

    Turns out he was actually 6 for 10 in these toughest of conditions until going 0 for 5 in his final season with the Wizards in 2002-03.


    www.myspace.com
  • RiotZact
    RiotZact Posts: 6,292
    Oh yeah. You guys remember Ol’ Mikey “Sir Chokes-a-lot” Jordan?

    Man, the hoops those Chicago fans would jump through to justify taking him at #3. They’d say things like, “He makes cool shoes though.”
  • pjhawks
    pjhawks Posts: 12,907
    RiotZact said:
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    “Casual” is to kind of an adjective. That just implies that you don’t pay attention. Picking and choosing which things to comment about in a sad attempt to grasp at straws because you need to find SOMETHING that doesn’t completely discredit your opinion on something that happened years ago is something entirely different. I’m not sure if there is an adjective for that.

    I can say that I personally held the opinion for a few years that Ben Simmons was treated too harshly and Embiid was over praised and under criticized. I am more than happy to admit that, after watching more basketball in this modern era and realizing how amazing Embiid is, I was a complete idiot, and that my former opinion was very dumb. 

    Some people just don’t have the equipment to admit that.
    I saw a stat that I thought was interesting ajnd posted it.   I made no comment other than to say I knew it wasn't great but didn't think it was that bad. Never once said he wasn't a great player.   But hey some made up stat says he's clutch so I guess the 1-29 means nothing.  
    LOL! You’re taking words out of your own mouth. You’re saying “that’s all I was saying” when that’s not all that you were saying. You threw in that bullshit about him being funny. Even in this very comment you had to say “made up stat”. You can’t just say “he’s a great player but I thought that stat was jarring”. You have to throw in extra nonsense.

    I love how the clutch stat is "made up" just because he never heard of it before. But I'd say gauging a players performance in the final 5 minutes of a 5 point game is way more intuitive to how clutch a player is than buzzer beaters, which obviously include half court and full court heaves. This article is old but speaks to the laziness of someone hearing a random stat somewhere and taking it for gospel. Notice how everyone on this list is a perimeter player too. 

    https://www.espn.com/blog/marc-stein/post/_/id/4396/clutch-shots-are-tough-just-ask-lebron-james

    Final-second shots are tough; just ask LeBron James

    Mar 1, 2016

    The stat began to circulate among ESPN's basketball brains not long after LeBron James airballed a potential winning hoist from 3-point range last Friday night in Toronto.

    The very contested miss lowered LeBron's regular-season success rate to a mere 10.6 percent in the past 10 seasons -- on 5-for-47 shooting -- when attempting a tying or go-ahead shot in the final five seconds of the fourth quarter or overtime.

    Yet to properly process a number that sounds so uncharacteristically low, it helps to have some context on what has to be considered some of the toughest circumstances that a shooter can face.

    So we consulted with Justin Page from ESPN Stats & Information, who informs us that the league average in that situation, in the same time frame, is more than double LeBron's conversion rate but still a rather modest 22.7 percent.

    ‎The following table ‎features the 21 players who, across the same 10-season span, have at least 25 attempts to tie or win the game in the final five ticks of regulation or OT.

    PLAYERFGMFGAFG%
    Rudy Gay173844.7%
    Dirk Nowitzki133834.2%
    Joe Johnson113928.2%
    Vince Carter93228.1%
    Damian Lillard72528.0%
    Kobe Bryant134827.1%
    Deron Williams103727.0%
    Monta Ellis93426.5%
    Raymond Felton72725.9%
    Kevin Durant125024.0%
    Kemba Walker73023.3%
    Carmelo Anthony94221.4%
    Chris Paul83821.1%
    Dwyane Wade94719.1%
    Russell Westbrook52917.2%
    Derrick Rose53016.7%
    Paul Pierce63716.2%
    Andre Iguodala53713.5%
    Brandon Jennings32711.1%
    LeBron James54710.6%
    Jamal Crawford33010.0%
    Total17376222.7%
    Minimum 25 attempts to tie or win the game
    in the final five seconds of regulation/overtime
    -- ESPN Stats & Information

    Two other notes that will surely interest you:

    Stephen Curry's name isn't on the list because, in his seven NBA seasons, he's had the opportunity to attempt only 19 such shots in the final five seconds of regulation or an OT period ... and has made six.

    As for Michael Jeffrey Jordan ...

    The only available data on such attempts covers MJ's two seasons in Washington and his last two seasons with the Bulls. He was 6 for 15 on such shots.

    Turns out he was actually 6 for 10 in these toughest of conditions until going 0 for 5 in his final season with the Wizards in 2002-03.


    so Embiid is 19% less than the league average in the last 5 seconds.  noted thanks. 


  • The Juggler
    The Juggler Posts: 49,590
    edited December 2021
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    “Casual” is to kind of an adjective. That just implies that you don’t pay attention. Picking and choosing which things to comment about in a sad attempt to grasp at straws because you need to find SOMETHING that doesn’t completely discredit your opinion on something that happened years ago is something entirely different. I’m not sure if there is an adjective for that.

    I can say that I personally held the opinion for a few years that Ben Simmons was treated too harshly and Embiid was over praised and under criticized. I am more than happy to admit that, after watching more basketball in this modern era and realizing how amazing Embiid is, I was a complete idiot, and that my former opinion was very dumb. 

    Some people just don’t have the equipment to admit that.
    I saw a stat that I thought was interesting ajnd posted it.   I made no comment other than to say I knew it wasn't great but didn't think it was that bad. Never once said he wasn't a great player.   But hey some made up stat says he's clutch so I guess the 1-29 means nothing.  
    LOL! You’re taking words out of your own mouth. You’re saying “that’s all I was saying” when that’s not all that you were saying. You threw in that bullshit about him being funny. Even in this very comment you had to say “made up stat”. You can’t just say “he’s a great player but I thought that stat was jarring”. You have to throw in extra nonsense.

    I love how the clutch stat is "made up" just because he never heard of it before. But I'd say gauging a players performance in the final 5 minutes of a 5 point game is way more intuitive to how clutch a player is than buzzer beaters, which obviously include half court and full court heaves. This article is old but speaks to the laziness of someone hearing a random stat somewhere and taking it for gospel. Notice how everyone on this list is a perimeter player too. 

    https://www.espn.com/blog/marc-stein/post/_/id/4396/clutch-shots-are-tough-just-ask-lebron-james

    Final-second shots are tough; just ask LeBron James

    Mar 1, 2016

    The stat began to circulate among ESPN's basketball brains not long after LeBron James airballed a potential winning hoist from 3-point range last Friday night in Toronto.

    The very contested miss lowered LeBron's regular-season success rate to a mere 10.6 percent in the past 10 seasons -- on 5-for-47 shooting -- when attempting a tying or go-ahead shot in the final five seconds of the fourth quarter or overtime.

    Yet to properly process a number that sounds so uncharacteristically low, it helps to have some context on what has to be considered some of the toughest circumstances that a shooter can face.

    So we consulted with Justin Page from ESPN Stats & Information, who informs us that the league average in that situation, in the same time frame, is more than double LeBron's conversion rate but still a rather modest 22.7 percent.

    ‎The following table ‎features the 21 players who, across the same 10-season span, have at least 25 attempts to tie or win the game in the final five ticks of regulation or OT.

    PLAYERFGMFGAFG%
    Rudy Gay173844.7%
    Dirk Nowitzki133834.2%
    Joe Johnson113928.2%
    Vince Carter93228.1%
    Damian Lillard72528.0%
    Kobe Bryant134827.1%
    Deron Williams103727.0%
    Monta Ellis93426.5%
    Raymond Felton72725.9%
    Kevin Durant125024.0%
    Kemba Walker73023.3%
    Carmelo Anthony94221.4%
    Chris Paul83821.1%
    Dwyane Wade94719.1%
    Russell Westbrook52917.2%
    Derrick Rose53016.7%
    Paul Pierce63716.2%
    Andre Iguodala53713.5%
    Brandon Jennings32711.1%
    LeBron James54710.6%
    Jamal Crawford33010.0%
    Total17376222.7%
    Minimum 25 attempts to tie or win the game
    in the final five seconds of regulation/overtime
    -- ESPN Stats & Information

    Two other notes that will surely interest you:

    Stephen Curry's name isn't on the list because, in his seven NBA seasons, he's had the opportunity to attempt only 19 such shots in the final five seconds of regulation or an OT period ... and has made six.

    As for Michael Jeffrey Jordan ...

    The only available data on such attempts covers MJ's two seasons in Washington and his last two seasons with the Bulls. He was 6 for 15 on such shots.

    Turns out he was actually 6 for 10 in these toughest of conditions until going 0 for 5 in his final season with the Wizards in 2002-03.


    so Embiid is 19% less than the league average in the last 5 seconds.  noted thanks. 


    Yep. And the second greatest player ever is about 12% less than what you consider "league average" from six years ago.

    Yet they're both 1 and 2 in Clutch points this year. So, hopefully you've learned something with this exercise. Thanks for walking right into that one.  
    Post edited by The Juggler on
    www.myspace.com
  • pjhawks
    pjhawks Posts: 12,907
    edited December 2021
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    “Casual” is to kind of an adjective. That just implies that you don’t pay attention. Picking and choosing which things to comment about in a sad attempt to grasp at straws because you need to find SOMETHING that doesn’t completely discredit your opinion on something that happened years ago is something entirely different. I’m not sure if there is an adjective for that.

    I can say that I personally held the opinion for a few years that Ben Simmons was treated too harshly and Embiid was over praised and under criticized. I am more than happy to admit that, after watching more basketball in this modern era and realizing how amazing Embiid is, I was a complete idiot, and that my former opinion was very dumb. 

    Some people just don’t have the equipment to admit that.
    I saw a stat that I thought was interesting ajnd posted it.   I made no comment other than to say I knew it wasn't great but didn't think it was that bad. Never once said he wasn't a great player.   But hey some made up stat says he's clutch so I guess the 1-29 means nothing.  
    LOL! You’re taking words out of your own mouth. You’re saying “that’s all I was saying” when that’s not all that you were saying. You threw in that bullshit about him being funny. Even in this very comment you had to say “made up stat”. You can’t just say “he’s a great player but I thought that stat was jarring”. You have to throw in extra nonsense.

    I love how the clutch stat is "made up" just because he never heard of it before. But I'd say gauging a players performance in the final 5 minutes of a 5 point game is way more intuitive to how clutch a player is than buzzer beaters, which obviously include half court and full court heaves. This article is old but speaks to the laziness of someone hearing a random stat somewhere and taking it for gospel. Notice how everyone on this list is a perimeter player too. 

    https://www.espn.com/blog/marc-stein/post/_/id/4396/clutch-shots-are-tough-just-ask-lebron-james

    Final-second shots are tough; just ask LeBron James

    Mar 1, 2016

    The stat began to circulate among ESPN's basketball brains not long after LeBron James airballed a potential winning hoist from 3-point range last Friday night in Toronto.

    The very contested miss lowered LeBron's regular-season success rate to a mere 10.6 percent in the past 10 seasons -- on 5-for-47 shooting -- when attempting a tying or go-ahead shot in the final five seconds of the fourth quarter or overtime.

    Yet to properly process a number that sounds so uncharacteristically low, it helps to have some context on what has to be considered some of the toughest circumstances that a shooter can face.

    So we consulted with Justin Page from ESPN Stats & Information, who informs us that the league average in that situation, in the same time frame, is more than double LeBron's conversion rate but still a rather modest 22.7 percent.

    ‎The following table ‎features the 21 players who, across the same 10-season span, have at least 25 attempts to tie or win the game in the final five ticks of regulation or OT.

    PLAYERFGMFGAFG%
    Rudy Gay173844.7%
    Dirk Nowitzki133834.2%
    Joe Johnson113928.2%
    Vince Carter93228.1%
    Damian Lillard72528.0%
    Kobe Bryant134827.1%
    Deron Williams103727.0%
    Monta Ellis93426.5%
    Raymond Felton72725.9%
    Kevin Durant125024.0%
    Kemba Walker73023.3%
    Carmelo Anthony94221.4%
    Chris Paul83821.1%
    Dwyane Wade94719.1%
    Russell Westbrook52917.2%
    Derrick Rose53016.7%
    Paul Pierce63716.2%
    Andre Iguodala53713.5%
    Brandon Jennings32711.1%
    LeBron James54710.6%
    Jamal Crawford33010.0%
    Total17376222.7%
    Minimum 25 attempts to tie or win the game
    in the final five seconds of regulation/overtime
    -- ESPN Stats & Information

    Two other notes that will surely interest you:

    Stephen Curry's name isn't on the list because, in his seven NBA seasons, he's had the opportunity to attempt only 19 such shots in the final five seconds of regulation or an OT period ... and has made six.

    As for Michael Jeffrey Jordan ...

    The only available data on such attempts covers MJ's two seasons in Washington and his last two seasons with the Bulls. He was 6 for 15 on such shots.

    Turns out he was actually 6 for 10 in these toughest of conditions until going 0 for 5 in his final season with the Wizards in 2002-03.


    so Embiid is 19% less than the league average in the last 5 seconds.  noted thanks. 


    Yep. And the second greatest player ever is about 12% less than what you consider "league average" from six years ago.

    Yet they're both 1 and 2 in Clutch points this year. So, hopefully you've learned something with this exercise. Thanks for walking right into that one.  
    i thought i was on ignore? guess not.  and yes those 2 are 1 and 2 by the standard of 5 minutes. of course their teams are 1 game over and 2 games under .500 so maybe 5 minutes isn't a good barometer?  so maybe it's too small a sample size to really determine clutch-ness or it's kind of a bogus stat since the number 1 and 2 most clutch players in the league team's are average. interesting question i think.
    Post edited by pjhawks on
  • The Juggler
    The Juggler Posts: 49,590
    edited December 2021
    pjhawks said:
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    “Casual” is to kind of an adjective. That just implies that you don’t pay attention. Picking and choosing which things to comment about in a sad attempt to grasp at straws because you need to find SOMETHING that doesn’t completely discredit your opinion on something that happened years ago is something entirely different. I’m not sure if there is an adjective for that.

    I can say that I personally held the opinion for a few years that Ben Simmons was treated too harshly and Embiid was over praised and under criticized. I am more than happy to admit that, after watching more basketball in this modern era and realizing how amazing Embiid is, I was a complete idiot, and that my former opinion was very dumb. 

    Some people just don’t have the equipment to admit that.
    I saw a stat that I thought was interesting ajnd posted it.   I made no comment other than to say I knew it wasn't great but didn't think it was that bad. Never once said he wasn't a great player.   But hey some made up stat says he's clutch so I guess the 1-29 means nothing.  
    LOL! You’re taking words out of your own mouth. You’re saying “that’s all I was saying” when that’s not all that you were saying. You threw in that bullshit about him being funny. Even in this very comment you had to say “made up stat”. You can’t just say “he’s a great player but I thought that stat was jarring”. You have to throw in extra nonsense.

    I love how the clutch stat is "made up" just because he never heard of it before. But I'd say gauging a players performance in the final 5 minutes of a 5 point game is way more intuitive to how clutch a player is than buzzer beaters, which obviously include half court and full court heaves. This article is old but speaks to the laziness of someone hearing a random stat somewhere and taking it for gospel. Notice how everyone on this list is a perimeter player too. 

    https://www.espn.com/blog/marc-stein/post/_/id/4396/clutch-shots-are-tough-just-ask-lebron-james

    Final-second shots are tough; just ask LeBron James

    Mar 1, 2016

    The stat began to circulate among ESPN's basketball brains not long after LeBron James airballed a potential winning hoist from 3-point range last Friday night in Toronto.

    The very contested miss lowered LeBron's regular-season success rate to a mere 10.6 percent in the past 10 seasons -- on 5-for-47 shooting -- when attempting a tying or go-ahead shot in the final five seconds of the fourth quarter or overtime.

    Yet to properly process a number that sounds so uncharacteristically low, it helps to have some context on what has to be considered some of the toughest circumstances that a shooter can face.

    So we consulted with Justin Page from ESPN Stats & Information, who informs us that the league average in that situation, in the same time frame, is more than double LeBron's conversion rate but still a rather modest 22.7 percent.

    ‎The following table ‎features the 21 players who, across the same 10-season span, have at least 25 attempts to tie or win the game in the final five ticks of regulation or OT.

    PLAYERFGMFGAFG%
    Rudy Gay173844.7%
    Dirk Nowitzki133834.2%
    Joe Johnson113928.2%
    Vince Carter93228.1%
    Damian Lillard72528.0%
    Kobe Bryant134827.1%
    Deron Williams103727.0%
    Monta Ellis93426.5%
    Raymond Felton72725.9%
    Kevin Durant125024.0%
    Kemba Walker73023.3%
    Carmelo Anthony94221.4%
    Chris Paul83821.1%
    Dwyane Wade94719.1%
    Russell Westbrook52917.2%
    Derrick Rose53016.7%
    Paul Pierce63716.2%
    Andre Iguodala53713.5%
    Brandon Jennings32711.1%
    LeBron James54710.6%
    Jamal Crawford33010.0%
    Total17376222.7%
    Minimum 25 attempts to tie or win the game
    in the final five seconds of regulation/overtime
    -- ESPN Stats & Information

    Two other notes that will surely interest you:

    Stephen Curry's name isn't on the list because, in his seven NBA seasons, he's had the opportunity to attempt only 19 such shots in the final five seconds of regulation or an OT period ... and has made six.

    As for Michael Jeffrey Jordan ...

    The only available data on such attempts covers MJ's two seasons in Washington and his last two seasons with the Bulls. He was 6 for 15 on such shots.

    Turns out he was actually 6 for 10 in these toughest of conditions until going 0 for 5 in his final season with the Wizards in 2002-03.


    so Embiid is 19% less than the league average in the last 5 seconds.  noted thanks. 


    Yep. And the second greatest player ever is about 12% less than what you consider "league average" from six years ago.

    Yet they're both 1 and 2 in Clutch points this year. So, hopefully you've learned something with this exercise. Thanks for walking right into that one.  
    i thought i was on ignore? guess not.  and yes those 2 are 1 and 2 by the standard of 5 minutes. of course their teams are 1 game over and 2 games under .500 so maybe 5 minutes isn't a good barometer?  so maybe it's too small a sample size to really determine clutch-ness or it's kind of a bogus stat since the number 1 and 2 most clutch players in the league team's are average. interesting question i think.
    ^
    Guy never heard of a stat before yesterday and now says it's bogus because it doesn't fit his dumb narrative. 

    Casual Sixers fans are the worst. 

    Edit—and the Sixers are 6 games over .500 when Embiid plays. Lol
    Post edited by The Juggler on
    www.myspace.com
  • Cliffy6745
    Cliffy6745 Posts: 34,024
    I am a casual sixers fan though I like embiid
  • pjhawks
    pjhawks Posts: 12,907
    edited December 2021
    pjhawks said:
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    “Casual” is to kind of an adjective. That just implies that you don’t pay attention. Picking and choosing which things to comment about in a sad attempt to grasp at straws because you need to find SOMETHING that doesn’t completely discredit your opinion on something that happened years ago is something entirely different. I’m not sure if there is an adjective for that.

    I can say that I personally held the opinion for a few years that Ben Simmons was treated too harshly and Embiid was over praised and under criticized. I am more than happy to admit that, after watching more basketball in this modern era and realizing how amazing Embiid is, I was a complete idiot, and that my former opinion was very dumb. 

    Some people just don’t have the equipment to admit that.
    I saw a stat that I thought was interesting ajnd posted it.   I made no comment other than to say I knew it wasn't great but didn't think it was that bad. Never once said he wasn't a great player.   But hey some made up stat says he's clutch so I guess the 1-29 means nothing.  
    LOL! You’re taking words out of your own mouth. You’re saying “that’s all I was saying” when that’s not all that you were saying. You threw in that bullshit about him being funny. Even in this very comment you had to say “made up stat”. You can’t just say “he’s a great player but I thought that stat was jarring”. You have to throw in extra nonsense.

    I love how the clutch stat is "made up" just because he never heard of it before. But I'd say gauging a players performance in the final 5 minutes of a 5 point game is way more intuitive to how clutch a player is than buzzer beaters, which obviously include half court and full court heaves. This article is old but speaks to the laziness of someone hearing a random stat somewhere and taking it for gospel. Notice how everyone on this list is a perimeter player too. 

    https://www.espn.com/blog/marc-stein/post/_/id/4396/clutch-shots-are-tough-just-ask-lebron-james

    Final-second shots are tough; just ask LeBron James

    Mar 1, 2016

    The stat began to circulate among ESPN's basketball brains not long after LeBron James airballed a potential winning hoist from 3-point range last Friday night in Toronto.

    The very contested miss lowered LeBron's regular-season success rate to a mere 10.6 percent in the past 10 seasons -- on 5-for-47 shooting -- when attempting a tying or go-ahead shot in the final five seconds of the fourth quarter or overtime.

    Yet to properly process a number that sounds so uncharacteristically low, it helps to have some context on what has to be considered some of the toughest circumstances that a shooter can face.

    So we consulted with Justin Page from ESPN Stats & Information, who informs us that the league average in that situation, in the same time frame, is more than double LeBron's conversion rate but still a rather modest 22.7 percent.

    ‎The following table ‎features the 21 players who, across the same 10-season span, have at least 25 attempts to tie or win the game in the final five ticks of regulation or OT.

    PLAYERFGMFGAFG%
    Rudy Gay173844.7%
    Dirk Nowitzki133834.2%
    Joe Johnson113928.2%
    Vince Carter93228.1%
    Damian Lillard72528.0%
    Kobe Bryant134827.1%
    Deron Williams103727.0%
    Monta Ellis93426.5%
    Raymond Felton72725.9%
    Kevin Durant125024.0%
    Kemba Walker73023.3%
    Carmelo Anthony94221.4%
    Chris Paul83821.1%
    Dwyane Wade94719.1%
    Russell Westbrook52917.2%
    Derrick Rose53016.7%
    Paul Pierce63716.2%
    Andre Iguodala53713.5%
    Brandon Jennings32711.1%
    LeBron James54710.6%
    Jamal Crawford33010.0%
    Total17376222.7%
    Minimum 25 attempts to tie or win the game
    in the final five seconds of regulation/overtime
    -- ESPN Stats & Information

    Two other notes that will surely interest you:

    Stephen Curry's name isn't on the list because, in his seven NBA seasons, he's had the opportunity to attempt only 19 such shots in the final five seconds of regulation or an OT period ... and has made six.

    As for Michael Jeffrey Jordan ...

    The only available data on such attempts covers MJ's two seasons in Washington and his last two seasons with the Bulls. He was 6 for 15 on such shots.

    Turns out he was actually 6 for 10 in these toughest of conditions until going 0 for 5 in his final season with the Wizards in 2002-03.


    so Embiid is 19% less than the league average in the last 5 seconds.  noted thanks. 


    Yep. And the second greatest player ever is about 12% less than what you consider "league average" from six years ago.

    Yet they're both 1 and 2 in Clutch points this year. So, hopefully you've learned something with this exercise. Thanks for walking right into that one.  
    i thought i was on ignore? guess not.  and yes those 2 are 1 and 2 by the standard of 5 minutes. of course their teams are 1 game over and 2 games under .500 so maybe 5 minutes isn't a good barometer?  so maybe it's too small a sample size to really determine clutch-ness or it's kind of a bogus stat since the number 1 and 2 most clutch players in the league team's are average. interesting question i think.
    ^
    Guy never heard of a stat before yesterday and now says it's bogus because it doesn't fit his dumb narrative. 

    Casual Sixers fans are the worst. 

    Edit—and the Sixers are 6 games over .500 when Embiid plays. Lol
    More answers from a guy who is supposedly ignoring me. Maybe I’ll get another cute message in my inbox.

    and you like the stat that uses 5 minutes as clutch so that makes it legitimate but since Embiid is well below league average at 5 seconds that is illegitimate?  Dude you are using the same logic you are accusing me of using. 

    When Embiid plays…I guess that is part of the decade long process…when he plays 🤔
    Post edited by pjhawks on
  • The Juggler
    The Juggler Posts: 49,590
    edited December 2021
    pjhawks said:
    pjhawks said:
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    “Casual” is to kind of an adjective. That just implies that you don’t pay attention. Picking and choosing which things to comment about in a sad attempt to grasp at straws because you need to find SOMETHING that doesn’t completely discredit your opinion on something that happened years ago is something entirely different. I’m not sure if there is an adjective for that.

    I can say that I personally held the opinion for a few years that Ben Simmons was treated too harshly and Embiid was over praised and under criticized. I am more than happy to admit that, after watching more basketball in this modern era and realizing how amazing Embiid is, I was a complete idiot, and that my former opinion was very dumb. 

    Some people just don’t have the equipment to admit that.
    I saw a stat that I thought was interesting ajnd posted it.   I made no comment other than to say I knew it wasn't great but didn't think it was that bad. Never once said he wasn't a great player.   But hey some made up stat says he's clutch so I guess the 1-29 means nothing.  
    LOL! You’re taking words out of your own mouth. You’re saying “that’s all I was saying” when that’s not all that you were saying. You threw in that bullshit about him being funny. Even in this very comment you had to say “made up stat”. You can’t just say “he’s a great player but I thought that stat was jarring”. You have to throw in extra nonsense.

    I love how the clutch stat is "made up" just because he never heard of it before. But I'd say gauging a players performance in the final 5 minutes of a 5 point game is way more intuitive to how clutch a player is than buzzer beaters, which obviously include half court and full court heaves. This article is old but speaks to the laziness of someone hearing a random stat somewhere and taking it for gospel. Notice how everyone on this list is a perimeter player too. 

    https://www.espn.com/blog/marc-stein/post/_/id/4396/clutch-shots-are-tough-just-ask-lebron-james

    Final-second shots are tough; just ask LeBron James

    Mar 1, 2016

    The stat began to circulate among ESPN's basketball brains not long after LeBron James airballed a potential winning hoist from 3-point range last Friday night in Toronto.

    The very contested miss lowered LeBron's regular-season success rate to a mere 10.6 percent in the past 10 seasons -- on 5-for-47 shooting -- when attempting a tying or go-ahead shot in the final five seconds of the fourth quarter or overtime.

    Yet to properly process a number that sounds so uncharacteristically low, it helps to have some context on what has to be considered some of the toughest circumstances that a shooter can face.

    So we consulted with Justin Page from ESPN Stats & Information, who informs us that the league average in that situation, in the same time frame, is more than double LeBron's conversion rate but still a rather modest 22.7 percent.

    ‎The following table ‎features the 21 players who, across the same 10-season span, have at least 25 attempts to tie or win the game in the final five ticks of regulation or OT.

    PLAYERFGMFGAFG%
    Rudy Gay173844.7%
    Dirk Nowitzki133834.2%
    Joe Johnson113928.2%
    Vince Carter93228.1%
    Damian Lillard72528.0%
    Kobe Bryant134827.1%
    Deron Williams103727.0%
    Monta Ellis93426.5%
    Raymond Felton72725.9%
    Kevin Durant125024.0%
    Kemba Walker73023.3%
    Carmelo Anthony94221.4%
    Chris Paul83821.1%
    Dwyane Wade94719.1%
    Russell Westbrook52917.2%
    Derrick Rose53016.7%
    Paul Pierce63716.2%
    Andre Iguodala53713.5%
    Brandon Jennings32711.1%
    LeBron James54710.6%
    Jamal Crawford33010.0%
    Total17376222.7%
    Minimum 25 attempts to tie or win the game
    in the final five seconds of regulation/overtime
    -- ESPN Stats & Information

    Two other notes that will surely interest you:

    Stephen Curry's name isn't on the list because, in his seven NBA seasons, he's had the opportunity to attempt only 19 such shots in the final five seconds of regulation or an OT period ... and has made six.

    As for Michael Jeffrey Jordan ...

    The only available data on such attempts covers MJ's two seasons in Washington and his last two seasons with the Bulls. He was 6 for 15 on such shots.

    Turns out he was actually 6 for 10 in these toughest of conditions until going 0 for 5 in his final season with the Wizards in 2002-03.


    so Embiid is 19% less than the league average in the last 5 seconds.  noted thanks. 


    Yep. And the second greatest player ever is about 12% less than what you consider "league average" from six years ago.

    Yet they're both 1 and 2 in Clutch points this year. So, hopefully you've learned something with this exercise. Thanks for walking right into that one.  
    i thought i was on ignore? guess not.  and yes those 2 are 1 and 2 by the standard of 5 minutes. of course their teams are 1 game over and 2 games under .500 so maybe 5 minutes isn't a good barometer?  so maybe it's too small a sample size to really determine clutch-ness or it's kind of a bogus stat since the number 1 and 2 most clutch players in the league team's are average. interesting question i think.
    ^
    Guy never heard of a stat before yesterday and now says it's bogus because it doesn't fit his dumb narrative. 

    Casual Sixers fans are the worst. 

    Edit—and the Sixers are 6 games over .500 when Embiid plays. Lol
    More answers from a guy who is supposedly ignoring me. Maybe I’ll get another cute message in my inbox.

    and you like the stat that uses 5 minutes as clutch so that makes it legitimate but since Embiid is well below league average at 5 seconds that is illegitimate?  Dude you are using the same logic you are accusing me of using. 

    When Embiid plays…I guess that is part of the decade long process…when he plays 🤔
    Pretty sure Ziotact and I thoroughly explained why your stat, which nobody uses as a measure of anything (it’s not even tracked on any website) is bogus. You just saw someone tweet it. Ooooohhhh! Meanwhile the actual clutch stat is widely available because it’s an actual measure of how a player helps his team down the stretch. 

    7 over .500 w/Embiid now.



    🤡
    Post edited by The Juggler on
    www.myspace.com
  • pjhawks
    pjhawks Posts: 12,907
    edited December 2021
    pjhawks said:
    pjhawks said:
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    “Casual” is to kind of an adjective. That just implies that you don’t pay attention. Picking and choosing which things to comment about in a sad attempt to grasp at straws because you need to find SOMETHING that doesn’t completely discredit your opinion on something that happened years ago is something entirely different. I’m not sure if there is an adjective for that.

    I can say that I personally held the opinion for a few years that Ben Simmons was treated too harshly and Embiid was over praised and under criticized. I am more than happy to admit that, after watching more basketball in this modern era and realizing how amazing Embiid is, I was a complete idiot, and that my former opinion was very dumb. 

    Some people just don’t have the equipment to admit that.
    I saw a stat that I thought was interesting ajnd posted it.   I made no comment other than to say I knew it wasn't great but didn't think it was that bad. Never once said he wasn't a great player.   But hey some made up stat says he's clutch so I guess the 1-29 means nothing.  
    LOL! You’re taking words out of your own mouth. You’re saying “that’s all I was saying” when that’s not all that you were saying. You threw in that bullshit about him being funny. Even in this very comment you had to say “made up stat”. You can’t just say “he’s a great player but I thought that stat was jarring”. You have to throw in extra nonsense.

    I love how the clutch stat is "made up" just because he never heard of it before. But I'd say gauging a players performance in the final 5 minutes of a 5 point game is way more intuitive to how clutch a player is than buzzer beaters, which obviously include half court and full court heaves. This article is old but speaks to the laziness of someone hearing a random stat somewhere and taking it for gospel. Notice how everyone on this list is a perimeter player too. 

    https://www.espn.com/blog/marc-stein/post/_/id/4396/clutch-shots-are-tough-just-ask-lebron-james

    Final-second shots are tough; just ask LeBron James

    Mar 1, 2016

    The stat began to circulate among ESPN's basketball brains not long after LeBron James airballed a potential winning hoist from 3-point range last Friday night in Toronto.

    The very contested miss lowered LeBron's regular-season success rate to a mere 10.6 percent in the past 10 seasons -- on 5-for-47 shooting -- when attempting a tying or go-ahead shot in the final five seconds of the fourth quarter or overtime.

    Yet to properly process a number that sounds so uncharacteristically low, it helps to have some context on what has to be considered some of the toughest circumstances that a shooter can face.

    So we consulted with Justin Page from ESPN Stats & Information, who informs us that the league average in that situation, in the same time frame, is more than double LeBron's conversion rate but still a rather modest 22.7 percent.

    ‎The following table ‎features the 21 players who, across the same 10-season span, have at least 25 attempts to tie or win the game in the final five ticks of regulation or OT.

    PLAYERFGMFGAFG%
    Rudy Gay173844.7%
    Dirk Nowitzki133834.2%
    Joe Johnson113928.2%
    Vince Carter93228.1%
    Damian Lillard72528.0%
    Kobe Bryant134827.1%
    Deron Williams103727.0%
    Monta Ellis93426.5%
    Raymond Felton72725.9%
    Kevin Durant125024.0%
    Kemba Walker73023.3%
    Carmelo Anthony94221.4%
    Chris Paul83821.1%
    Dwyane Wade94719.1%
    Russell Westbrook52917.2%
    Derrick Rose53016.7%
    Paul Pierce63716.2%
    Andre Iguodala53713.5%
    Brandon Jennings32711.1%
    LeBron James54710.6%
    Jamal Crawford33010.0%
    Total17376222.7%
    Minimum 25 attempts to tie or win the game
    in the final five seconds of regulation/overtime
    -- ESPN Stats & Information

    Two other notes that will surely interest you:

    Stephen Curry's name isn't on the list because, in his seven NBA seasons, he's had the opportunity to attempt only 19 such shots in the final five seconds of regulation or an OT period ... and has made six.

    As for Michael Jeffrey Jordan ...

    The only available data on such attempts covers MJ's two seasons in Washington and his last two seasons with the Bulls. He was 6 for 15 on such shots.

    Turns out he was actually 6 for 10 in these toughest of conditions until going 0 for 5 in his final season with the Wizards in 2002-03.


    so Embiid is 19% less than the league average in the last 5 seconds.  noted thanks. 


    Yep. And the second greatest player ever is about 12% less than what you consider "league average" from six years ago.

    Yet they're both 1 and 2 in Clutch points this year. So, hopefully you've learned something with this exercise. Thanks for walking right into that one.  
    i thought i was on ignore? guess not.  and yes those 2 are 1 and 2 by the standard of 5 minutes. of course their teams are 1 game over and 2 games under .500 so maybe 5 minutes isn't a good barometer?  so maybe it's too small a sample size to really determine clutch-ness or it's kind of a bogus stat since the number 1 and 2 most clutch players in the league team's are average. interesting question i think.
    ^
    Guy never heard of a stat before yesterday and now says it's bogus because it doesn't fit his dumb narrative. 

    Casual Sixers fans are the worst. 

    Edit—and the Sixers are 6 games over .500 when Embiid plays. Lol
    More answers from a guy who is supposedly ignoring me. Maybe I’ll get another cute message in my inbox.

    and you like the stat that uses 5 minutes as clutch so that makes it legitimate but since Embiid is well below league average at 5 seconds that is illegitimate?  Dude you are using the same logic you are accusing me of using. 

    When Embiid plays…I guess that is part of the decade long process…when he plays 🤔
    Pretty sure Ziotact and I thoroughly explained why your stat, which nobody uses as a measure of anything (it’s not even tracked on any website) is bogus. You just saw someone tweet it. Ooooohhhh! Meanwhile the actual clutch stat is widely available because it’s an actual measure of how a player helps his team down the stretch. 

    7 over .500 w/Embiid now.



    🤡

    No shit their record is better with him in the lineup . breaking fucking news there.   He's one of the best players in the world, I would hope their record would be a lot better with him than without him.  Now they just need to find a way to you know, keep him in the lineup.
    Post edited by pjhawks on
  • RiotZact said:
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    “Casual” is to kind of an adjective. That just implies that you don’t pay attention. Picking and choosing which things to comment about in a sad attempt to grasp at straws because you need to find SOMETHING that doesn’t completely discredit your opinion on something that happened years ago is something entirely different. I’m not sure if there is an adjective for that.

    I can say that I personally held the opinion for a few years that Ben Simmons was treated too harshly and Embiid was over praised and under criticized. I am more than happy to admit that, after watching more basketball in this modern era and realizing how amazing Embiid is, I was a complete idiot, and that my former opinion was very dumb. 

    Some people just don’t have the equipment to admit that.
    I saw a stat that I thought was interesting ajnd posted it.   I made no comment other than to say I knew it wasn't great but didn't think it was that bad. Never once said he wasn't a great player.   But hey some made up stat says he's clutch so I guess the 1-29 means nothing.  
    LOL! You’re taking words out of your own mouth. You’re saying “that’s all I was saying” when that’s not all that you were saying. You threw in that bullshit about him being funny. Even in this very comment you had to say “made up stat”. You can’t just say “he’s a great player but I thought that stat was jarring”. You have to throw in extra nonsense.

    I love how the clutch stat is "made up" just because he never heard of it before. But I'd say gauging a players performance in the final 5 minutes of a 5 point game is way more intuitive to how clutch a player is than buzzer beaters, which obviously include half court and full court heaves. This article is old but speaks to the laziness of someone hearing a random stat somewhere and taking it for gospel. Notice how everyone on this list is a perimeter player too. 

    https://www.espn.com/blog/marc-stein/post/_/id/4396/clutch-shots-are-tough-just-ask-lebron-james

    Final-second shots are tough; just ask LeBron James

    Mar 1, 2016

    The stat began to circulate among ESPN's basketball brains not long after LeBron James airballed a potential winning hoist from 3-point range last Friday night in Toronto.

    The very contested miss lowered LeBron's regular-season success rate to a mere 10.6 percent in the past 10 seasons -- on 5-for-47 shooting -- when attempting a tying or go-ahead shot in the final five seconds of the fourth quarter or overtime.

    Yet to properly process a number that sounds so uncharacteristically low, it helps to have some context on what has to be considered some of the toughest circumstances that a shooter can face.

    So we consulted with Justin Page from ESPN Stats & Information, who informs us that the league average in that situation, in the same time frame, is more than double LeBron's conversion rate but still a rather modest 22.7 percent.

    ‎The following table ‎features the 21 players who, across the same 10-season span, have at least 25 attempts to tie or win the game in the final five ticks of regulation or OT.

    PLAYERFGMFGAFG%
    Rudy Gay173844.7%
    Dirk Nowitzki133834.2%
    Joe Johnson113928.2%
    Vince Carter93228.1%
    Damian Lillard72528.0%
    Kobe Bryant134827.1%
    Deron Williams103727.0%
    Monta Ellis93426.5%
    Raymond Felton72725.9%
    Kevin Durant125024.0%
    Kemba Walker73023.3%
    Carmelo Anthony94221.4%
    Chris Paul83821.1%
    Dwyane Wade94719.1%
    Russell Westbrook52917.2%
    Derrick Rose53016.7%
    Paul Pierce63716.2%
    Andre Iguodala53713.5%
    Brandon Jennings32711.1%
    LeBron James54710.6%
    Jamal Crawford33010.0%
    Total17376222.7%
    Minimum 25 attempts to tie or win the game
    in the final five seconds of regulation/overtime
    -- ESPN Stats & Information

    Two other notes that will surely interest you:

    Stephen Curry's name isn't on the list because, in his seven NBA seasons, he's had the opportunity to attempt only 19 such shots in the final five seconds of regulation or an OT period ... and has made six.

    As for Michael Jeffrey Jordan ...

    The only available data on such attempts covers MJ's two seasons in Washington and his last two seasons with the Bulls. He was 6 for 15 on such shots.

    Turns out he was actually 6 for 10 in these toughest of conditions until going 0 for 5 in his final season with the Wizards in 2002-03.


    Curry and Jordan wouldn't be on there much because their teams routed other ones.

    My guess is you wouldn't want to be on the list towards the top.

    Just my view of it.
  • The Juggler
    The Juggler Posts: 49,590
    edited December 2021
    RiotZact said:
    pjhawks said:
    RiotZact said:
    “Casual” is to kind of an adjective. That just implies that you don’t pay attention. Picking and choosing which things to comment about in a sad attempt to grasp at straws because you need to find SOMETHING that doesn’t completely discredit your opinion on something that happened years ago is something entirely different. I’m not sure if there is an adjective for that.

    I can say that I personally held the opinion for a few years that Ben Simmons was treated too harshly and Embiid was over praised and under criticized. I am more than happy to admit that, after watching more basketball in this modern era and realizing how amazing Embiid is, I was a complete idiot, and that my former opinion was very dumb. 

    Some people just don’t have the equipment to admit that.
    I saw a stat that I thought was interesting ajnd posted it.   I made no comment other than to say I knew it wasn't great but didn't think it was that bad. Never once said he wasn't a great player.   But hey some made up stat says he's clutch so I guess the 1-29 means nothing.  
    LOL! You’re taking words out of your own mouth. You’re saying “that’s all I was saying” when that’s not all that you were saying. You threw in that bullshit about him being funny. Even in this very comment you had to say “made up stat”. You can’t just say “he’s a great player but I thought that stat was jarring”. You have to throw in extra nonsense.

    I love how the clutch stat is "made up" just because he never heard of it before. But I'd say gauging a players performance in the final 5 minutes of a 5 point game is way more intuitive to how clutch a player is than buzzer beaters, which obviously include half court and full court heaves. This article is old but speaks to the laziness of someone hearing a random stat somewhere and taking it for gospel. Notice how everyone on this list is a perimeter player too. 

    https://www.espn.com/blog/marc-stein/post/_/id/4396/clutch-shots-are-tough-just-ask-lebron-james

    Final-second shots are tough; just ask LeBron James

    Mar 1, 2016

    The stat began to circulate among ESPN's basketball brains not long after LeBron James airballed a potential winning hoist from 3-point range last Friday night in Toronto.

    The very contested miss lowered LeBron's regular-season success rate to a mere 10.6 percent in the past 10 seasons -- on 5-for-47 shooting -- when attempting a tying or go-ahead shot in the final five seconds of the fourth quarter or overtime.

    Yet to properly process a number that sounds so uncharacteristically low, it helps to have some context on what has to be considered some of the toughest circumstances that a shooter can face.

    So we consulted with Justin Page from ESPN Stats & Information, who informs us that the league average in that situation, in the same time frame, is more than double LeBron's conversion rate but still a rather modest 22.7 percent.

    ‎The following table ‎features the 21 players who, across the same 10-season span, have at least 25 attempts to tie or win the game in the final five ticks of regulation or OT.

    PLAYERFGMFGAFG%
    Rudy Gay173844.7%
    Dirk Nowitzki133834.2%
    Joe Johnson113928.2%
    Vince Carter93228.1%
    Damian Lillard72528.0%
    Kobe Bryant134827.1%
    Deron Williams103727.0%
    Monta Ellis93426.5%
    Raymond Felton72725.9%
    Kevin Durant125024.0%
    Kemba Walker73023.3%
    Carmelo Anthony94221.4%
    Chris Paul83821.1%
    Dwyane Wade94719.1%
    Russell Westbrook52917.2%
    Derrick Rose53016.7%
    Paul Pierce63716.2%
    Andre Iguodala53713.5%
    Brandon Jennings32711.1%
    LeBron James54710.6%
    Jamal Crawford33010.0%
    Total17376222.7%
    Minimum 25 attempts to tie or win the game
    in the final five seconds of regulation/overtime
    -- ESPN Stats & Information

    Two other notes that will surely interest you:

    Stephen Curry's name isn't on the list because, in his seven NBA seasons, he's had the opportunity to attempt only 19 such shots in the final five seconds of regulation or an OT period ... and has made six.

    As for Michael Jeffrey Jordan ...

    The only available data on such attempts covers MJ's two seasons in Washington and his last two seasons with the Bulls. He was 6 for 15 on such shots.

    Turns out he was actually 6 for 10 in these toughest of conditions until going 0 for 5 in his final season with the Wizards in 2002-03.


    Curry and Jordan wouldn't be on there much because their teams routed other ones.

    My guess is you wouldn't want to be on the list towards the top.

    Just my view of it.
    Yeah, I mean, its just a dumb list/stat as it includes full and half court heaves at the buzzer and stuff. That's why you have to go back to 2016 to find any info on it. 
    Post edited by The Juggler on
    www.myspace.com
  • Jearlpam0925
    Jearlpam0925 Deep South Philly Posts: 17,517
    Who the hell is working with McGinnis tonight? It's a bit much.
  • Jearlpam0925
    Jearlpam0925 Deep South Philly Posts: 17,517
    And why are the Nets wearing these shitty "throwbacks" like they have any nostalgic factor?
  • Jearlpam0925
    Jearlpam0925 Deep South Philly Posts: 17,517
    This might top that Golden State game (FINGERS CROSSED)!
  • Jearlpam0925
    Jearlpam0925 Deep South Philly Posts: 17,517
    He's telling Durant to get out of his own goddamn building. How do you not love this fucking guy?
  • The Juggler
    The Juggler Posts: 49,590
    8 over .500 w/ a non covid infected Embiid now.  January schedule is pretty favorable. Let’s pile up some wins

    GET EXCITED!
    www.myspace.com
  • The Juggler
    The Juggler Posts: 49,590
    Who the hell is working with McGinnis tonight? It's a bit much.
    Marc Jackson

    Pretty sure both Kate and Alaa have covid
    www.myspace.com
  • eeriepadave
    eeriepadave West Chester, PA Posts: 43,168
    great win last night against the #1 team in the east (so far...)
    8/28/98- Camden, NJ
    10/31/09- Philly
    5/21/10- NYC
    9/2/12- Philly, PA
    7/19/13- Wrigley
    10/19/13- Brooklyn, NY
    10/21/13- Philly, PA
    10/22/13- Philly, PA
    10/27/13- Baltimore, MD
    4/28/16- Philly, PA
    4/29/16- Philly, PA
    5/1/16- NYC
    5/2/16- NYC
    9/2/18- Boston, MA
    9/4/18- Boston, MA
    9/14/22- Camden, NJ
    9/7/24- Philly, PA
    9/9/24- Philly, PA
    Tres Mts.- 3/23/11- Philly. PA
    Eddie Vedder- 6/25/11- Philly, PA
    RNDM- 3/9/16- Philly, PA
  • The Juggler
    The Juggler Posts: 49,590
    edited January 2022
    31, 15 and 10. 

    Just another incredibly dominant Embiid performance. Ho hum. 
    Post edited by The Juggler on
    www.myspace.com