If every one of our starters (not named Irving) plays in just 8 of the remaining 12 games, all of them would have played at least 72 games this season. So yeah, we've had a good amount of injuries, but most of the core players have suited up most of the time.
Um, there are SEVEN games left, not twelve. I guess you missed that too.
Ok, you got me. Jaylen Brown will only play in 71 games even if he starts every single game between now and the end of season.
As a curious aside, I distinctly remember having conversations about giving max contracts to guys like Hayward, Irving and Anthony Davis who routinely turn in seasons with workload in the low 70s... and there was a school of thought that it was fine and one wouldn't want your main guys to play so many games either way. Tsk-tsk.
As for the core guys, in MPG the top 3 and 5 of the top 6 will almost certainly have missed more than 10 games (this doesn't even include Hayward). So much for your "core players have suited up" theory...unless you consider missing on average about 20 games each is somehow a good thing.
I have no idea what you're trying to say. Our regular lineup is Irving, Brown, Tatum, Horford and Baynes. Brown, Tatum, Horford, and Baynes have mostly been available this season.
If you think a bench consisting entirely of rookies is such a big issue, I don't see how you dispute Brett Brown's impending COY award, given that he's about to win close to 50 games with a starting lineup featuring 4 guys with an average of 0.75 years of NBA experience and a roster with 10 guys who've been in the NBA for less than two years.
Again, that's already been debunked. There's only rookie putting time on the court for that team. For much of the season, our bench has consisted of almost exclusively of 2nd round rookies, a castoff reclamation project who was out of the NBA entirely, a 25 euro with overseas experience and a dancing bear as the other bench guys were pressed into starting roles.
I don't know what's being "debunked" and how. That Brett Brown has worked largely with a roster that has little to no real NBA experience is a fact, no matter how you choose to interpret Simmons and Embiid's redshirt years. This discussion isn't about whether Ben Simmons should be eligible for the ROY vote...