Dead legs, dead wrong: Fatigue smacks Sixers in the face against Knicks

NEW YORK – It’s one of the unwritten rules of sports for some reason. But in actuality, sometimes it’s just the truth. You can say it should never happen for whatever the reason, but it’s a human reality that is felt by everyone, no matter you’re race, religion, gender, or even how much money you make for doing what you do.

Professional athletes get tired. Sometimes the toll of their sport is so grinding at times that the body and mind simply can’t overcome the mental and physical strain that has been presented.

The Sixers didn’t lose to the New York Knicks in Game 1 of their best-of-7 second round series simply because they were exhausted from the moment they stepped onto the Madison Square Garden court. But to say it didn’t play a huge part in their 137-98 thumping just isn’t true. 

Coaches won’t say it, nor will players. But sometimes breaking down why a game went the way it did has to include the cold, hard reality. 

Two days after beating Boston in Game 7, then traveling back to Philly early Sunday morning, only to have to go to New York later that day and then step on the court the next day against a team that hadn’t played since Thursday, well, tiredness just isn’t an excuse, it’s a reality.

Coach Nick Nurse said the obligatory, “can’t use that as an excuse,” but later seemed to accept the reality.