Joel Embiid has produced well below his career rates for most of the season, but he flashed his former Most Valuable Player form on Friday, pouring in 39 points in the Sixers‘ 10-point win over Indiana.
“He’s worked at it,” Philadelphia coach Nick Nurse said, per Tony Jones of The Athletic. “The practices this week have helped. His own individual work away from practice has helped. I think him being able to do all of that is a great sign that he’s starting to feel good. I have always said that he’s best when he’s driving. I think he drove a lot to draw fouls early. The best thing was his variety. The 39 points were great, but they came with him scoring through a lot of different schemes. He read the different stuff most of the night, pretty good.”
Friday’s game was the Sixers first in five days, and Embiid believes his knees have held up better when he has more time in between appearances.
“I feel good,” Embiid said. “I’ve been able to be consistent, and that’s the big thing. I’ve been able to do the same thing over and over again this week and not have to take a break. I’ve talked about this before, but the plan of having me play a game and then having two days off seems to be working. So, I’ve been able to get on the court and do a lot of work.”
Here’s more from the Atlantic Division:
- Nurse has increasingly used Paul George as a point forward, Keith Pompey of the Philadelphia Inquirer tweets. George has racked up 13 assists over the last three games. “I’m comfortable with the ball,” George said. “I think more than anything, it’s just continue to prove to myself and remain confident as I continue to trust my body and gain confidence on the floor that my body can still produce. So it’s just adding to the confidence, and just chipping away at the work put into this season so far to get ready for this season.”
- Earlier this week, Raptors two-way player Alijah Martin is the G League’s most recent Player of the Week, per the NBA (Twitter link). Martin averaged 26.0 points, 4.7 rebounds and 2.7 assists per game in three Raptors 905 wins. This year’s No. 39 overall pick has appeared in just two games with the NBA team.
- Nets rookie big man Danny Wolf had 17 points and seven rebounds in a loss to Dallas on Friday. He’s averaging 13.5 PPG in his last six outings. Wolf benefited from a stint in the G League, according to Brian Lewis of the New York Post. “When he had the opportunity to play with Long Island, he took advantage of his minutes,” coach Jordi Fernandez said. “And now that he’s in the rotation, he’s taking advantage of his minutes. So I’m very happy with him. He’s a special player because at his size he can do so many different things. And still trying to figure it out because he’s showing me what he’s capable of doing. He’s capable of doing a lot of things — good things.”
- Another Nets rookie, Egor Demin, only played two-plus minutes in the fourth quarter on Friday as the team fell apart in crunch time, Lewis notes. “He was trying to fix mistakes by trying to make things happen. And this is not how you want to do things,” Fernandez said. “I need him to play with better readiness and better physicality. And this is not the way that the team needs him to play. So, he’s got to be better. Otherwise, the minutes are going to go down, and somebody else will take advantage. I know he cares; he’s always responded and punched back. So, he’s way better than what he performed.”

One day on and two days off. How out of touch with reality can you be? How does this work in the playoffs? What a complete waste of money.
Basketball is more enjoyable without drama over this clown’s availability. He’s been injured his whole career. Now the recovery strategy is not playing the majority of the time. It’s an absurd self-inflicted set of circumstances. Zion gets clowned. Anthony Davis who actually won a championship gets called “street clothes”… embiid is an embarrassment to the hard work it takes to be successful in the NBA.
The story should and always will be that he never had to work hard because he was big and skilled, and when he got injured he didn’t understand what hard work was. Instead of changing his habits to recover and be available more, he decided to just work less. One day on and two days off means he works 2 days a week the overwhelming majority of the time.
Shame on the media for disguising his laziness as a plan for health. If your body can’t keep up with the rigors of an NBA schedule, this ain’t the league for you. Go play Big 3, play the Olympics every 4 years, but stop trying to be an NBA player because your body and/or your work habits can’t handle it. This is the dumbest running decades long joke.
Well, he has a 3 year, $188M extension that starts next season, so I will be very surprised if he takes your advice and hangs them up 😜
He just started showing up on time for meetings and treatment halfway through last year. Can’t wait to see what his next breakthrough will be.
Maxey having to call him out, at 10 years younger than him, should settle the John Calipari vs Bill Self debate. Only one of them sends players to the NBA with the professionalism to succeed. And they don’t come from Kansas.
Your interpretation is trumpenesque.
Embiid is 6th on Philly in rebounds per 36. link to basketball-reference.com
Super impressive.
Embiid and consistent lol