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Young Sixers team isn't ready to compete with disciplined Celtics | Marcus Hayes

Joel Embiid, Ben Simmons and Brett Brown are looking like playoff newcomers. As they should. It's part of The Process, right?

Celtics forward Jayson Tatum grabs the loose basketball past the Sixers’ Ben Simmons during the fourth quarter of Game 3 on Saturday.
Celtics forward Jayson Tatum grabs the loose basketball past the Sixers’ Ben Simmons during the fourth quarter of Game 3 on Saturday.Read moreYONG KIM / Staff Photographer

The Process has been delayed. Stymied.

Halted.

The talented, callow Sixers gave away a second consecutive playoff game, 101-98, and, with it, a series. No NBA team has ever come back from a 3-0 series deficit.

This one won't, either.

Not with these kids.

Not with this coach.

Not against a toughened, disciplined, well-coached team such as the Boston Celtics.

They're just not ready. It's just that simple.

The Sixers hadn't sniffed the playoffs since 2012. The Celtics went to the Eastern Conference finals last season. At this point in the teams' respective developments, the Celtics are too savvy, too deep, and too well-run for the Sixers to beat.

Rookie point guard Ben Simmons can't contend with a team that engineers its game plan to expose his inability to shoot. Second-year center Joel Embiid, who played in only 31 games last season, lacks the repertoire and the refinement to carry a team for four quarters. Brett Brown, in his first playoff run as a head coach, can't get them past a Celtics team whose two best players aren't even playing. That should tell you all you need to know about how well Brad Stevens is coaching his club by comparison.

This sort of yardstick series is a necessary part of The Process, but that doesn't mean it hurts any less.

"Joel's gonna learn a lot. Ben Simmons is gonna learn a lot. It's painful admitting that now," Brown said. "But there is some truth to that. There's a lot of truth to that."

That said, Brown refused to completely blame his team's youth.

"We are navigating through this. This isn't entirely a youthful thing at all. Nobody write that," he said. "Some of the matchups have hurt us."

Sorry, coach, but we're going to write that. The matchups hurt the Sixers chiefly because the Sixers are so young. They're so young chiefly because The Process – begun five years ago by Brown, former general manager Sam Hinkie and owner Josh Harris – is clearly far from complete.

It took a jump shot at the buzzer to force overtime in Game 3 on Saturday evening, and, with 1 minute, 5 seconds to play into the extra session, it appeared that the Sixers might, in fact, continue their astounding accelerated development; that they might survive this round despite having lost twice, disparagingly, in Boston.

In Game 1, they blamed five-day rust. In Game 2, they held a 22-point lead but frittered it away as Brown miserly hoarded his timeouts.

In Game 3, they first threw away chance a win with 4.7 seconds to play in regulation, when JJ Redick's pass never found Embiid and Simmons, who collided near the free-throw line. Jaylen Brown's layup forced Marco Belinelli's hero shot.

The Sixers then threw away the game thrice more, all in the last minute of overtime. Leading, 98-96, Embiid turned the ball over with 46.6 seconds to play, which let the Celtics cut it to one. Embiid then missed a shot with 20.8 seconds, even as he insists, "I was built for this moment."

He was not built for that moment. He's a work in progress.

Still, Simmons got that rebound – and, inexplicably, he immediately shot it again (and missed), instead of kicking it out and trying to run out the clock or forcing the Celtics to foul.

The Celtics then scored with 5.5 seconds to play in overtime on an inbounds play on which Brown ordered every player to switch on every screen, which led to small forward Robert Covington defending power forward Al Horford, who caught and shot under the Celtics' basket. The Sixers still had 3.9 seconds, down by one, but Stevens correctly anticipated the in-bounds play. Horford anticipated a pass to Embiid, stole it when Simmons threw it.

Those plays will weigh badly in the Brown vs. Stevens conversation.

"I'm the coach," Brown said. "I'll take responsibility for all of this."

That seems satisfying in the moment, but it's wrong to blame Brown for everything. He didn't build the team.

Rookie forward Jayson Tatum's 24 points Saturday made him the first Celtics rookie to hit the 20-point mark in five straight playoff games. Sixers general manager Bryan Colangelo traded a future first-round pick to Boston so he could select Markelle Fultz, who has scored five points in these entire playoffs, has scored zero in the last seven games and hasn't even played in the last five.

Covington is in his fourth full NBA season, but this is his first playoff run. He scored three points in Game 1, had just one point Saturday, and is 0-for-14 in the two games combined. He's known as a good defender, but he often defends Tatum, so …

Dario Saric, who should have been rookie of the year last season, is shooting 37.1 percent from the field against the Celtics, more than 8 percentage points worse than his season's average.

Brown is reluctant to blame his players' inexperience for everything, and he shouldn't, because he and Colangelo haven't been perfect, either. But they helped these kids win 52 games in the regular season, including 16 in a row to end it, and they waxed the Heat in five to win the first round.

"I don't like blaming youth.We made mistakes. It doesn't matter how old we are," Embiid insisted. "It doesn't matter we've never been in this position."

Of course it does.

"They showed up in the time when it was the time to show up, and we didn't," Embiid continued.

They will, of course. They will one day.

Just not today.