Miami Heat vs Philadelphia 76ers: 4 takeaways from Game 1 of NBA Playoff series

NBA: Playoffs-Philadelphia 76ers at Miami Heat

May 2, 2022; Miami, Florida, USA; Miami Heat guard Tyler Herro (14) reacts in the first quarter against the Philadelphia 76ers during game one of the second round for the 2022 NBA playoffs at FTX Arena. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-USA TODAY Sports

The Miami Heat hosted the Philadelphia 76ers in Game 1 of their Eastern Conference Semifinals series in South Beach Monday evening.

Miami entered the series as overwhelming favorites given the injury to 76ers star center and NBA MVP candidate Joel Embiid.

Outside of a 76ers run late in the first quarter and heading into halftime, Miami dominated throughout the game. It outscored Philadelphia 25-11 over the first eight minutes of the first quarter.

While the Heat did end up going cold in the second quarter (20 points), they played great on both ends of the court in what ended up being a dominating 106-92 win. That included Jimmy Butler and Co. outscoring Philadelphia 56-41 in the second half.

Below, we look at the four biggest takeaways from the Miami Heat defeating the Philadelphia 76ers by 14 points in Game 1 of their second-round NBA Playoff series.

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Philadelphia 76ers’ DeAndre Jordan was an absolute disaster in Joel Embiid’s stead

You’re not going to replace the production that Embiid brings on both ends of the court. We’re talking about the reigning NBA scoring champ and the single most-dominant center in the NBA since Dwight Howard was in his prime.

With that said, Philadelphia needed something from Jordan after he played less than a minute in his only Round 1 appearance. In no way did that come to fruition. Jordan finished with four points in 17 minutes of action. Philadelphia was outscored by a whopping 22 points during that span.

The first half was especially terrible with the 76ers finishing minus-12 in Jordan’s four minutes and plus-13 when he was rightfully riding the pine. Philadelphia put Paul Millsap in for six minutes to see if he could provide anything on the low-post. He made no impact. The takeaway here is that Philadelphia is pretty much screwed until Embiid returns. It has no one to compete with Bam Adebayo.

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Speaking of Miami Heat star Bam Adebayo

Miami knew that it had a plus-level matchup inside with Embiid sidelined. Boy, did Bam take advantage of that after a so-so first-round appearance saw him average a mere 12.4 points against the Atlanta Hawks. That was not the case in the series opener.

In addition to those basic stats, the stud center finished plus-26 in 34 minutes of action. It was needed with backup big man Dewayne Dedmon having committed five fouls in just four minutes of action.

Tyler Herro rebounds for Miami Heat after terrible Round 1 performance

One of our biggest keys heading into this series for the Miami Heat was the team’s second-leading scorer during the regular season. Herro was tremendous as a sixth man, averaging 20.7 points on 40% shooting from distance. Herro did not provide this against Atlanta — averaging 12.8 points on a laughable 18% mark from three-point range.

Herro had FTX Arena in South Beach rocking throughout Monday night’s series opener. The dude just had that “it” feeling to him as we saw throughout the regular season. Herro scored 25 points on 9-of-17 shooting. He also connected on 4-of-6 from distance while dishing out seven assists in 29 minutes.

Miami will be nearly unstoppable moving forward in this series if the leader of its bench continues to perform at this level. It really is as simple as that.

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James Harden is not a No. 1 option for the Philadelphia 76ers

“I just have to be more aggressive. I’ve been doing this — I’m comfortable and have been doing this for a long time. Just taking what the defense gives me and being aggressive, and making the right decision once I get to that point. More floor spacing and more attacks to the basket. We just have to play free — free and with the ultimate confidence as a group.”

Philadelphia 76ers’ James Harden on mentality heading into Game 1

About that? Harden connected on just 5-of-13 from the field while turning the ball over five times in what was another terrible performance from the former NBA MVP. He continued struggling finishing at the rim and couldn’t hit from the outside (2-of-7 from distance).

Outside of his performance in a series-clinching Game 6 win ove the Toronto Raptors in Round 1, this is what we’ve seen from Harden since being dealt to the Philadelphia 76ers. In the first five games of said series, Harden averaged a mere 18.4 points on 37% shooting. We’re now at the point where we have to wonder whether Harden is simply a shell of his former self at 32 years old.

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