Sixers' Drastic Transformation Continues With Series Win Over Heat

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For years, the notion of winning four out of five games was a reach for the Sixers. Getting four wins could take weeks at a time, not just over one week. 

That was then, this is now. And how different now is. 

The Sixers eliminated the Heat with a 104-91 win in Game 5 Tuesday to advance to the Eastern Conference semifinals for the first time since 2012 (see observations). They had not won a best-of-seven series in five games or less since 1985. 

The team that started the season with a goal of making the playoffs and transformed into aspirations of 50 wins, home-court advantage and the third seed has proved to be a true contender in the East (see highlights)

Quite a dramatic turnaround from finishing 10-72 only two seasons ago. 

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"I'm just thankful to be here because it goes back to three or four years ago when it all started for me here," Joel Embiid said. "Two years ago, we won 10 games, so to be in this position, I'm just excited."

The Sixers won 75 games in Brett Brown's first four seasons as head coach. Reaching .500 would have been a significant accomplishment. The Sixers blew past that mark with 52 wins, including 16 straight to end the regular season. 

The organization envisioned this level of success years ago when it began thinking of its current "Phila Unite" playoff campaign. The Sixers had the pieces; it was a matter of everything coming together. From Ben Simmons' standout rookie year after injury to Embiid's dominant sophomore season to the compilation of a roster deep with veterans, this relatively newly-constructed squad clicked … quickly. 

"I was hired in 2013 and I sat with Josh Harris and David Blitzer and a few of the other owners, and we talked about the vision, what we hoped to build," Brown reflected. "Through rough times, through adversity, we didn't blink. We stayed strong in what we were trying to do. 

"We've got more to do. We've got more to give. We're excited for sure and there was a sense of just gratitude and I'm proud of all of us for just staying together - owners, team, direction that we're heading - we didn't blink. We didn't pivot out of what we said we were going to do and I think slowly we're reaping the benefit of that."

Instead of looking ahead to the NBA draft lottery in May as the key to the Sixers' future, they are eyeing a deep playoff run during that time. The Sixers will find out their second-round opponent possibly as soon as Thursday night. They will face the winner of the series between the Celtics (No. 2) and Bucks (No. 7), which Boston leads, 3-2. 

The Sixers have high expectations for success. For as many years as they were a losing team, many of the current players were not part of it. They know winning, an unwavering standard they've set for themselves they will carry throughout the playoffs. 

"On to the next series," Simmons said. "We've got to focus on that. But for me, this is my first season playing so this is what I'm going to expect now. Going into it, we've got to lock in and focus on that next team we play." 

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