I don't think it is a coincidence that Embiid being able to do whatever he wanted against Baynes
This is true only in your mind. Embiid is very good and clearly better than Baynes but CBS liked what Baynes did and he helped us win the series, no matter how you twist it....
Yeah, that is a complete rewriting of history. Embiid clearly got upset with Baynes’ physicality at stages, particularly near the end of the series
Sure he got upset that the fouls were harder then Embiid felt they needed to be. But they were still fouls and they still put Embiid on the line. If Baynes wasn't getting beat all the time, maybe he wouldn't have needed to foul Embiid at all.
No, Embiid got upset because Baynes held him to an atrocious 1.12 points per shot after he put up 1.4 points per shot in the regular season. Unlike your plus minus metrics, this stat actually measures Baynes effect on Embiid, not Embiids effect on the Sixers / Celtics. It’s really not that difficult.
Did you actually analyze Embiid's shots when being guarded by Baynes? Like watch video of every possession to see when Baynes was on Embiid and when Embiid was being guarded by others. Did that analysis include end of the shot clock type shots verse normal offense shots both with and without Baynes? Did that analysis account for double teams and if so how did it account for double teams? Just because Embiid had 1.12 points per shot, doesn't mean Baynes held him to that, especially since Embiid was in the game a lot without Baynes even being on the floor. Of course, as indicated Embiid and the Sixers were a lot more effective on the scoreboard (the only thing that really matters) when Baynes was in the game then when Baynes wasn't in the game.
I don't have to do that, I just have to establish that my statistics are more relevant in regards to Baynes's abilities guarding Embiid than yours are, and I've done that, given the unanimous disagreement you've met in this thread from knowledgeable posters.
With unanimous support on my side, the burden of bearing evidence in the form of video analysis and statistical segmentation is on you.
EDIT - Here's a fun starting point. Embiid played most teams in the East 4 times- against what teams did he average lower than 1.12 PPS in those 4 games? If Baynes can't guard Embiid, surely you'll find lots of averages below 1.12 PPS.
Wouldn't be expecting a response to this, lol. Good post. Not sure why he's being obtuse in the face of pretty irrefutable stats
his stats are nonsense for what he is arguing. If his argument was the Celtics did a great job guarding Embiid, I'd agree. Embiid performed mostly below his regular season averages overall in that series. My position is, it wasn't because of Baynes, as both Embiid and the Sixers performed significantly better when Baynes was in the game, then when Baynes wasn't in the game. Every metric you can use, supports that position. Boston was better when Baynes wasn't guarding Embiid.
Hmm. So the Celtics did well because Embiid did mostly worse than he did in the regular season. Okay, that logic makes sense.
Oh wait, weren't you arguing here weeks ago that Kyrie played poorly in the 2016 finals where the Cavs won, by selecting only his worst games and looking at point per shot?
Now I present to you an argument about Embiid relying on your familiar points per shot, and instead you throw out plus minus numbers that I've address the legitimacy of above.
By the way, we're talking about playoffs vs season averages, your new metric now that you've conveniently abandoned points per shot when it exposes Embiid...
Kyrie in the 2016 finals:
27 ppg
3.9 apg
3.9 rpg
2.1 spg
.7 bpg
56.4 TS%
46.8 FG%
40.5 3PT%
94 FT%
Kyrie in the 2015-2106 Season:
19.6 ppg
4.7 apg
3 rpg
1.1 spg
.3 bpg
54 TS%
44.8 FG%
32.1 3PT%
88.5 FT%
A massive step up in literally every single key stat but assists, which dropped by .8, and you're arguing
against people that are saying Kyrie played well in the 2016 finals. By picking games and using points per shot. And then ignoring points per shot for Embiid, instead comparing his playoff dips to his season averages to make an assessment. But then when we're talking Kyrie, you ignore his massive leap vs. season averages, and focus on tricky, selective points per shot.
See how it's kind of weird, but kind of a cycle where the data, no matter what it is, tends to argue against the Celtics vs. other teams and players pretty consistently?