Ben Simmons leads new-look Nets offense in preseason loss to 76ers – The Denver Post

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As expected, it wasn’t pretty.

Ben Simmons played his first game in 470 days and he played it alongside new teammates in a fresh offense the Nets’ coaching staff recently installed.

The result was predictable: to start their first of four preseason games, the Nets looked rusty and at times discombobulated, digging a hole as deep as 20 against a Philadelphia 76ers team resting four key players — Joel Embiid, James Harden, P.J. Tucker and Danuel House — on Monday.

And then Brooklyn’s shots started falling, passes reached their targets, the defense picked up and the score reflected that of a team trying to find itself before the games begin to count.

The Nets undoubtedly have a lot of work to do if they’re going to reach the NBA Finals stage that’s eluded them each of the past two seasons, but for stretches of their 127108 loss over a shorthanded 76ers team, they looked promising — most promising of all being the motion of what was once a stagnant Nets offense.

Simmons started alongside Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving against his former team and assumed the point guard-facilitator role with Irving deferring to him to run the offense from tip. Each member of the new-look Brooklyn Big Three tallied 19 first-half minutes before sitting the entire second half of their preseason opener.

Simmons logged six points, five assists and four rebounds, hugging former teammates Tobias Harris and Tyrese Maxey before the opening tip. Kevin Durant scored 13 points on four-of-eight shooting, and Irving scored nine points on the same shooting numbers.

With Simmons running the point, the ball “hopped,” as Irving described of the new-feel offense a few days into training camp.

The Nets ran a good chunk of Spain pick-and-roll — that is when someone screens for the screener to get a cleaner roll to the rim and to force the defense to help off of a corner shooter — and after being absent almost all of last season, the set appears to be a staple of the newly-installed offense.

After shaking off the rust, corner shooters cut backdoor with some success and they flared from the corners to give motion to the offense.

Simmons only scored three baskets on six attempts against his former team, all on dunks and layups. He attempted to back down former teammate Georges Niang on the low block, but after shimmying and attempting a turnaround fading jump shot, the ball was wide right and hit all backboard.

The Nets, however, aren’t expecting Simmons to hit jump shots. They’re expecting him to make plays for his teammates, to defend the opposing team’s best player, to push the pace in transition and to finish at the rim.

On a rusty night after a season-long layoff, he still checked all four boxes.

On one fastbreak possession, Simmons found starting center Nic Claxton with a behind-the-head, no-look dump-off for an easy dunk at the rim. In a halfcourt set, Simmons posted up on the left baseline then rifled a cross-court pass to the right wing to find Royce O’Neale for a wide-open three. And on the final possession of the first half, Simmons reminded the Sixers why he made First Team All-Defense two consecutive seasons. He hounded Sixers guard Shake Milton and forced a bad pass that resulted in a missed and hurried Philadelphia shot attempt at the buzzer.

That kind of effort would have been welcomed against Jayson Tatum in the playoffs last season.

Simmons’ highlights were sprinkled, however, across minutes of indecision, an obvious product of a new player adjusting to a new offense with new teammates. Sometimes he over-dribbled, other times he picked his dribble up too soon and too far away from the three-point line. He turned the ball over two times to his five assists and turnovers could be an issue because opponents will play the passing lanes knowing Simmons isn’t a score-first guard. The Sixers sure did.

Nash also showed off a few lineups fans should expect to see get regular-season minutes.

Simmons started alongside Claxton, Durant, Harris and Irving, but he also played a hybrid point guard-center role with Claxton on the bench and O’Neale on the floor. Nash’s first substitution was moving Harris to the bench in favor of O’Neale, who developed a strong reputation as a 3-and-D wing on the playoff contending Utah Jazz. O’Neale shot two-of-four from downtown for 11 points and also assumed some ball-handling responsibilities when the offense broke down. Harris, in his first game back after missing most of last season following two ankle surgeries, shot two-of-seven from downtown and airballed two threes.

What’s clear, at least through one measly preseason game, is that Nash finally got his wish: with the exception of TJ Warren (foot – will be re-evaluated in November) and Seth Curry (ankle – expected to play in final preseason game), his team is healthy enough to begin implementing complex offensive sets.

Simmons sits at the center of the Nets’ ability to get creative offensively and in his first game as a Net, he flashed the versatile blend of size, skill and athleticism that will allow him to play both ball handler and screener in the Nets’ reinvented offense. This is the new era of Nets basketball, and after three more exhibition games, Brooklyn will test its fullest strength against other teams in games that count.

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