Just for clarity, I just reread and I wasn’t calling you out as clueless. Totally didn’t mean to do that. Sorry. It was a very general observation of online commentary.
Watch it in real time. People keep commenting about it online while playing it in slow motion. At full speed you see a few things. Evans watches Alex as he’s running back and Alex whips the ball back to Braylon. Evans turns back toward Braylon and is on his heels a little and just as he sets his feet to get ready to guard him the ball is gone. Evans actually raises his right arm halfway (you see this better in slow motion) but it’s too late and he instinctively puts it down. It was way too fast for him to do anything at all. When guys run at someone taking a buzzer 3 they are usually running at the shooter. Evens had no time to stop, turn around and begin running forward toward Braylon with a hand up. He had just gotten his feet under him. And yes, he was lost in the moment. Everyone was.
We are now seeing it from 5000 feet. On the court this was all reactionary and lightning fast. It’s not like Evans missed his assignment and wasnt guarding his man. Nobody had a man at that point. Everyone on both sides is just trying to survive for a few seconds. This was a perfect scenario. Silas is cool as a cucumber and didn’t choke on that second free throw. He then makes the big defensive play. Braylon grabs the ball and whips a pass to Alex. Look at that pass, it is a bullet and thrown with perfect, text book technique, even in that situation. Alex is another cerebral and unflappable guy and he sees Boozer in front of him and Braylon moving forward wide open with no defender, he zips it back and Braylon catches and shoots that ball in 1 second flat.
The reason this was so great, historic and improbable is that it was all done perfectly and any variation at all to what happened would have resulted in us losing.