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Sixers Bell Ringer: Paul George has season-best performance vs. Bucks

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2025-26 Sixers Bell Ringer standings:
Tyrese Maxey – 10
VJ Edgecombe – 2
Andre Drummond – 2
Dom Barlow – 1
Adem Bona – 1
Justin Edwards – 1
Quentin Grimes – 1
Jared McCain – 1
Kelly Oubre Jr – 1
Trendon Watford – 1
15th roster spot – 1



The Philadelphia 76ers looked to carry over the momentum from Thursday night’s thriller against the Warriors into Friday’s matchup in Milwaukee. It took a team effort, but they pulled off the back-to-back sweep with a 116-101 victory over the Bucks.

The Sixers were without the services of Joel Embiid (rest) for the second night of the back-to-back, but Paul George returned to the court after missing Thursday’s contest.

It was the Bucks’ first complete game without Giannis Antetokounmpo since he suffered a calf strain early in their matchup against Detroit on Wednesday.

The Sixers’ talent advantage shone in the first half, allowing them to build a 20-point lead at the break.

Heading into the half, they were shooting 56% from the field, 48% from three-point range and 92% from the line.

Not bad at all considering it was Tyrese Maxey’s worst performance of the season.

Following another third quarter in which the Sixers were outscored, it looked like we may be seeing a repeat of the Warriors’ comeback just 24 hours prior.

Thanks to resilient efforts from key veterans and inspiring bench play, the Sixers collected their 13th win of the season, something they did not achieve until Dec. 30 last season.

Let’s not think about last season; instead, let’s think about Bell Ringer.

Paul George: 20 points, 30 minutes, 5 assists, 5 rebounds, 1 steal

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On a night where Maxey did not have it going, George stepped up as the Sixers’ sole consistent source of offense throughout the entire game.

In the first half, he let the game come to him as the bench helped ignite the offense. He only missed two of his six shot attempts as the Sixers built up the massive lead.

The third quarter was when George’s effort became crucial, as many Sixers began to feel the fatigue of the back-to-back.

The Sixers were without a field goal for the first three minutes and twenty seconds of the half, yet George’s defense helped keep the Bucks at bay. He drew a charge on a driving Kyle Kuzma, had a textbook contest on a driving Kevin Porter Jr., and then, after the Sixers finally made a bucket, intercepted a pass from Ryan Rollins and hit a three a possession later.

In the fourth, the Sixers’ fatigue increased as their lead steadily decreased. With just over six minutes remaining, holding on to a 12-point lead, George decided it was time to give the Bucks a taste of Pacers PG.

PG going to work. 🎱 pic.twitter.com/Q6dZhVPTgE

— Philadelphia 76ers (@sixers) December 6, 2025

On the very next possession, he would hit another midrange over Jericho Sims.

Later in the fourth, with an 11-point lead and the Bucks beginning to press, he forced a double team as he was starting his third dance with Sims, and curled the rock to a wide-open VJ Edgecombe for a big three.

big three late in the 4th for @vj_edgecombe !! pic.twitter.com/xzAgsMGrMI

— Philadelphia 76ers (@sixers) December 6, 2025

George’s defensive impact was evident in this one, but his leadership could be felt as well on Friday. The poise when things start to get hairy, and the willingness to trust the young guys in big spots, will only aid the Sixers the more he plays.

“I’m blessed that I’m healthy and I’m just trying to stack games” pic.twitter.com/mWxZRz5JHi

— Philadelphia 76ers (@sixers) December 6, 2025

Jabari Walker: 18 points, 4-of-8 3PT, 2 rebounds, 1 assist, 1 steal

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Walker was the bench MVP in the first half. In the second quarter alone, he would drain three from deep and add on four free throws, giving him a season-high 16 points in just the first half. Walker was the spark that spurred the Sixers to a 20-point lead at halftime. Not only his shooting, but his intensity on the glass and defensively helped set the tone for the squad.

3️⃣3️⃣ for 3️⃣. pic.twitter.com/YBocLnGZ4u

— Philadelphia 76ers (@sixers) December 6, 2025

He would tack on two more off a slick dime from Jared McCain in the third, bringing his season-best total to 18. Walker has already been a steal of a two-way contract, but if he continues to shoot the ball as he did on Friday, it will be tough to keep him off the court.

Quentin Grimes: 22 points, 6-of-7 3PT, 5 assists, 4 rebounds

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Grimes was the bench MVP in the second half, complementing George in their attempts to thwart the Bucks’ third-quarter comeback. His three makes from deep in the third kept the game out of reach, and his scoring output overall helped hide some fatigue from the Sixers starting guards. In games against undermanned teams, performances like tonight could help relieve some minutes for Maxey and Edgecombe.

AND ONNNNNNE !! pic.twitter.com/DTlMJHIDDD

— Philadelphia 76ers (@sixers) December 6, 2025

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...ucks-paul-george-jabari-walker-quentin-grimes
 
PG comes through as Sixers hang on to beat Bucks, win third straight

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A nice stress free 2-0 back-to-back, as everyone predicted.

The Sixers won their third in a row, knocking down the Milwaukee Bucks 116-101 Friday night.

Quentin Grimes led the Sixers with 22 points shooting a blistering 7-of-9 from the field along with four rebounds and five assists.

Tyrese Maxey only had 12 points and four assists on 5-of-14 shooting while VJ Edgecombe only had 10 going 4-of-8 from the field.

Staggering Paul George turned out just the way they wanted to — he went for 20 points, five boards and five assists, shooting 7-of-15 from the floor. Jabari Walker had 18 points off the bench while Bobby Portis led Milwaukee with 22.

Joel Embiid, Kelly Oubre Jr. and Trendon Watford were out for the Sixers while the Bucks were without Giannis Antetekoumnpo, who suffered a calf injury earlier this week.

Here are some thoughts at the buzzer.

First Quarter​

  • Maxey started the game as quick as he could, taking the opening tip into the paint for a floater. Dominick Barlow was rewarded for a backdoor cut with a lob and Edgecombe made somewhat of a grenade three. That was also quickly negated by a 3-of-4 Bucks’ start from three. Speaking of threes, Andre Drummond has now missed his last two by about five feet, which isn’t great.
  • The second unit did give a shot in the arm thanks to Adem Bona and Jared McCain. Bona took advantage of being left alone for a couple of baskets, and McCain nailed his first two long range attempts to give the Sixers an early double-digit lead.
the dish and the dunk! pic.twitter.com/TDBDalDfwU

— Philadelphia 76ers (@sixers) December 6, 2025
  • Jabari Walker has also been shooting it pretty well lately, and he continued to do so knocking down his first triple of the night as well. They were playing so well that Grimes’ three turnovers hardly slowed them down as they held a 13-point lead after one.

Second Quarter​

  • Walker didn’t just keep that rolling over quarters, it’s fair to say he lit the court up to start the second. Not only did he continue to drain threes, but he flew over a defender to save a possession with an offense rebound. George made his first impact of the game during this stretch as well knocking down a couple of long jumpers.
  • This start only improved the season lineup metrics for Kyle Lowry, who got his first minutes this season outside of the Barclays Center. In classic form, he immediately drew a loose ball foul in transition after securing a rebound. His perfect shooting percentage is no more as he missed his first attempt of the night, but was able to get on the board on his second. He had a really solid shift, picking up a steal to cap it off. The Sixers were great on the perimeter as a unit with eight steals in the half, Maxey with three himself.
  • For the second night in the row the Sixers had jumped all the way out to a 24-point lead. They do seem to ease up a bit as quarters end when they go up this much. Here they only allowed a couple easy layups in this stretch but they did throw their challenge away on rather meaningless out of bounds call. Grimes had turned things around though — an and-1 from him and a trip to the line from Walker gave the Sixers a 20-point lead at the half.

Third Quarter​

  • More reason for concern about how flat they began to look as it took them three and a half minutes to record their first field goal of the second half. Not long after that, they put the Bucks in the bonus with Edgecombe and Drummond each picking up a pair of fouls.
  • The contested runner in transition from Edgecombe was impressive, but it was a George three that settled things down for the Sixers a bit. Defensively, they had done a good job of limiting Milwaukee to what they were able to get at the line.
CIRCUS SHOT FROM VJ EDGECOMBE 🎪

76ers leading the Bucks on NBA League Pass: https://t.co/ILL8teRPSw pic.twitter.com/KeAGUhh3qn

— NBA (@NBA) December 6, 2025
  • The bench once again gave the Sixers a much needed surge. Walker tacked on another bucket and McCain got to the hoop after struggling to do so in the second, but it was Grimes’ heater that led the way. He was hardly touching the net coming off screens and knocked one down off the dribble as well. McCain’s three at the buzzer hit the front of the rim, making it just a 16-point Sixers lead

Fourth Quarter​

  • That stagnation continued to linger in the Sixers’ offense. They got Bona open rolling for a dunk, but otherwise couldn’t score as the Bucks continued to eat into the lead. Fatigue did look to be setting in for some, but they also had George on the court, who didn’t play the night before.
  • To be fair, George’s gravity did allow him to kick to some pretty open shooters but those shooters were losing their legs to make those shots. He did eventually take things into his own hands, burying midrange pull-ups on back-to-back possessions to push the lead back to 14 and prompt a Bucks timeout.
  • George was great on defense all night, and the Sixers needed it no more than when he caused two Portis misses with the Bucks swinging momentum back their way. He hustled back to contest a missed layup in transition and blocked a three on the following possession.
  • The Bucks double teams turned their way to George, and the Sixers needed someone else to make a shot. Edgecombe did when he was swung to. Ill-advisedly, George tried to power through the double on the following possession and airballed, but Drummond was there to scoop it up and lay it in. They struggled to beat the press the next trip up the floor, but Grimes buried a three and was fouled for his troubles to put a cap on things.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...rge-tyrese-maxey-quentin-grimes-jabari-walker
 
The Sixers need to shoot the ball better

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Friday night’s win in Milwaukee needs to be a sign of things to come for the Sixers.

In a game in which Philadelphia led by as many as 26, the team got 43 attempts from beyond the three-point line up and connected on 17 of them. That’s a 40% success rate from outside the arc. Perhaps the most positive thing from the box score on Friday was the outside shooting from the bench. Quentin Grimes shot 6-of-7 from three-point land and Philly got a 4-for-8 night from deep from Jabari Walker.

Despite the hot shooting night against the Bucks, the Sixers are hovering around the middle of the NBA in three-point shooting at 36.1% for the season after 22 games. It’s not bad, but is it good enough? Well, I guess it depends on what your goals are for this season.

Some fans probably look at 2025-26 as a transition year. The Sixers have so much dead weight tied up in Joel Embiid and Paul George’s contracts. Therefore, an argument can be made that the team is best suited to see what it has on the rest of the roster this season to set itself up for 2026-27 and beyond to go with Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe. If Grimes thrives in the bench role he thrived in on Friday night for a good chunk of the season, and is willing to accept a similar role in the future to stay in Philadelphia, that would be a win for the organization. If Jabari Walker were to become any sort of rotational piece, that would be another win.

We’ve yet to see Jared McCain return to his rookie year self before his meniscus injury, but McCain’s progress would be another helpful step in the transition away from Embiid and George and towards the team’s younger players. So, if that’s your motivation for this season, then nights like Friday night occurring enough are most important and the team’s win-loss record is secondary. Of course, the Sixers won easily against the Bucks so these things do not have to be mutually exclusive.

Having said all of that, this season should be about winning games first and foremost. The Sixers likely will not own their first-round pick in 2026 and there are still multiple years of Embiid and George’s contracts to deal with beyond this year. Does that sound like a team that should prioritize developmental results from its younger players? Yes, the franchise is in a weird place and sort of stuck, but that doesn’t mean it shouldn’t try to make the most of the situation.

When you look at the roster, there simply aren’t many interior offensive threats that you can count on. Therefore, as per the modern basketball school of thought when it comes to offensive success, if you’re not going to be able to rack up a ton of points in the paint, your best bet is to let it fly from the three-point line a bunch. That means that hovering in the middle of the NBA in three-point percentage isn’t going to work for Philadelphia since the Sixers aren’t going to be able to complement their outside shooting with enough scoring inside.

When it comes to the individuals that need to shoot the ball more consistently, let’s start with Grimes. In five games in the month of October, Grimes shot 44% from the three-point line. Philadelphia won four of those five games and the one loss was an NBA Cup game against Boston by one point. He went 4-of-8 from three-point land in the team’s first game in November, a blowout win against Brooklyn, but for the entire month of November, he shot just 34% from deep in 14 total games.

Grimes missed Philly’s first December game against Washington, but went 0-of-5 from the three-point line against Golden State before the big night against Milwaukee. There really is no excuse for Grimes to be this volatile. If you exclude all the starts he made with the Sixers last year, a team that simply needed bodies to get through a disastrous season, Grimes has mostly been a bench guy that can come in and provide some outside shooting. He shouldn’t be uncomfortable in that kind of a role in the backcourt behind Maxey and Edgecombe and should be able to knock down anywhere from two to six three-point field goals a night.

Perhaps we should be a little less critical of McCain due to his return from a major knee injury, but his three-point field goal percentage is down from 38% in 23 games last season to 34% thru 13 games this season. The reality is that if this is going to be a good season for the Sixers, they’re going to need more from McCain, which he could certainly be capable of in the second half, but it hasn’t come yet.

I understand many fans probably want nothing to do with George at this point, but the veteran wing player is again underperforming from beyond the arc. Prior to coming to Philadelphia, George shot a career best 41.3% from deep in 2023-24 with the Clippers, He also appeared in 74 games for Los Angeles, starting all of them in that season, which feels impossible to believe given how much time he has missed as a Sixer. In his first season in Philly, George shot 35.8% from three-point land on 6.5 attempts per game and this season in seven games he’s shooting an even 35% on 5.7 attempts per game. George might not be the dynamic three-level scorer he was earlier in his career, but is it asking too much from him to flirt with 40% on threes again?

We should note that VJ Edgecombe is certainly pulling his weight when it comes to three-point shooting. That was one of the knocks on Edgecombe as a prospect coming out of Baylor, but he’s just south of 37% in his first two months in the NBA. So that leaves Grimes, McCain and George as the three players whose outside shooting needs to be consistent enough in order to provide ample support for Edgecombe and Maxey.

There’s reason to believe McCain will grow into a bigger role as the season progresses and shooting has always been a strength of his. George can’t be counted on to play basketball at a high level any more so I wouldn’t be nearly as optimistic in his shooting improving. That leaves Grimes as the wild card. Grimes is already on his fourth team in the NBA since being drafted in 2021 and could be headed for a fifth next season if he doesn’t re-sign with Philadelphia. Players that travel down those kinds of career paths can be difficult to trust, so frankly your guess is as good as mine when it comes to what kind of shooting nights we’re going to get from Grimes.

It should come as no surprise that a no-sweat win on the road like Friday night’s in Milwaukee was fueled by a strong shooting night for the Sixers. That’s going to have to be their bread and butter this season if they want to be successful, and being a run-of-the-mill shooting team isn’t going to be good enough.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...hrees-quentin-grimes-paul-george-jared-mccain
 
Sixers Bell Ringer: LeBron and Lakers halt Sixers’ winning streak

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2025-26 Sixers Bell Ringer standings:
Tyrese Maxey – 10
VJ Edgecombe – 2
Andre Drummond – 2
Paul George – 1
Dom Barlow – 1
Adem Bona – 1
Justin Edwards – 1
Quentin Grimes – 1
Jared McCain – 1
Kelly Oubre Jr – 1
Trendon Watford – 1
15th roster spot – 1



Stepping on the court back at home while riding a three-game winning streak, the Philadelphia 76ers took the lead into halftime, before the usual third-quarter woes reared their head in an eventual 112-108 defeat to Los Angeles. LeBron James turned back the clock with 29 points on 12-of-17 shooting, and hit some huge shots to carry the Lakers across the finish line in the final minute and change. Luka Doncic had a ho-hum 31-point, 15-rebound, 11-assist masterclass. The Sixers definitely had their chances to come away with a win, and probably would have if Joel Embiid didn’t have an absolutely dreadful shooting night, but objectively speaking, it was at least a fun game to watch. They’ll have plenty of time to think about it as they don’t play again until Friday, but for now, let’s talk Bell Ringer.

Tyrese Maxey: 28 points, 7 rebounds, 9 assists, 2 steals, 2 blocks, 3 turnovers

Luka Doncic, LeBron James and Tyrese Maxey were all in the same class tonight, and honestly, that’s basically every night nowadays for the Sixers star guard. Tyrese had the outside shot working, draining 5-of-8 shots from behind the arc, with a couple coming off screens as an off-ball mover. He also roasted some Lakers off the dribble to convert scoop shots and floaters, and made advanced reads to find open teammates in the corners. Maxey’s defensive acumen continues to grow, as well, whether he was digging down to steal the ball from LeBron when his back was turned, or swiping the ball out of Luka’s hands from behind on a shot attempt. He’s doing it all in every phase of the game for the Sixers.

Sixers up 60-53 at the half. Maxey leads the team with 15 points. pic.twitter.com/pJXT81sncx

— Liberty Ballers (@Liberty_Ballers) December 8, 2025

VJ Edgecombe: 15 points, 5 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 turnover

The Baylor product keeps taking everything thrown his way and running with it. It was Edgecombe’s third straight game with multiple threes, and he’s at a rock-solid 36.7 percent on the season. He is creating off the dribble, both for himself and others, getting valuable backup point guard reps. All the holes in his scouting profile have already been answered two months particularly off-the-charts performance from VJ, but we’re at the point where 15 points and some good sides is a baseline night for a 20-year-old rookie.

Gosto muito quando Filadélfia dá poder ao VJ Edgecombe, oferecendo a ele bastante espaço para trabalhar.

Ao fazer isso, eles maximizam seus atributos atléticos e dificultam a marcação, já que ele entra no garrafão com bastante velocidade.

pic.twitter.com/8pW4twb839

— Hooper Flagg (@FlaggHooper) December 8, 2025

Jared McCain: 8 points, 1 rebound, 1 assist, 0 turnovers

McCain had a terrific two-minute stretch in the second quarter where he feinted a dribble handoff with Embiid and knocked down a three, caught the defense back on its heels in transition for a lay-in, and came off a Joel screen to nail an off-the-dribble three. It was a flashback to the instant offense he provided last season. So it was definitely weird that he only saw three minutes and change in the second half, without any minutes in the third quarter as the usual sand ran through the hourglass on the Sixers’ lead. I know he isn’t the two-way force of the rest of the guard rotation, but Jared is looking more or less like his old self, so the usage, or lack thereof, is confusing.

And even more J-Mac pic.twitter.com/0k2vGSdAqP

— Liberty Ballers (@Liberty_Ballers) December 8, 2025

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...lebron-tyrese-maxey-vj-edgecombe-jared-mccain
 
On LeBron, Maxey and high-level hoops in South Philly

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Ahead of a matchup against the Sixers Sunday, LeBron James was questionable on the injury report with sciatica and left foot joint arthritis.

Yeah, 40-year-old problems.

But not only did James play, he closed the game in vintage fashion, going on a heater that ultimately helped the Lakers beat the Sixers 112-108. It was a reminder that LeBron is still That Dude in a career full of such moments.

“I told him, ‘Man, ain’t nothing wrong with your foot.‘ He’s out here left-hand dunking,” Tyrese Maxey said.

This is James’ 23rd season. He’ll turn 41 in a couple weeks. His longevity is remarkable, unparalleled by any player before him — and likely any player after him.

“I don’t think I want to play 23 years,” Maxey said when asked if James’ longevity inspires him. “I don’t think so.”

Maxey was no slouch himself Sunday evening. The 25-year-old guard continues to play at an All-NBA level, posting 28 points, nine assists, seven rebounds, two steals and two blocks. Unfortunately, he didn’t have much help. He was 11-of-24 from the field. The rest of the Sixers shot 25-of-78 (32%).

Still, it was a wildly entertaining night of basketball. High-level hoops, some might say. Xfinity Mobile Arena was packed. The crowd was loud — though perhaps a bit more for James than the home team.

But it was nice for that building to have life again. There wasn’t much last season (understandably). The year prior, a bunch of Knicks fans took it over in the playoffs, which was disheartening. The only similar energy that season was Joel Embiid’s 70-point game, which feels like at least one lifetime ago.

Maxey has helped bring that back a bit with his electric play and the Sixers’ high-wire act so far in 2025-26. James has been a mentor to Maxey throughout the years. Maxey is of course a client of Klutch Sports, the agency founded by James’ childhood friend, Rich Paul.

Even after a virtuoso performance, James was quick to heap praise on the Sixers’ star guard.

“I love the success, and the humbleness that Tyrese does it with,” he said. “It starts with his family and he’s just taking full advantage of the opportunity here and he’s made the most of it. … Obviously, I love his game, but I love him the person more than his game, and that’s tough to do as great as he is on the court.”

James and Maxey work out together every summer, getting to the gym at 5 or 6 a.m. If LeBron is an inspiration to Maxey in any way, it’s how much James still loves the game at his age and with all his accomplishments.

He’s inspired the next generation to cherish the game.

“I appreciate him like an older brother,” Maxey said. “I can call him and talk to him anytime. We can crack jokes with each other every now and then. He’s a good player … pretty good player.”

Who knows how many more of these performances LeBron has left? Who knows if this is the last time we’ll see him play in Philly?

King James made sure to give the birthplace of the nation its flowers as well.

“One thing you know about Philly fans is they don’t care about anyone besides their own teams,” he said. “And I respect that and I love that.”

The night was a good reminder of why we love basketball — to see the greatest athletes in the world do things we could only dream of doing.

In LeBron’s case, that means literally just about anyone who has ever picked up a basketball. So, enjoy him while you can. Love an ascending star like Maxey while he’s just scratching the surface of what he might ultimately become.

Let’s thank god this fuckery is going on for much longer than anyone could’ve imagined, as we see the torch slowly being passed.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...igh-level-hoops-in-south-philly-sixers-lakers
 
Sixers need to let McCain-Edgecombe backcourt take its lumps

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Anyone watching Jared McCain in his first few games of the season could tell he was still dealing with the lingering effects of the thumb and knee injuries that kept him out of action for 11 months. The bulky brace he wore on his knee restricted his mobility and he could not buy a jumper to fall. There’s no better stat to turn to here than the simple fact that he was scoreless in the first four games he appeared in this season.

How shaky he looked impacted how much Nick Nurse trusted him to be on the floor, creating a negative feedback loop of not making enough of an impact to stay on the floor, but not getting enough minutes to get in any possible rhythm. After playing 15 minutes in his first game back, McCain would not play more than 10 minutes in a game for a whole two weeks.

A two-game stint in the G-League with the Delaware Blue Coats to get his feet under him seems to have done exactly that. McCain’s averages still aren’t close to what he put up when he burst on the scene as a rookie, but he’s now averaging 7.5 points playing 18 minutes a night, doing so on 38.1% field goal shooting and 35.7% from three-point range.

He’s put together performances that look more and more like his brilliant, shortened rookie campaign, but is still the odd man out when it comes to the Sixers’ four guard rotation of himself, Tyrese Maxey, VJ Edgecombe and Quentin Grimes.

After playing over 20 minutes in seven straight games, McCain only played 12 minutes in a loss to the Los Angeles Lakers, a loss in which the 35% from the field shooting Sixers were desperate for someone to put the ball in the hoop. Nurse cited concerns over McCain’s ability to hang defensively against a team as big and long as the Lakers.

Those are valid concerns. McCain’s size and lack of quickness have always presented challenges for him to stay in front of guys. Working his way back up to game speed after missing so much time hasn’t helped either, it’s seeped its way onto the offensive end as well. Per Cleaning the Glass, McCain is taking 8% less shots at the rim from a season ago, dropping him from the 67th percentile in his position group to the 40th.

Even after filtering out his 0-for start, he’s been much less effective in the midrange compared to a season ago. He’s shooting 29% from that part of the floor as opposed to 46% last year, again, a big jump down in percentile.

While this is all true, he has really started to look more like himself as he’s gotten more run. Filtering games since he’s actually hit a shot, that midrange percentage is up to 35%.

This puts the Sixers at an interesting crossroads: McCain’s physical profile leaves him the least trusted by the coach, but his shooting skillset is a necessity, especially to ease the load of the league’s leader in minutes, Maxey.

The key to figuring out this conundrum may lie in the second unit, though it will come with a lot of growing pains. Something the Sixers have gone to with Maxey on the bench since they’ve had (close to) all their guys on the floor is the show being ran by Edgecombe and McCain.

It’s been exciting to see that lineup work, not only because of the real-time growth between two of the franchise’s potential most important long-term pieces, but also because of the extra rest it’s been able to give Maxey in games.

McCain made a great example of this with the 20-point game he dropped on Nov. 28 against the Brooklyn Nets, but take it with all the grains of salt given the opponent.

Another example was the eight-point stretch he had in the second quarter in that loss to the Lakers. His time running the offense gave Maxey the chance to sit a couple extra minutes, but a big reason is a variable the Sixers cannot rely on as much, and that’s Joel Embiid being available.

Even on a night where he shots 4-of-21 from the field, in another season where he hasn’t looked as physically dominant, Embiid has still drawn an incredible amount of attention from opposing defenses. There’s perhaps no other Sixer with the proper feel, relocation skills and shooting ability to take advantage of Embiid’s gravity. How hard he gets Austin Reaves to bite and get himself wide open here is a great example of that.

Jo-JMac pic.twitter.com/96EHoLfdzw

— Liberty Ballers (@Liberty_Ballers) December 8, 2025

Lineups with McCain and Edgecombe so far do not have the best metrics. The Sixers have a -5.4 point differential with those two on the court and a big reason is the 100.7 points per 100 possessions they’ve scored, which would be the in the league’s worst percentile.

The numbers of most frequently used lineup with those two however look great, and that lineup happens to feature Embiid, someone’s who typically started quarters this season as part of his minutes restriction.

The lineup of Embiid, McCain and Edgecombe along with Grimes and Jabari Walker have a +29.8 point differential, scoring a blistering 123.5 points per possessions. Of course it’s worth remembering the tiny 17 possession sample size there’s been of said lineup.

Still, McCain continues to look more like the version of himself from a year ago the more minutes he gets, and it’s clear he knows how to play off of offensive talent. With the team’s offensive rating cratering every time Maxey leaves the floor, McCain’s role as leading the second unit offense should be clear.

It won’t be an easy balance to strike, trying to win games right now while letting two players younger than 22 years old carry so much responsibility. It’s a big ask of Edgecombe as well, whose shooting has come down to earth since his torrid start to his career.

Giving these two the reigns with Maxey on the bench may not help the Sixers win the most games this season. McCain will certainly struggle with defensive assignments more than someone like Grimes. Edgecombe may never develop into the complete offense player he’s shown flashes of, but it’s time for the Sixers to start finding these things out.

With the two players on this roster making 57% of the team’s salary as unreliable as ever, the Sixers need to continue shifting their priority in this direction.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...-mccain-vj-edgecombe-backcourt-take-its-lumps
 
Was that LeBron’s last game in Philly?

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I am fortunate enough to have attended some of the greatest sporting events in Philadelphia’s history, from Game 5 of the 2008 World Series to the 2017 NFC Championship Game. Those are iconic for what they meant to the city’s sports landscape, but the downright coolest game I ever attended is a little less known.

During the 2011 NBA lockout, LeBron James descended upon Philly’s hallowed basketball cathedral, the Palestra for a pickup game. In a “Team Melo” vs. “Team Philly” matchup with LeBron suiting up for the former squad, I was fortunate enough to see the greatest basketball player of the 21st century with just roughly 9,000 other people in that sweat-inducing arena. It was glorious. LeBron would go on to win his first NBA title nine months later and his legacy has only continued to grow from there.

Fast forward almost 15 years later and LeBron is still doing it.

On Sunday evening, he had an archetypal prime LeBron stat line of 29-7-6 in a Lakers win in South Philadelphia that included a game-sealing jumper with under 30 seconds on the clock to help secure the Los Angeles victory. LeBron has been at it so long that he beat the Sixers in their early 2000s throwbacks after playing against the franchise when they were originally wearing them two-plus decades ago.

LeBron hasn’t made any official retirement plans, but it’s fair to wonder a few weeks before his 41st birthday in the middle of his 23rd NBA season if this is the end of the run for King James and if Sunday was the last time he’d ever suit up in Philly.

If it was, well, he dominated the Sixers just as much as he dominated any other helpless team in the league. In 59 regular season games, LeBron averaged a cool 27-7-8 with a true shooting percentage of 60.1 percent against the Sixers. His Heat defeated the Sixers in a first round gentleman’s sweep in the 2011 NBA playoffs for good measure as well. I attended Game 4 of that series, the famed Lou Williams game-winner contest, so I’m fortunate enough to say I’ve seen one of the greatest athletes to ever live multiple times with my own two eyes.

As a crazed Philadelphian, I wish the Sixers had gotten the best of him every time. As a pure basketball fan, I can at least take solace in the fact that I witnessed a level of greatest that’s scope extends far beyond my world and even my lifetime.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...ebron-james-last-game-in-philly-sixers-lakers
 
Editor-in-chief mailbag: The Sixers get a break

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It’s clear the Sixers are not built for The Cup … and it’s the best thing for them.

With the knockout stage of the Emirates NBA Cup set to start, the teams that didn’t qualify will get a nice break from the rigors of an 82-game schedule. The Sixers will have four days off before they host the Indiana Pacers on Friday. They’ll head to Atlanta for a matchup with the Hawks Sunday, but will get another four days off before their first matchup of the season against the New York Knicks next Friday.

For a team that’s dealt with injury and continuity issues since opening night, that time could be incredibly value. Sure, the Sixers have been playing pretty well, so a halt to momentum is tough, but they can now basically have training camp 2.0.

Hit me with your questions about the 13-10 Sixers.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...ditor-in-chief-mailbag-the-sixers-get-a-break
 
Is Tyrese Maxey’s leap big enough to make the Sixers consider a Giannis trade?

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Just hear me out, alright.

Our fearless leader Paul Hudrick wrote earlier this week about the Sixers’ best path to title contention. Most are definitely taking a wait-and-see approach to this season because there is just a lot of figuring out still to do with this roster. As he points out though, it appears the Sixers have a Batman again in Tyrese Maxey — how do they go about finding his Robin?

The internal candidates he outlined are certainly the most realistic, but what if there was another Batman out there on the market? One the Sixers could put a competitive offer out for that could vault them into title contention, especially if Maxey is up to the task?

I am of course talking about Giannis Antetokounmpo, the MVP candidate who seems to have finally gotten his departure from the Milwaukee Bucks rolling last week before suffering a calf injury that will hold him out for a few weeks.

This is probably absurd thinking for a couple reasons. The Sixers are very much not Giannis’ preferred destination — by all indications that would be the New York Knicks, who are currently more equipped to compete for a title. The Sixers also can’t top the “godfather offers” of the Houston Rockets, San Antonio Spurs or Atlanta Hawks.

When Giannis trade talks started swirling in the offseason, this was hardly a thought for Sixers fans. Mostly because the franchise’s most recent Batman, Joel Embiid, has not been reliably available enough at all to consider taking such a swing. Already missing a nine-game stretch with knee soreness this year, there’s been no reason to question that line of thinking.

Maxey’s leap to the production of a No. 1 guy might change the calculous on that. He’s third in the league in scoring, shooting a blinding 39.1% from three and 46.7% from the field overall. Given how things ended this may not be the best example, but his season averages are almost identical to Damian Lillard’s last season in Portland before the Bucks acquired him to pair with Antetokounmpo.

I think this is all worth bringing up because I think the Sixers could put together an enticing package for Antetekounmpo, one certainly better than anything his desired team, the Knicks, can put together. The problem of the Giannis-Lillard duo was not due to their production, but due to the team’s inability to build a solid supporting cast around them.

It would be a huge risk as the package I’m talking about would send both Jared McCain and VJ Edgecombe to Milwaukee. The inclusion of Edgecombe might already be a non-starter for the Sixers’ front office. He was highly coveted for this team at the No. 3 overall pick and every quote and action by the organization has only backed up their belief in him.

Also unlike the Knicks, the Sixers possess some intriguing future picks, including the Clippers’ 2028 unprotected first-rounder and a potential 2029 pick swap with LA (top-four protected). They still owe the Oklahoma City Thunder and Brooklyn Nets picks, but have multiple first-rounders of their own able to be moved.

The deal I’ve cooked up sends McCain, Edgecombe and Paul George to fill salary in a three-for-one deal for Antetokounmpo. According to FanSpo’s trade machine, that would give the Sixers about $14 million dollars to fill out the rest of the roster before hitting the first apron and $26 million before hitting the second.

There could be plenty of holdouts in just getting that done of course. The Bucks might also want to throw in a contract they want to get off of like Bobby Portis. They might still balk at taking George’s contract back even with the inclusion of both young guards in the deal.

If a deal is there though, is there enough wiggle room for the Sixers to create a better support system around Giannis and a star guard? Is the supporting cast of Quentin Grimes, Kelly Oubre Jr., Dominick Barlow, Trendon Watford and co. better than what Giannis’ supporting cast in Milwaukee? It’s certainly debatable.

There’s still the Embiid wild card to consider. The combo of him, Antetekoumnpo and Maxey all on the court could truly be an unstoppable offensive force, but of course there’s no guarantee of those three playing together for a consistent basis. Would it be that hard to see them getting far in this particular Eastern Conference?

There’s also no guarantee of Giannis and Embiid fitting seamlessly with both needing to dominate the paint. With the league trending further and further towards the importance of depth, it’d make an expensive Sixers’ roster even riskier. In a perfect world, they’d only have Maxey and these young pieces, no giant, old contracts tethering down every decision they make.

Even in this imperfect situation though, not only do I believe the ascension of Maxey makes the question worth asking, but if they do, they could beat out potential packages made by more serious suitors.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...h-to-make-the-sixers-consider-a-giannis-trade
 
The Sixers’ path to contention would likely come from an internal source

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Before the 2025-26 season began, there was a sector of Sixers fans who wondered what the team’s tanking path could look like with Joel Embiid and Paul George both recovering from knee surgeries. There were some who pondered what the team could get for Tyrese Maxey in a trade. Others even thought about using Jared McCain as a throw-in to move up in the NBA Draft instead of selecting VJ Edgecombe.

Considering all of that, a 13-10 start to the campaign feels … promising?

Now, nobody should be planning to march down Broad St. The Sixers are middle of the pack when it comes to offensive, defensive and net rating. They sit in seventh in the East. They look more like a team that will hover a little over .500 and flirt with a potential sixth seed than a real contender.

But with Tyrese Maxey playing at an All-NBA level and more depth than they’ve had in a long time, what would it take for the Sixers to be more? The answer likely comes from within — in a literal sense, though one could argue a spiritual one as well.

If Maxey is this team’s Batman, he’s going to need a Robin. And maybe a Nightwing, too. (Given Maxey’s affinity for Marvel, he’d likely prefer to be called Spider-Man and say the Avengers need to assemble around him.) With a trade for a franchise-altering player being unlikely, the team will need to find that answer inside the organization. The team essentially has four wildcards in that department: Joel Embiid, Paul George, Jared McCain and VJ Edgecombe.

Embiid and George are the most obvious candidates here. They’re on max contracts and have a combined 16 All-Star appearances between them. The obvious issue is health. Will either be healthy enough consistently enough to make that level of impact?

Embiid struggled mightily from the floor in the most recent loss to Los Angeles, but he did seem to be moving better defensively, especially late in the game. The Sixers likely don’t win in Milwaukee last week against the Bucks without George, but the veteran forward was most invisible against the Lakers. There are moments where it looks like it could all work … if they stay healthy. (Understood if your first thought is Lucy pulling the football away from Charlie Brown). It’s so hard to count on that, but it would be the easiest way for the Sixers to go from a play-in berth to having home-court advantage in a playoff series.

With McCain and Edgecombe, the issue isn’t health, though both have missed time this season. The impediments are age and experience. McCain will turn 22 in February, while Edgecombe won’t turn 21 until the offseason. We’ve seen significant flashes from both players — bright enough for you to dream on what they can become.

We saw what McCain can do last season during an incredibly impressive 12-game stretch. He looked like he was going to run away with the Rookie of the Year award before suffering a torn meniscus. Nothing about that stretch felt flukey, either. The Sixers faced real competition and they were still trying to win games. He’s been up and down while coming off knee and thumb surgeries, and his size and lack of elite athleticism have clearly given Nick Nurse pause to play him big minutes. At some point, though, you have to let McCain loose and see if he can find last season’s magic again.

As for Edgecombe, his scoring output has dipped after a ridiculous start. A calf injury also set him back a bit. He’s still playing extremely well for a rookie in his position. The Sixers are asking him to do a lot defensively, on the glass and as the team’s backup point guard. He’s handling those responsibilities remarkably well and still helping the Sixers win. Can he rediscover some of that scoring from his fantastic start? If he does, it could change the Sixers’ outlook in a big way.

The Sixers have been fun. They’re playing fast and hard and have generally been in every game this season. With what it felt like going into the year, that alone feels like a decent outcome. And if all they provide is some version of what we’ve already seen — a decent team getting Maxey heaters and inconsistent play from the four aforementioned guys — that’s a far better outcome than many were preparing for before the season began.

But if one (or more) of those four guys can truly pop, 2025-26 could become a lot more interesting.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...-embiid-paul-george-vj-edgecombe-jared-mccain
 
Delaware Blue Coats acquire rights to Charles Bassey

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It’s not trade season in the NBA yet, but that hasn’t stopped G League teams from staying active. The Philadelphia 76ers’ affiliate, the Delaware Blue Coats, made a move on Thursday by sending Emoni Bates to the Texas Legends for the G League rights to a familiar face, Charles Bassey.

thank you, Emoni.

OFFICIAL: the Blue Coats acquire the NBA G League rights to Charles Bassey from the Texas Legends in exchange for Emoni Bates. pic.twitter.com/2l7PyMW688

— Delaware Blue Coats (@blue_coats) December 11, 2025

Bates joined the Sixers organization late, signing an Exhibit 10 deal in September and spending almost all of his time with the Blue Coats. In seven games, the former top prospect averaged 19.1 points and 4.4 rebounds in just over 30 minutes, shooting 43.4 percent from the field and 32.9 percent from three. Now it looks like he’ll take his talents to Texas.

Many fans will remember Bassey, who the Sixers drafted late in the second round of the 2021 draft. He was involved in one of the more memorable contract disputes for a late pick, holding out for months before finally signing and securing an extra partially guaranteed second year (which did end up netting him some extra money). Bassey played 23 games for the Sixers and averaged 7.3 minutes under Doc Rivers. His best moment with the team came in November of his rookie season, when an injury- and COVID-depleted Sixers squad faced the Denver Nuggets. Bassey delivered 12 points, seven rebounds and three blocks against Nikola Jokić, and held his own defensively for most of the night.

After that performance, Bassey didn’t see the floor much, logging only 124 more minutes with the Sixers. He was waived in October 2022 and went on to sign a two-way deal with the San Antonio Spurs. He eventually earned a standard NBA contract worth over $10 million across four years, playing 90 games in three seasons, although knee injuries slowed him down. San Antonio moved on just before the 2025 season.

Most recently, Bassey returned to the NBA in October with a 10-day hardship deal from the Memphis Grizzlies. He averaged 3.5 points, 7.5 rebounds and an assist in two games, playing 15.5 minutes per contest.

So what does this move mean? It could go a few different ways. Bassey hasn’t played in the G League for quite some time, which explains why Delaware needed to trade for his rights rather than making a simple player swap. He might be heading overseas, and the Blue Coats are just securing his rights in case he returns. Or this could mostly be about Bates, who has played well and may have drawn more interest from Texas.

There’s also the possibility that the Sixers have some level of interest in bringing Bassey back. They’ve had interest before, and while the Grizzlies are in a difficult stretch right now, their front office still tends to make analytically driven decisions. Hardship players rarely stick long-term, and Bassey was no exception, but he did put up solid numbers in limited minutes and fills some clear needs for the Sixers. He rebounds, blocks shots and can do a few different things on offense. In theory, he brings more size and rebounding than Adem Bona and more athleticism and shot blocking than Andre Drummond. In a way, he sits in the middle of what both reserve bigs offer.

One key detail is that Bassey is no longer eligible for a two-way contract. If the Sixers wanted him back, it would have to be through a standard deal. That could be a simple 10-day using their open roster spot or a partially guaranteed contract, but he cannot replace Dominick Barlow, Jabari Walker or Hunter Sallis on a two-way.

We’ll likely get a better sense of the reasoning behind the move soon, whether Bassey reports to Delaware or the team simply holds onto his rights. For now, it’s at least a small reunion between the Sixers and their former draft pick.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76ers-news/82352/delaware-blue-coats-acquire-rights-to-charles-bassey
 
Andre Drummond has proven to be the biggest pleasant surprise for the Sixers

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With the NBA Cup providing a break in the schedule for the Philadelphia 76ers earlier this week, it was a good time to reflect on the first quarter of the regular season. While the Sixers have certainly had some letdowns since the season first tipped off back in October, I think anyone would have realistically been happy with a 13-10 start, particularly following the morass of misery we had to wade through a year ago.

We could go down the list of reasons for the early success, many of which provide positive indicators for the Sixers’ future: Tyrese Maxey making another leap, rookie VJ Edgecombe being That Dude, Daryl Morey finding contributors with minimum or two-way deals like Trendon Watford, Dominick Barlow and Jabari Walker, etc. But there’s one big surprise that probably doesn’t have an impact on the future, but sure is helpful in the present: Andre Drummond’s reemergence as the innings-eater center the Sixers signed up for two summers ago.

Dealing with a toe injury last season, Drummond looked like a shell of himself, arguably not even a viable NBA player any longer, let alone the guy with two All-Star appearances under his belt. People threw the Washed word around for him, bemoaned Morey giving him a second year on the deal, and wondered how the contract could be salary-dumped. Fortunately for the Sixers, his poor play appears to have been almost entirely a result of that toe and not due to his hitting his early-30s.

Drummond has rebounded this season both literally and figuratively, with higher rebounds and blocks per 36-minute stats than last season, and lower turnover and personal foul per-36 numbers. Moreover, buoyed by his new three-point-shooting prowess and an excellent 59.4 percent figure on two-pointers, Drummond’s true shooting percentage of 60.2 percent would be the second-best mark of his career. (Andre’s new three-point weapon isn’t the focus of this piece, but nearly doubling his career total for made triples in 22 games while shooting 37.9 percent is absolutely wild.)

The Sixers have surely needed that giant production from Andre this year. To no one’s surprise, Joel Embiid has missed over half the team’s games due to issues in both knees. Adem Bona has missed a bit of time, but also still fouls too often to be a consistent presence. You can’t bank on second-round picks, obviously, but there hasn’t even been a hint of Johni Broome being a thing. Meanwhile, Drummond has shown on-court abilities new and old, and most importantly, had availability. He has appeared in 22 of the team’s 23 games, only surpassed by Tyrese Maxey not missing a contest, while even playing through a knee sprain of his own. His presence in the pivot has been crucial for the Sixers thus far.

Prior to the season, you could have convinced me that Tyrese “one percent better every day” Maxey would enter the All-NBA discussion. A third overall pick like VJ Edgecombe providing day-one value is hardly unheard of in the sport. But a guy in his age-32 season, with a positional skillset that typically ages poorly, suddenly doing a 180 in value and adding a super helpful new trick to boot? That’s truly surprising. For a fan base that has had to deal any number of negative surprises in recent years, let’s embrace the positives ones that come our way.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...-the-biggest-pleasant-surprise-for-the-sixers
 
Sixers Bell Ringer: Vets and the rook fill the Maxey void in win over Indiana

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2025-26 Sixers Bell Ringer standings:
Tyrese Maxey – 11
VJ Edgecombe – 2
Andre Drummond – 2
Paul George – 1
Dom Barlow – 1
Adem Bona – 1
Justin Edwards – 1
Quentin Grimes – 1
Jared McCain – 1
Kelly Oubre Jr – 1
Trendon Watford – 1
15th roster spot – 1



For the first time this season, the Philadelphia 76ers had to experience life without Tyrese Maxey, who missed his first game due to illness. In his absence, Sixers veterans and youngsters alike stepped up, and Philadelphia prevailed over a plucky Indiana Pacers team, 115-105. The Sixers will next play on Sunday in Atlanta, so hopefully Tyrese has a couple days to drink some hot tea and rest up. But tonight’s win provided a nice feeling to know that everything doesn’t necessarily have to fall to pieces with Philadelphia’s star guard sidelined. On to Bell Ringer candidates.

Joel Embiid: 39 points, 9 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 steal, 3 turnovers

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The dismal shooting display against the Lakers is now a distant memory. Embiid had the full arsenal of his offensive game working against the Pacers in the season-high 39-point effort. He looked as good physically as we’ve seen this season, able to establish position against Indiana defenders and play into contact to earn trips to the charity stripe (13-of-18 on free throws). He wasn’t shooting lights out from behind the arc, but after his ice-cold stretch from downtown, it was great to watch Joel get a couple to fall. But the midrange game was certainly on point, with a ton of silky smooth little stepback jumpers. Embiid even did some dirty work; one of the most important plays of the game came with a few minutes left, with Joel fighting underneath for an offensive rebound and three-point play on the putback to make it a two-possession game again. Time will tell if tonight was more of a one-game anomaly or sign of things to come, but it was sure fun to see Embiid still have this type of performance in his bag.

Joel Embiid got into a groove for the Sixers in Q2 vs. Pacers tonight, hitting jumpers and drawing fouls. Seems to be moving laterally a lot better tonight than we've seen this season so far.

In the second frame:
15 PTS (5-7 FG, 1-3 3PT)

Here's all 15 of those points ⬇️ pic.twitter.com/wrKHTbvcbU

— Erin Grugan (@eringrugan) December 13, 2025

VJ Edgecombe: 22 points, 4 rebounds, 5 assists, 2 steals, 0 turnovers

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With Maxey out, it looked like Edgecombe came into play with a clear idea in mind to take on more of an offensive role. He scored 14 points in the first quarter, tying his highest-scoring period as pro. The rookie guard finished 3-of-5 from behind the arc, but also contributed a bunch of points via drives, either finishing at the rim, sinking a soft floater, or drawing fouls. Edgecombe’s 10 free throw attempts (making seven) were easily a career-high. Add in his usual strong defense and some playmaking and it was an excellent all-around night for VJ, who scored 20-plus points for the first time since mid-November. He couldn’t have reasserted himself on a better evening.

Sixers rookie VJ Edgecombe leading the way after Q1 🔥

In the first frame:
14 PTS (5-6 FG, 2-3 3PT), 2 REB, 1 AST, 1 STL

Here's all 14 points from Q1 vs. Pacers tonight ⬇️ pic.twitter.com/vYuNUnAOTz

— Erin Grugan (@eringrugan) December 13, 2025

Paul George: 23 points, 6 rebounds, 5 assists, 1 steal, 4 turnovers

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George has mostly contributed positively since making his season debut a little under a month ago, and tonight was on the short list for his best game of the season. This was exactly the version of George the Sixers need at this stage of his career. He played terrific defense, created easy shots for others (a couple assists to Dominick Barlow around the rim stood out), and hit a number of contested jumpers. It’s great to have another guy who when the offense breaks down, can just create a shot for himself in a one-on-one situation. George finished the night 8-of-17 from the field, including 4-of-7 from three. The 23 points were a season-high, and between he and Joel, you saw the possible vision for how everything could potentially come together for the Sixers this season.

PG getting the Sixers started in Q4 — he's up to 19 points so far tonight. pic.twitter.com/nceMzQLNzo

— Liberty Ballers (@Liberty_Ballers) December 13, 2025

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...-rook-fill-the-maxey-void-in-win-over-indiana
 
Watch all 39 points of Joel Embiid’s season-best performance vs. Pacers

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(Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images)

The Philadelphia 76ers grabbed their 14th win of the season on Friday night, defeating the visiting Indiana Pacers 115-105, even with Tyrese Maxey sidelined due to illness.

Even more encouraging than the victory itself was the sight of Joel Embiid’s best performance of the season by a fair margin — not only statistically so, but he looked the most comfortable physically he has in a long time. Embiid put up a season-high 39 points on 12-for-23 (52.2%) field goal shooting and 13-for-18 shooting from the charity stripe in 31:56 on the floor. He sank two triples, grabbed nine rebounds (two offensive) and added three assists and a steal.

He looked extremely fluid moving laterally and didn’t seem to be hampered by pain at really any instance throughout this one. Though not exactly red-hot from long range, Embiid was sinking silky smooth midrange jumpers and drawing fouls out of the Pacers left and right. His grittiest play came at a moment the Sixers needed it most late in the fourth period, with Embiid battling under the rim for an offensive board and getting up the put-back to help secure the Philadelphia win.

How sustainable this level of play from Embiid is in his current health state remains to be seen. Regardless, it’s still nice to enjoy a vintage big fella performance when we can get one.

For a full game recap, you can find that here. To vote on the Bell Ringer, head here.

But here, let’s watch Embiid’s season-best performance from Friday evening!

Season-best 39-point performance from Joel Embiid tonight vs. Pacers. Moving well laterally, sinking shots, boxing out more and drawing fouls.

39 PTS (12-23 FG, 2-8 3PT, 13-18 FT), 9 REB, 3 AST, 1 STL in 31:56

Here is every point from Embiid tonight ⬇️ pic.twitter.com/jYfJv5u7S5

— Erin Grugan (@eringrugan) December 13, 2025

What impressed you most about Embiid’s game against the Pacers? Let us know in the comments!

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...hts-joel-embiid-sixers-philadelphia-nba-video
 
Embiid drops season-high 39 points as Maxey-less Sixers top Pacers

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Welcome back, big fella.

The Tyrese Maxey-less Sixers were able to get back on track, knocking off the Indiana Pacers 115-105 Friday night.

Joel Embiid easily had his best game since the 2024 playoffs, going for a season-high 39 points shooting 12-of-23 from the floor along with nine rebounds. VJ Edgecombe started the game brilliantly and finished with 22 points going 6-of-10 from the floor along with five assists and two steals.

Paul George went for 23 shooting 8-of-17 from the floor, while Pascal Siakam led the Pacers with 20.

Maxey missed his first game of the year with an illness, joining Kelly Oubre Jr. and Trendon Watford on the inactive list. Indiana was obviously without Tyrese Halliburton, Aaron Nesmith, and Obi Toppin.

Here are some thoughts at the buzzer.

First Quarter​

  • The Sixer who stepped up first in the absence of Maxey was George, who knocked down his first two jumpers of the night. He helped the Sixers start at a fast pace, pushing it up for a lob and a three on following possessions. One of those fast breaks was started thanks to George himself intercepting a pass.
  • Edgecombe was also a big help in getting the Sixers to play fast early. Every outlet pass he caught he was trying to get down to the rim. On one drive he took off a bit too early, and leaving an ambitious poster attempt 0ver Siakam. His shot was falling from outside early as he went for 14 in the first, a new career-high for any quarter for him.
VJ Edgecombe comin through! 💨 pic.twitter.com/pKpJzU1ZdP

— Liberty Ballers (@Liberty_Ballers) December 13, 2025
  • This was a controversial topic last game, but Embiid looked to be moving fairly well, importantly on defense as well. The rim got left out to dry a couple times as the Pacers turned three quick offensive rebounds into six second-chance points, but he had some strong contests, picking up one early block. For what could easily be the first time this year, the opponent had a notably easier time getting to their spots once Embiid went to the bench. As hot as the Sixers’ young guards were to start the game, they closed the quarter with just a three-point lead.

Second Quarter​

  • The Sixers started the quarter leaving T.J. McConnell wide open for three, and he stepped into it and made them pay. Some more established three-point shooters got going to start the quarter as the Sixers were not as tight on the perimeter as the Pacers ripped off a 12-3 run. While McConnell was giving them nightmares off the dribble, Jared McCain was able to give him a taste of his own medicine — swiping an outlet pass on an unsuspecting McConnell for a wide open layup.
  • That perimeter defense markedly improved upon Edgecombe’s return to the game. Both Edgecombe and George were very active causing deflections — it was easily the best thing they had going on for them defensively early, and they answered . Embiid had a much more efficient second shift, able to take Isaiah Jackson off the dribble and get going in the midrange.
Back-to-back buckets from the big fella! Joel Embiid up to 12 points. pic.twitter.com/JneU9nxtYv

— Liberty Ballers (@Liberty_Ballers) December 13, 2025

Third Quarter​

  • The momentum built by Embiid to close to half was built on to start the second. He continued to knock down jumpers at a blistering rate, including from behind the arc as he knocked another one down. Perhaps the most encouraging play was when he backed down Jay Huff on the block for an easy layup. For what felt like the first time in ages, Embiid received MVP chants from his home crowd.
  • Quentin Grimes and Dominick Barlow each chipped in with some baskets after a quiet start, but it was a classic Embiid third quarter, again a welcomed sight that hasn’t been seen in so long. It felt like an automatic basket or trip to the line, no matter if the Pacers were in man or zone. Embiid easily passed his season-high midway through the quarter. His play in the quarter got Maxey to fire off a mid-game tweet.
And with the 3-point play, Joel Embiid hits 30 points for the first time this season! (and we're only midway through Q3…) pic.twitter.com/VKmb3VTXq2

— Liberty Ballers (@Liberty_Ballers) December 13, 2025
GOOD PROCESS!!

— Tyrese Maxey (@TyreseMaxey) December 13, 2025
  • The production outside of Embiid began to run as dry as it had all night. The Pacers took advantage to erase a double-digit lead and retake the lead with a couple minutes left in the quarter. Running the offense through Edgecombe felt like the right thing to do, but he wasn’t able to get clean looks on his drives. George briefly steadied the ship, hitting a circus jumper from the free throw line that turned into a three-point play. A couple possessions later he knocked another from behind the arc, but a bad offensive rebound scooped up by McConnell allowed the Pacers to tie the game up at 90 as the quarter closed.

Fourth Quarter​

  • Again with Embiid on the bench, the Sixers suddenly had no answer for anything in the paint. Andre Drummond grabbed some tough offensive rebounds, but allowed too many on the other end as well. With their only source of scoring at the moment being pull-up jumpers from George, they struggled to keep up. This was yet another time when the Sixers, with a fair amount of bench guys out there, did not go to McCain despite struggling offensively.
  • The Sixers’ defense did improve upon Edgecombe and Embiid’s returns to the game. They held the Pacers scoreless for over three minutes. The Sixers slowly clawed their way back, but missed free throws only let them tie the game rather than taking the lead. The Pacers took the lead right back after Embiid fouled a three-point shooter.
  • Despite Alaa incorrectly attributing his scoring to bench points, it was actually Barlow who got the Sixers’ offense out of a rut. He actually made both of his free throws in a change of pace, and then hit a push shot set up by George to break a fairly long Sixers’ field goal drought.
Paul George finds Dominick Barlow down under the rim for the bucket! Sixers up 104-102. pic.twitter.com/W2XobITLdP

— Liberty Ballers (@Liberty_Ballers) December 13, 2025
  • Of course it was Embiid who hit the big momentum shot to cap off a 13-2 Sixers’ run. A broken possession led to a heavily contested Grimes three, but Embiid put himself in great position to scoop up the offensive layup, put it back, and get fouled for his troubles. Grimes followed that up with a trip to the line of his own, and when George got all the way to the hoop for a layup it gave the Sixers enough of a cushion to put this one away.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...me-recap-joel-embiid-vj-edgecombe-paul-george
 
A statement game? For Joel Embiid, it was just a win with a group he loves

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There was a time not so long ago where a Joel Embiid 39-point performance wouldn’t have moved the needle. There were nights when the former MVP got that done in three quarters.

The 39 points Embiid poured in Friday night in a 115-105 win over the Indiana Pacers felt a little different.

First off, it had been a while. The last time Embiid scored 39 points was May 2, 2024, against the New York Knicks in a Game 6 elimination loss. He failed to reach that number in 19 games last season. He hadn’t even hit the 30-point mark through his first nine games of 2025-26.

Was it a statement game?

“I don’t know. That’s for those people that don’t think I can do it to decide,” Embiid said. “I can’t change their mind or opinion. It feels good playing like that. I feel like I can do it.”

He was coming off his second-worst shooting game of the young season, a 4-for-21 outing against the Los Angeles Lakers this past Sunday. With the Sixers failing to qualify for the knockout stage of the NBA Cup, the big fella got a couple extra practice days — and some individual work with his longtime trainer Drew Hanlen — to find some rhythm and confidence.

“I think the practice helped,” Nick Nurse said, “his own individual work away from practice certainly helped, which is a great sign that he’s doing that and feeling good or better-ish to do some of that.”

The Sixers needed a vintage Embiid performance. With Tyrese Maxey missing his first game of the campaign, it would be on the veteran portion of the team’s Big 3 to come through — and they did just that.

Embiid and Paul George combined for 64 points and led a strong defensive effort against a scrappy Pacers team led by old friend T.J. McConnell. Indiana shot 25% from the field and put up just 15 points in the decisive fourth quarter. A lineup with VJ Edgecombe, Quentin Grimes and Dominick Barlow, anchored by Embiid and George, smothered the Pacers down the stretch.

It’s fair to note that Indiana, which is missing star guard Tyrese Haliburton and a few other key contributors, is dead last in the NBA in offensive rating. With that said, the Sixers are suddenly ninth in the NBA defensive rating — impressive after a rough start on that end of the floor.

Embiid’s movement improving has been a huge help. (George’s more consistent presence has also been key.) While he won’t likely regain the lateral quickness of his peak, he’s still as smart as any big when it comes to drop coverage. That was evident Friday.

George, who’s barely gotten to play with Embiid over the last season and change, has admired the effort his teammate has put in to be available.

“People don’t understand how much work he does, how much goes into his day-to-day and getting prepared for a game,” George said. “I talk to him, he’s got a list of things he does. He’s a hard worker, man, when it comes to taking care of his body and doing whatever it takes to get on the floor and be available for us. We appreciate all his efforts and just happy that it showed out.“

Embiid’s IQ has also grown exponentially over the years as teams have thrown exotic coverages at the seven-time All-Star. Friday night was no different as Rick Carlisle, one of the best tacticians we’ve seen in the NBA, threw the kitchen sink at Embiid.

After a relatively quiet first stint, Embiid was ultra-aggressive getting downhill during his next run. You could see the big man had more confidence in his body and movements, getting all the way to the cup for shots at the rim or drawing a foul. Then he started mixing in his midrange game and became increasingly difficult to slow down.

Carlisle did it all — 1-on-1, early double teams, late double teams, zone, bigger defenders, smaller defenders — but Embiid recognized and made the right plays all night. Nick Nurse knows a thing or two about throwing funky defensive schemes at star players. He was impressed with the way Embiid navigated those looks.

“Again, I keep saying, he’s best when he’s driving,” Nurse said. “I thought he drove it a lot to draw the fouls early, put them in a tough position of how to play him. I think the best part about it all — 39 is great — but it came in a lot of different schemes they threw at him, and I thought he read the different stuff pretty good most of the night.”

It wasn’t a perfect night by any means.

Embiid is still trying to find his three-ball, though he did end a long drought with a pretty pull-up three as the clock was winding down to close the first half. He finished the evening 2-of-8 from deep, but it was encouraging after he came in 0-for-his-last-16 on triples. He said postgame something had felt off in his shooting hand, but that he felt much better Friday.

The rebounding is still a bit of a concern as Embiid is still lacking much vertically as he works his way back. He joked recently that he was simply going to box out while allowing more athletic guys like Barlow and Edgecombe to swoop in. To his credit, the Sixers won the battle on the glass and Embiid himself came away with a huge offensive rebound and converted an and-one put-back that gave the Sixers a two-possession lead late.

It’s clear this was the most confident Embiid has been in his body in a long time. The mental aspect of things has been equally as important as his physical recovery. The fact that he’s enjoying showing up to the arena and being around his teammates is a big part of that.

“Obviously, when the vibes are positive, it helps a lot,” Embiid said. “Last year, I wasn’t happy all the time coming to work because of everything that was going on, whether it was on or off the court. This year it’s a little different. I got a great group of guys. … Having that stability off the court, you look at the guy next to you and you want to joke with them, talk with them, hang out, and being on the road and just chill — that goes a long way.”

Embiid closed the game by hitting as vintage a shot as we’ve seen him hit in over two years, backing down Pascal Siakam on the right block, then pirouetting left and burying a 17-foot fadeaway.

“It’s whatever,” he said. “We got the win. That’s all that matters, I think.”

Thirty-nine points from Joel Embiid? Light work.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...9-points-sixers-pacers-paul-george-nick-nurse
 
Editor-in-chief mailbag: With trade season officially here, what should the Sixers target?

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Dec. 15 is widely known as the official start of trade season, with many players who signed contracts this offseason eligible to be traded as of this date.

It will have little impact on the Sixers’ current roster. Trendon Watford, who is currently out with an adductor strain and has played only 14 games this season, is the only player this truly affects. The team isn’t even 100% sure what it has in Watford (though there have been flashes), so chances are he’ll be here a minute.

The Sixers in general have much to sort out as key players get healthy and Nick Nurse is attempting to make the pieces fit. So, what do you think Daryl Morey and company should look for in a trade? Which position? Any specific players? Hit me with your responses or any burning Sixers questions you have and I’ll respond to as many as I can in the comments.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...officially-here-what-should-the-sixers-target
 
NBA Refs account calls out Alaa Abdelnaby for not knowing non-existent backcourt rule

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(Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images)

This is a weird one. What else is new in the NBA, though?

Last night, there was a controversial no-call late in the Philadelphia 76ers loss to the Atlanta Hawks on what appeared to be a backcourt violation by Atlanta’s Nickeil Alexander-Walker on an inbound play in the final moments of the game. Here is the play:

Can someone explain to me how this was NOT called a backcourt violation by the Hawks?

Look at the score! You can't make these officiating mistakes here! pic.twitter.com/jdfOOukfQ5

— Erin Grugan (@eringrugan) December 15, 2025

I am using my own tweet here because, full disclosure, I thought this was just a blatantly missed call for a backcourt violation when it happened live. I clearly wasn’t alone, as my post and others like it circulated wildly through social media overnight and into Monday. I was curious to see the Last Two Minutes Report would say, but was otherwise ready to move on with my life.

Then, however, I got a strange notification from the official X account of NBA Referees, or the National Basketball Referees Association (NBRA). Instead of just an explanation of what occurred on this play, the account opted to take things a different route.

This was not a backcourt violation and has never been a backcourt violation.

For those calling the game, there is a responsibility to know the NBA rules and explain them correctly in order to properly educate the fans @alaatweets

See the below thread for more examples: https://t.co/UOWQ9qrTwd

— NBA Referees (@OfficialNBARefs) December 15, 2025

My first reaction was to check the account to make sure it was the legitimate account. It is. It’s linked to from the NBRA’s website. I checked because I thought it was not only strange but completely unprofessional to call out and condescend to Alaa Abdelnaby for not understanding the call. “For those calling the game, there is a responsibility to know the NBA rules and explain them correctly in order to properly educate the fans. See the below thread for more examples:”

Woof, OK then. Let’s even put aside the condescension to Abdelnaby and do what they asked, we’ll see the thread for these examples of why this non-call should have been so obvious to Alaa and the rest of us watching…

Well, when you follow the tweet “thread” of examples, it actually just dead-ends at one tweet of one video of a single “example”… and example is a word I’m using loosely there. Let’s watch.

Another backcourt related play. Olynyk deflects the ball & causes the ball to be loose. Sabonis regains possession in front court, but his momentum brings him into the backcourt. Momentum applies anytime the ball is loose. By rule this is NOT a backcourt violation #MixedBagFriday pic.twitter.com/sa4Sv0Zky0

— NBA Referees (@OfficialNBARefs) January 13, 2023

Yep, that was it.

This play from 2023 is the only example they could provide of why the Hawks weren’t called for backcourt violation against the Sixers last night. You may notice that the play is not even remotely similar to the one that played out in Sixers-Hawks. In the clip, Domantis Sabonis is not called for a backcourt violation after taking a single sidestep into the backcourt because the ball had been deflected by the defender and his momentum going for the loose ball was what caused him to take that single step. It is before halftime in this game.

“Momentum applies anytime the ball is loose. By rule this is NOT a backcourt violation,” the tweet concludes.

However, the thread adds that, though it is not a loose ball, the same principal applies on a throw-in in the final two minutes of the fourth period or overtime. The example is merely to show the idea of momentum carrying a player over the line in pursuit of the ball, apparently.

Last night during DET/NY Game 3, the crew made a correct no-call on a backcourt play. We explained a similar play in 2023 where, on a loose ball play, momentum played a factor in a player crossing over into the back court. As stated in the rulebook, this same rule also applies to… https://t.co/nyTDbe0a1O

— NBA Referees (@OfficialNBARefs) April 25, 2025

This tweet was from April 25, 2025, when the NBA Refs account used the same video and explanation as justification for the New York Knicks not being called for a backcourt violation in the 2024-25 playoffs in a game against the Detroit Pistons.

This one is a whole lot closer than the Sixers-Hawks situation in terms of subjectivity of momentum, with Jalen Brunson appearing to catch the ball right on the half-court line, with the momentum of actually catching the ball taking him into the backcourt. He didn’t catch it a step and a half away and keep running into the backcourt.

This momentum rule was ultimately provided by the Last Two Minutes Report, which came out Monday evening, as the reasoning for the decision in the Sixers-Hawks game as well.

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The official report reads that “Alexander-Walker’s (ATL) momentum carries him into the backcourt, which is legal in the last two minutes of the fourth quarter and overtime.”

However, in the case of Sunday night’s game, that momentum was the player running purposefully in that direction at full speed. That says to me that, basically, backcourt violations do not exist under two minutes to play. If I have the ball and purposefully sprint from the frontcourt to the backcourt a whole step and a half as Alexander-Walker did, is that just “momentum” carrying me?

The problem with this is the gray area. What is considered “momentum” carrying a player and not purposeful movement in the backcourt direction? They’ve used the same video twice now to justify this sort of decision, so there must be a rule in writing, right?

Let’s break out our handy dandy NBA Rulebooks for clarity.

Here’s the strange thing about this entire situation. The word “momentum” appears just once in the online rulebook, and is not remotely in reference to backcourt violations. Here is the word’s only appearance:

For what it's worth, also, the word "momentum" appears JUST ONCE in the NBA Rulebook online, and it's not even remotely in reference to backcourt violation rules: pic.twitter.com/X1LxyoQjPU

— Erin Grugan (@eringrugan) December 15, 2025

Alright, so that didn’t help either to figure out what the referees are referencing. Let’s keep searching the rulebook. There has to be something here… Let’s look at relevant rules.

For throw-ins:

throwin.jpg

This is the rule that allows a team to inbound directly to the backcourt from the frontcourt in the final two minutes of fourth periods and overtime, but does not say you can carry the ball from the front to the back, even with “momentum”.

And here’s the frontcourt/backcourt rules:

frontback.jpg

The frontcourt/backcourt section of the rulebook stipulates that, during a throw-in in the final two minutes of the fourth or OT, frontcourt/backcourt status is not attained until a player with the ball has established “a positive position” in either half. Not a single mention about momentum negating a backcourt violation.

The other problem? The phrase “positive position” is never actually defined either. Alexander-Walker caught a direct pass with his left foot down and took a full step to his right foot before crossing over the half-court line. Is that not positive position? Do you get two steps? A dribble?

Let me make something clear, too. I did not go through all of this just to double-double and say “I was right about this and the officials are wrong.” I’m not claiming that at all. I would genuinely have loved to have opened the rulebook, saw this random momentum rule clearly written and defined. I could have just said “huh, that’s interesting then” and moved on — but it’s not about being me being right. I’ve been wrong plenty of times and I guarantee you I will be wrong again in my life. I’ll be the first to admit it.

It’s about questioning why the official NBA Refs account is calling out a broadcaster for not knowing an obscure subsection of a rule that isn’t even actually even in the rulebook; why the same account referenced a video that was not even remotely similar to the situation from last night as the explanation for both this game as well as the Knicks-Pistons playoff contest in April; where this “momentum” rule appears in the rulebook; and how this all culminates in a display of the degraded relationship between NBA officials and those watching or even playing in the games.

It’s about the lack of clarity, transparency and accountability behind NBA officiating.

If, after all you read here, you still aren’t sure what letter of the law the officials used to come to their conclusion from Sunday night, you aren’t alone. This controversial call falls among many, many others across officiating in the NBA. Especially in the times of sports betting and rigging scandals, clarity in the rulebook and transparency from the referees calling these games is crucial.

The NBRA X account’s bio is “Encouraging communication, dialogue and transparency with NBA fans,” but did just the opposite here. Apparently, that means singling out a broadcaster for not knowing a rule that doesn’t even appear with any clarity in the rulebook.

I suppose, in the end, everything is made up and the rules don’t matter.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...backcourt-violation-nba-officials-adam-silver
 
What should the Sixers actually trade for?

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It’s officially Dec. 15! A somewhat pivotal day in the NBA calendar, as all contracts in the league (most notably ones signed just over six months ago in the summer) become tradeable. Even more importantly, players traded today and tomorrow can have their salaries aggregated in additional deals ahead of this year’s deadline.

So, with NBA trade talk destined to heat up, what exactly should the Sixers trade for? Should they be buyers? Sellers? Who will get moved in the annual salary dump? Should they empty the clip for an MVP-caliber player who may or may not be available in Giannis Antetokounmpo? Or should they look elsewhere?

The Sixers are an unorthodox team in the sense that there isn’t a clear-cut timeline, at least not yet. Let’s survey the landscape and try to gauge some potential trade candidates for this year, or beyond. We’ll start with smaller deals and progressively scale up to the biggest names.

The annual Sixers salary dump​


We’ve seen the Sixers trim salary before, and at this point it’s almost an annual tradition. This year should be no exception, as the Sixers are just under $7 million into the luxury tax. It’s also worth mentioning that they have $1,063,493 in first apron space and are $12,942,493 under the second apron.

So, if or when the Sixers look to move salary, who will it be?

As things stand, it’s highly unlikely they’ll look to move one of their massive contracts in Tyrese Maxey, Paul George or Joel Embiid. VJ Edgecombe is the next highest salary at $11.1 million this season, but we all know he’s going nowhere. Beyond that, the Sixers have Quentin Grimes ($8.7M), Kelly Oubre Jr. ($8.3M) and Andre Drummond ($5M) as notable salaries close to that $7 million luxury tax number.

I won’t touch on Grimes too much here. He has new representation that should help him actually negotiate a new contract in good faith. He’s also been a massive part of the Sixers’ three-guard lineup, which has produced their best numbers this year. On top of that, he has a no-trade clause, meaning he’s not signing off on a move unless he wants it.

That leaves Oubre and Drummond as potential candidates in a cost-cutting move.

Trading away Oubre’s $8.3 million and taking back a salary less than $1.3 million, or no salary at all, would get the Sixers fully out of the luxury tax. I would be strongly against this type of move. Oubre played strong basketball before going down with injury. He’s been overextended for most of his Sixers tenure, but he’s an excellent gap-filler and a good addition whether the Sixers are trying to win now with George and Embiid or lean into the youth movement. It also goes against Daryl Morey’s MO. He simply doesn’t trade productive players and assets purely for cost savings.

That brings us to Drummond, who would be the most likely candidate. His salary doesn’t fully get the Sixers out of the luxury tax, but it does get them close. Theoretically, the Sixers could also trade one of Kyle Lowry or Eric Gordon along with Drummond, which would get them out of the tax and open up a roster spot. With their preexisting open roster spot, that’s two slots that could go to Jabari Walker or Dominick Barlow, both of whom are on two-way contracts and will need to be converted at some point this season.

There are several teams projected to have space next summer, but only two really stand out as salary-dumping grounds this season: the Utah Jazz and Brooklyn Nets. To incentivize a move, the Sixers would likely need to send out a second-round pick or two to get Drummond and another cheap salary off the books.

Is it worth it? In my opinion, no. Drummond has had a resurgence this year and has been productive. But the Sixers aren’t surefire contenders, and ownership or other higher-ups will use that to justify moves like this. Helicopter fuel ain’t cheap, guys.

Some under-the-radar candidates​


With the Sixers stuck between two timelines, it’s likely we see a middle-of-the-road type of deal. But who could be available for a reasonable price and also blend with the current core?

The list isn’t long, but there are a few names to watch.

Keon Ellis


At this point, Ellis has become almost too popular of a name to be truly under the radar, but I’m still listing him here. Ellis is just 25 years old and, for reasons nobody can quite figure out, has fallen out of Sacramento’s rotation more often than not.

He put together a strong season last year, averaging 8.3 points in 24.4 minutes per game while shooting 48.9 percent from the field and 43.3 percent from three on four attempts per game. While the Sixers don’t necessarily need another guard (I already hear your comments), Ellis is probably better than his numbers suggest. And at 6-foot-4, he isn’t small. He’s also on an incredibly cheap contract for salary-matching purposes at $2.3 million.

I wouldn’t sell the house for Ellis, but the Kings clearly don’t value him the way the rest of the league might. That could mean they’d listen if they like the deal enough. They’re also stuck in no man’s land, so who knows what they could be talked into.

Jay Huff


Huff might be my favorite trade target that nobody really brings up. He’d blend tremendously with this Sixers group. He’s a per-minute machine, averaging 19.4 minutes per game and 2.5 blocks per game. He’s also putting up 8.1 points while shooting a respectable 33 percent from three on nearly 4.6 attempts per game.

Theoretically, you could run him as a forward next to Embiid or another big, or have him patrolling the rim himself.

The Pacers are in a bit of a gap year, which means almost anything is on the table as they retool. Myles Turner’s departure has them looking for a big, and while Huff has produced, I’m not sure he’s the No. 1 option on a team with real aspirations. I don’t expect Indiana to shop him outright, but if they can turn a late-addition signee into assets, that could be enough.

Huff is on a very team-friendly contract over the next three years, making $2.3M, $2.6M, and $3M through 2027–28. He’s 27 years old, which is slightly older than this team’s core, but there isn’t much mileage on his body.

Yves Missi


Missi is just 21 years old and coming off what was widely considered a strong rookie campaign, one that landed him on the All-Rookie Second Team just a year ago. So why would the Pelicans move him?

Well, because they didn’t have Derik Queen last year. Queen has put together one of the better rookie campaigns in a deep draft class. Add in Zion Williamson, who is around the team (sometimes), and Missi’s minutes have dipped to 18.8 per game this season after averaging 26.8 a year ago. The Pelicans also handed out a $16 million deal to veteran Kevon Looney and a minimum contract to our old friend DeAndre Jordan, who is somehow still hanging around.

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With all that in mind, it isn’t crazy to think New Orleans would listen to offers on Missi. They simply have more investment in similar players. If that’s the case, the Sixers could land a versatile big with real size and length in just the second year of his rookie deal. His salary is low enough to match in a variety of ways, and he’d fit right into the youth movement.

It’s also worth noting that Missi was one of the few names we know the Sixers brought in for a pre-draft workout in 2024. There’s interest there to some degree.

Swings for the future​


I don’t expect the Sixers to make a roster-altering move involving either George or Embiid. But if they were to embrace a full youth movement, some of these names could make sense.

Tari Eason


Eason has long been one of my favorite draft prospects, and he’s produced well in Houston. The 6-foot-8 forward is at a crossroads as the Rockets rapidly build a payroll and inch closer to contention. They also just signed Dorian Finney-Smith to a multi-year deal, which could squeeze Eason out of their long-term plans.

Trading for Eason now wouldn’t be difficult, but retaining and paying him would be, given the Sixers’ salary structure. Players like Eason don’t get moved often, and he’d fit beautifully as a high-motor, do-it-all wing with a real frame. If the Sixers opted for a full overhaul, I’d imagine Eason would be high on their list.

Trey Murphy


Murphy has drawn trade interest around the league for a while now, and it’s easy to see why. At just 25 years old, he’s averaging 21.1 points and 6.5 rebounds while shooting 48.9 percent from the field and 36 percent from three on high volume. The sweet-shooting 6-foot-8 forward would fit seamlessly with the Sixers’ guards without sacrificing size, length or athleticism.

Unlike Eason, Murphy is locked in long term. He’s earning $25M this year, $27M in 2026–27, $29M in 2027–28, and $31M in 2028–29. By NBA standards, that deal is well below his market value, with his best years likely still ahead. If the Sixers were to unload the clip with an eye toward the future, Murphy would be the target.

Peyton Watson


Watson is at a different stage of his career than the wings above, as he’s entering the final year of his rookie-scale deal. Denver, a team notorious for avoiding massive spending, will have a tough decision to make. They already have over $217 million committed for next season, and an extension for Watson would likely push them deep into the luxury tax.

That could create a small buy window. If Denver knows they aren’t willing to pay him what he’s worth, they may look to recoup assets.

Watson would fit nicely with the young core. At just 23 years old, he’s already entering his fourth NBA season and has improved every year. So far, he’s averaging 10.8 points, 5 rebounds, 1.2 blocks and 0.9 steals in just 27 minutes per game, while shooting 50.3 percent from the field and 38.8 percent from three. At a legit 6-foot-8, he provides size and shooting next to the guards, with the upside of potentially locking him up long term in restricted free agency.

Big-name salary relief​


Again, I wouldn’t expect a major pivot. But if the Sixers were to move either George or Embiid, here are some big contracts they could bring back that would expire and open space after the season:

  • Khris Middleton ($33.2M)
  • CJ McCollum ($30.6M)
  • Kristaps Porzingis ($30.7M)
  • Anfernee Simons ($27.7M)
  • Zion Williamson ($39.4M this season, $42.2M in 2026–27, $44.9M in 2027–28, fully non-guaranteed)

The big names​


It wouldn’t be trade season without speculation about the biggest stars in the league. Let’s take a look at a few who would fit with this core.

Giannis Antetokounmpo


Let’s address the elephant in the room. Or rather, the Greek.

There are conflicting reports on whether Antetokounmpo is actually available, but let’s assume he is. Should the Sixers be interested, and what would a deal even look like?

I already hear the comments screaming no, but MVP-caliber players don’t become available often. The Sixers would absolutely do their due diligence. The concerns are obvious: his age (31) and the fact that he’s a unique player to build around. He’s improved his shooting, but he still needs the ball in his hands and space around him. If you trade for him, other areas of the roster will need to be adjusted.

On the flip side, the Sixers would have to ask themselves whether trading for Giannis puts them in the same stratosphere as teams like OKC or San Antonio. The answer is probably yes, at least to some extent. That’s what makes a theoretical deal so intriguing. This is the one move they could talk themselves into because it’s the only true needle-shifter available right now and for the foreseeable future.

Any deal would require one of Embiid or George for salary-matching purposes. I doubt the Bucks would be thrilled to take on either contract for arguably the greatest player in franchise history, so the rest of the package would matter. Would the Sixers include Edgecombe? Could Jared McCain be the centerpiece? How many picks would it take?

You’re likely looking at a framework of Embiid or George, McCain and draft compensation that probably includes at least one unprotected Clippers pick. It’s an extremely rich price. But again, this is the only move that could credibly put the Sixers back into serious contention. That alone makes it worth discussing.

Zion Williamson


I already hear it: no, the Sixers don’t need another injury-prone big.

And unfortunately, that’s what the Duke phenom has been for most of his career. Still, there’s a reason for the Sixers to at least inquire. Zion’s contract is non-guaranteed moving forward, meaning a team could waive him and owe nothing beyond this season.

If the Sixers pursued this, it likely wouldn’t be to land Zion himself, but to gain salary relief. That said, there would probably be some intrigue in seeing what he looks like outside of New Orleans, a team that appears genuinely cursed.

This would be a way to offload major money while also taking a swing on Zion. If the Sixers ever hit the nuclear button (probably not this season), this would be an efficient way to do both. Plus, the Pelicans apparently say yes to any trade offer now, so there’s that.

Domantas Sabonis


The Kings are stuck in no man’s land and might need to rebuild their rebuild. Sabonis is currently out with injury, but we know what he is: a legitimate All-Star-level big who isn’t just a double-double machine, but an offensive hub.

Offensively, he’d blend well with the Sixers’ guards. He’s an excellent screen-setter, a strong facilitator, and a dominant rebounder with a soft touch around the rim.

Most of the concerns come on defense, where he hasn’t consistently held up in high-leverage moments. But as a regular-season innings eater, he’s proven, and there aren’t many bigs better than him.

At nearly 30, it likely doesn’t make sense given the Sixers’ timeline. But if his market craters, which isn’t unrealistic under the current CBA, and the Sixers want to pivot off Embiid, Sabonis could make sense. He’s under contract for the same length as Embiid, but not at a supermax number, which would save money while adding a proven regular-season player.

Truthfully, this isn’t the move I’d make, nor the one I expect the Sixers to make when they commit to a direction. Still, with teams giving up less for stars than ever, this could be a relatively cheap, asset-wise way to land a proven big.

We still don’t have a concrete sense of what the Sixers are looking to do this season, if anything. More likely, we’ll see a move on the margins that sheds salary and adds an asset or two, either in the form of a draft pick or a player who can help now and beyond.

The Sixers, and Daryl Morey in particular, have an intriguing road to navigate over the coming months. We’ll see if any of these names resurface later on.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/76er...gets-nba-trade-deadline-2025-26-december-15th
 
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