Game 1 was just a little too easy for the Sixers. Too much free space in transition, too many open threes, too many offensive rebounds. The Heat were determined to make Game 2 different.
An hour before tipoff, 15-year veteran Udonis Haslem's focus was clear. "We gotta get into the physical part of the game," Haslem said. "Make everything tough, make everything physical, raise our level of intensity as their level of intensity has raised. And then secondly, we'll get into the X's and O's. But first of all, just pure competition."
Miami's physicality was on another level in Monday's night 113-103 win (see observations). The Heat picked up Ben Simmons full court, chased Marco Belinelli and JJ Redick tight around every screen, and issued their fair share of "playoff fouls" whenever a Sixer found an inch of free space in the paint. It was a stark contrast to Game 1, when they gave Simmons plenty of room to operate, saw the Sixers make 18 of their 28 three-point attempts and conceded numerous open dunks.
"They were more physical, and I think that was the expectation," JJ Redick said. "In terms of their schemes, they didn't change a whole lot. I think the biggest thing was just how they approached their defense on Ben. Instead of sagging off in the paint, they were pressuring full court. Other than that, it was just being more physical all around with our bigs. We had trouble just getting to our plays sometimes."
The Heat held the Sixers to 7-for-36 shooting from three-point range, their fourth-worst long-range shooting percentage of the season. While a few of those misses were open looks, a big part of the Sixers' struggles from long range Monday were due to how closely the Heat tailed shooters off the ball, and how often they denied the initial action and made the Sixers take a worse shot.
"I just think we made it tough on them," Heat guard Josh Richardson said. "They were able to get wherever they wanted last time and if you let them do that then they're just going to punish you. We took it upon ourselves in those last two days to come out tougher and make things harder on them."
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After a dismal second quarter in which they were outscored 34-13 the Sixers responded in the second half. Their shots still weren't falling from deep, but the Sixers didn't shy away from the physical challenge. Simmons, who scored 15 of his 24 points in the second half, was involved in plenty of pushing and shoving off the ball with Justise Winslow.
"They were a little bit more physical, but at the same time, our guys can throw bodies around," Simmons said. "I think that was one of the biggest things."
This series is going to be a fight, and Redick thinks it's not the worst thing in the world that the Sixers absorbed a few blows Monday night.
"For the guys who haven't been through the fire of the playoffs, this will sharpen you and strengthen you as a player, as a man, as a group," Redick said. "Games like this are good for you, but it doesn't feel good to lose."