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Sixers offseason mailbag: How would landing Cooper Flagg affect their plans?

Houston v Duke

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We answer your questions about which teams to root against in the playoffs and how the draft lottery could impact the Sixers’ offseason plans.

Now that the NBA playoffs have begun, it’s time to put our hater hats on. The Sixers’ season already ended in unceremonious fashion, and misery loves company.

Not only would it be enjoyable to watch longtime Sixers foils come up short—aww, are the refs not falling for your grifting nonsense this year, Jalen Brunson?—but the results of the playoffs could have trickle-down effects on the Sixers this offseason. Some teams will be facing uncomfortable questions in the next few weeks depending on how the rest of the first round shakes out.

With that in mind, we asked you for your top offseason questions on Wednesday. Let’s dive right into the first question, aka a Hater’s Guide to the Playoffs.

po_g
Is there specific chaos that Sixers fans should be rooting for? Not just for schadenfreude, but a scenario where a team loses bad and suddenly they're interested in trading for PG (as an example)

Sixers fans should largely be rooting for teams with high expectations to fall flat on their faces in the playoffs. That will drastically increase the chances of offseason chaos.

If the Denver Nuggets and/or Milwaukee Bucks lose in the first round, they’ll likely feel enormous pressure to make a move to appease Nikola Jokić and Giannis Antetokounmpo, respectively. I’ve already touched on the idea of a trade revolving around Paul George and Michael Porter Jr., but it’s harder to imagine a workable deal with the Bucks. If anything, the Sixers could try to wiggle their way in as a third team in a larger trade.

The Minnesota Timberwolves and New York Knicks aren’t as imminently under the gun with Anthony Edwards and Jalen Brunson as the Nuggets and Bucks are with Jokić and Giannis, but both made big changes this past offseason with an eye on a deep playoff run. Losing in the first round could make them reevaluate whether they have the right cores in place moving forward. With that said, trading for Julius Randle might be the one way to make the current Sixers an even more miserable experience.

I’d also be eyeing asset-rich teams like the Houston Rockets and Memphis Grizzlies. The Rockets are clearly on the ascent and have repeatedly been linked to Kevin Durant on the rumor mill, although longtime NBA insider Marc Stein has repeatedly downplayed their interest in him because of his age. They’d presumably have the same concerns with Paul George, but if Rockets owner Tilman Fertitta gets antsy to accelerate their rebuild, the Sixers could be well-positioned to take advantage.

Meanwhile, the Grizzlies just fired head coach Taylor Jenkins in late March and are getting annihilated by the Oklahoma City Thunder. It’s the kind of beatdown that raises questions about whether they can feasibly run back the same core in the hope that new coaching helps bridge the gap. If not, Ja Morant might be quietly available this summer, which might open the door for three- or four-team trade frameworks that the Sixers could sneak into.



stags066
(1) If the Sixers lottery odds land them at #2, what would it take for them to move up to #1 overall to get Flagg?
(2) If the Sixers end up with Flagg, do you try and trade PG?

A two-parter here!

I don’t think Cooper Flagg is quite on the level of Victor Wembanyama as a prospect, but I get the impression that whichever team wins the No. 1 pick will not be open for business. It seems like the gap between him and Dylan Harper is fairly large. I’d think at the very least, the Sixers would need to give up No. 2, Jared McCain and a fully unprotected future first-round pick, and I’m honestly not even sure if that would be enough.

Regardless of what happens in the lottery, I’d be surprised if the Sixers try to trade PG this offseason. It seems like they still believe in their Big Three and want to see what they look like with better health next year, even if that might be a pipe dream. Besides, Flagg might be the one prospect in this year’s draft who could salvage whatever’s left of this Big Three era. He’d presumably make Kelly Oubre Jr. expendable, but I don’t see why he couldn’t play alongside George as the Sixers’ other starting forward.

But if the Big Three go bust again next year, landing Flagg might make the Sixers less reluctant to move on from George and/or Joel Embiid in 2026.

JojoTheProcessEmbiid
As a follow up your 1st question, what trade package could we make if we lose this years pick?

As I mentioned above, I’m not sure the Sixers could feasibly put together a package for the No. 1 overall pick, particularly if they send their first-rounder this year to OKC. Even a deal centered around Tyrese Maxey likely wouldn’t be enough.

With that said, it is briefly worth exploring the Sixers’ trade assets in general, because that’s the one thing differentiating them from the truly stuck teams (aka, the Phoenix Suns).

Hypothetically, let’s say the Sixers lose their first-round pick this year. In that scenario, they’d owe a top-eight-protected 2027 first-round pick to the Brooklyn Nets, but they otherwise have full control over all of their first-rounders moving forward. They also have a fully unprotected 2028 first-round pick from the Los Angeles Clippers and the right to swap first-rounders with the Clippers in 2029 if the Clippers’ pick isn’t in the top three.

The Sixers couldn’t trade their 2026 first-rounder because of the Stepien Rule, which prevents teams from being without a first-round pick in back-to-back drafts. But since they have the Clippers’ 2028 first-rounder, they would be able to trade 2028, 2030 and 2032 first-round picks after this year’s draft, along with pick swaps in 2026, 2029 and 2031.

The Sixers have traded away their 2026 and 2030 second-round picks, but they otherwise have control over all of their other ones. However, they can’t trade their 2028 second-rounder since it’s conditionally tied up in the first-round pick that they owe to Brooklyn. (If the first-rounder doesn’t convey to Brooklyn by 2028, the Sixers will send them their 2028 second-rounder instead.) Beyond that, the Sixers get the more favorable of the Warriors/Suns’ 2027 second-round pick, a fully unprotected Warriors second-round pick in 2028, a fully unprotected Wizards second-rounder in 2030 and the more favorable of the Suns/Blazers’ second-round pick in 2030.

Got all that? No? The TL;DR: The Sixers could trade as many as three first-round picks, three first-round swaps and nine (!) second-round picks after this year’s draft. The extra second-round currency is exactly why they flipped what figures to be a late 2026 first-round pick to the Wizards at this year’s trade deadline. Rotation players tend to go for two or three second-rounders at the deadline (see: Dorian Finney-Smith and Dennis Schröder), so the Sixers now have plenty of ammunition to make midseason shakeups as needed.

saratoga7
Should the Sixers -- unintentionally, of course, because they wouldn't want to break the rules -- pull a double-San Antonio Spurs next year and sit Embiid and George all season even if they are semi-healthy?
David Robinson was hurt in the late 90s, San Antonio ended up with the first pick and drafted Tim Duncan. Many championships later....

To some extent, this depends on how this year’s draft lottery shakes out. If the Sixers finish in the top six and keep their first-round pick, they’ll owe a top-four-protected pick to OKC in 2026. That would give them more incentive to tank next year, particularly if they deal with another relentless wave of injuries.

With that said… no, they aren’t going to throw away an entire season with Embiid and George if both are healthy. They need to see what they have in this Big Three, if only to know whether it’s feasible to continue building around them or if they need to blow it up in 2026.

Multiple teams seem to be lining up to have max cap space in 2026. The Sixers might have a get-out-of-jail-free card that offseason, particularly if Embiid and/or George stay healthy next season.

Thanks as always for the questions this week! Enjoy the playoffs, and we’ll see you back here at the same time next week.

Unless otherwise noted, all stats via NBA.com, PBPStats, Cleaning the Glass or Basketball Reference. All salary information via Salary Swish and salary-cap information via RealGM.

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Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...agg-affect-plans-philadelphia-76ers-nba-draft
 
Editor-in-chief mailbag: I’m back, baby

Los Angeles Lakers v Minnesota Timberwolves - Game Four

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After a week off, I’m here to answer all your Sixers-related questions as the NBA playoffs trudge on and we inch closer to the lottery.

I needed a week off. I think you all get that?

I’ve been doing this for nearly a decade and it’s still super hard to detach yourself when the season ends. This is the first full season I covered the Sixers where they failed to make the playoffs. I think it made the transition to the offseason even more difficult. Post-achievement depression is a real thing ... and yes, I view getting through this season as a massive achievement.

With that said, I’m feeling recharged and rejuvenated and I’m ready for more questions. The NBA playoffs have been mostly entertaining and we’re inching closer to the NBA Draft lottery. Plus, Righteous Gemstones is ending and The Rehearsal is starting back up!

Hit me with all your questions below and I’ll do my best to answer as many as I can for tomorrow. I’ll also be hanging out in the comments today. Appreciate you all!

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...hief-mailbag-im-back-baby-nba-playoffs-sixers
 
Ricky Council IV’s future with the Sixers uncertain after disappointing sophomore season

Chicago Bulls v Philadelphia 76ers

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After a promising rookie year as an undrafted free agent, the 23-year-old Council underwhelmed in his second season in Philadelphia.

It wasn’t long ago that Ricky Council IV was the most talked-about name in the Sixers’ 2023 draft class, despite the team not having a pick. Signed as an undrafted free agent, Council quickly turned heads with his rare blend of athleticism, finishing ability, and knack for drawing fouls — traits not often seen in a rookie. It didn’t take long for Sixers fans to buy in.

Council entered this past season with expectations to build on what was widely viewed as a promising rookie campaign — but things didn’t go as planned. Despite nearly doubling his playing time, his production took a noticeable step back. His field goal percentage dropped from 48.2% to 38.2%, and his three-point shooting plummeted from 37.5% to 25.8%. Among players with at least 200 three-point attempts, Council ranked dead last in the league.

While the Sixers’ season was a rough one overall, it did offer valuable reps to end-of-bench players as the team’s tank quietly took shape. Council was among those who saw extended minutes, but he struggled to make the most of them. More often than not, head coach Nick Nurse leaned on rookie Justin Edwards or even two-way players instead — perhaps a sign of Nurse’s dwindling trust in Council’s role on the roster.

On the surface, it might seem like Nick Nurse was simply rotating through his options and giving everyone a fair shot. But one specific instance painted a different picture. In multiple blowout games, Nurse chose to play David Roddy — a newly signed two-way player who appeared in just three games before the team moved on — over Council. It was a subtle but telling move that raised questions about where Council stood in the rotation.

While others made the most of their extended minutes, Council never quite found the same rhythm we saw during his rookie year. After a largely uninspiring season, the Sixers are expected to explore all options as they look to reshape the roster — and Council’s future will be no exception.

As of now, Council is set to earn $2.2 million next season, with a team option worth $2.4 million for 2026–27. However, his contract is non-guaranteed, meaning the Sixers can waive him without taking a hit to their salary cap. It’s a low number in NBA money, but does it make any sense to bring him back?

Barring major changes, the Sixers’ wing rotation already has several key pieces in place. Paul George is expected to return, and rookie Justin Edwards should still be in the mix, whether via his team option or a restructured long-term deal. Kelly Oubre Jr. also has a player option this summer. If he’s back in any capacity, that’s three wings already positioned for significant rotation minutes — and that’s before factoring in any draft picks or offseason additions.

While Council’s salary is relatively low, a change of scenery might benefit both sides. At this point, it’s clear Nick Nurse’s trust in him is minimal. And even with expected roster shake-ups, the opportunity for Council to carve out a meaningful role in Philly might simply not be there.

Player Grade: D-

Ricky Council IV entered the season with momentum and real expectations after a standout rookie campaign — but failed to take the next step. The efficiency drop-off, lack of development as a shooter, and increasingly diminished role under Nick Nurse all paint a picture of a player who struggled to find his fit. While the athletic tools and flashes are still there, the Sixers needed more than just potential this year.

Given his limited production and the growing logjam at the wing, it’s hard to justify a roster spot unless significant improvement is made. Council’s story isn’t over — a fresh start elsewhere could unlock his game — but his sophomore campaign in Philly was undeniably a step backward.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...omore-season-philadelphia-76ers-nba-offseason
 
Knicks-Pistons first-round series looking awfully familiar for Sixers fans

NBA: Playoffs-New York Knicks at Detroit Pistons

David Reginek-Imagn Images

The Knicks might be up 3-1 on Detroit. But their wins are far from convincing and their fans likely know how this season ends.

As the Sixers season winded down, I wrote about how it felt kind of freeing not to have to worry about a spring of inevitable disappointment from the Sixers or the illusion of hope. Perhaps you’ve been watching the Phillies or are just too nervous about the lottery to even think about anything else related to the NBA. But with the NBA’s first round nearing its conclusion, we wanted to specifically highlight the New York-Detroit series in the Eastern Conference as the kind of series we’re sort of relieved the Sixers aren’t participating in this season.

The Knicks finished this season third in the Eastern Conference with a record of 51-31. The Sixers made the playoffs in seven consecutive seasons prior to 2024-25. Two of them were not full 82-game seasons thanks for COVID-19. In the five full seasons, they won 255 games which averages out to exactly 51 games per season. Of course, we know that the Sixers never made it past the second round in any of these seasons, and they have not made it to the Eastern Conference Finals in 24 seasons. New York’s conference finals drought will reach 25 if it can’t win five more games in this year’s postseason. The Knicks appear poised to square off with the Celtics in the second round, a team they got swept by in four games in the regular season.

It’s not even so much that the Knicks are not in the league’s top tier of teams, but it’s their struggles to beat the teams in the tier below them that make their first-round series with Detroit feel like a Sixers playoff series. New York slots in with Indiana this year as that next tier in the East below Cleveland and Boston and the rest of the playoff teams in the East are in a tier below Indiana. Historically, the first round is supposed to be a cakewalk for true title contenders. It has been for Cleveland and Boston in the East. Oklahoma City was the first team into the second round out West after sweeping Memphis. The first-round wins for the Cavaliers, Celtics and Thunder are all not competitive games.

The Knicks look ready to win their series with the Pistons in five games after taking a 3-1 lead on Sunday with Game 5 back at Madison Square Garden on Tuesday night. But, don’t kid yourself, this has been a competitive series with the Pistons for the Knicks. It took a 21-0 run in the fourth quarter of Game 1 for New York to win by 11. After losing Game 2 at home, the Knicks won both games in Detroit by a combined three points. One of the top talking points in the NBA on Sunday and into Monday was the questionable no-call on Josh Hart who appeared to come into contact with Tim Hardaway Jr on a potential game-winning three-pointer for Detroit. A foul call on Hart would have sent Hardaway to the charity stripe, only needing to make two of three free throws to even the series at two games apiece.

When we look back on the playoff series the Sixers did win in the last seven years, we’ll find a lot of similar game scripts. In 2018 and 2019, the first two seasons they made the postseason with Joel Embiid as the franchise player, the Sixers failed to protect home court against Miami and Brooklyn in the first round and left Wells Fargo tied at one game apiece both years. After comfortable wins in Game 3s of both series, Philadelphia escaped with narrow victories in Game 4 both years to go up 3-1 and would close each series out back at Wells Fargo Center in both Game 5s. A couple of different bounces in those two Game 4s and the Sixers are in a pair of series that would have turned into best-of-threes against playoff bottom feeders.

In 2022, the Sixers did protect home court against Toronto to go up 2-0 before heading to Canada. Remember what happened next? Joel Embiid made a buzzer-beater to win the third game in what is sadly his best playoff moment. Then the Sixers went on to lose Game 4 and get clobbered at home in Game 5 before closing it out in six back in Toronto. That was a Raptors team that was slowly in the process of breaking up its 2019 NBA Championship roster and Nick Nurse’s departure soon followed.

As you can see, there were plenty of postseasons in years past in which the Sixers simply did not pass the eye test in the first round. They were not dominant in the first round the way most true contenders are. They had enough talent on the roster to give each of their second-round opponents a run for their money, but ultimately were a tier below those opponents for many of those postseasons. This is why the 2021 second-round defeat at the hands of the Atlanta Hawks is the most embarrassing playoff exit for the Sixers of the recent handful of defeats. There is no doubt Philadelphia was more talented than Atlanta and found a way to lose that series which included three home losses.

Whether the Knicks win in five, six or seven games against the Pistons, they should close the series out now that they hold a commanding 3-1 lead. Then, they will probably lose to the Celtics in five or six games and their season will be over. It’s a script we’ve seen plenty of times before with the Sixers, so if you’re happy not to be doing this same old song and dance again, I don’t blame you.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...istons-first-round-series-nba-playoffs-sixers
 
Justin Edwards’ NBA journey comes full circle with the Sixers

Milwaukee Bucks v Philadelphia 76ers

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Justin Edwards took a funky path to end up with his hometown team, but the undrafted rookie showed out in his first NBA season with the Sixers.

The Sixers’ 2024–25 campaign was anything but memorable, with few bright spots in what many considered a lost season. But amid the disappointment, a few silver linings emerged: including Justin Edwards. Signed to a two-way deal after going undrafted, the Philly native quickly proved he belonged — becoming one of the few success stories in an otherwise forgettable year.

Edwards began the season on a two-way contract, spending most of his time with the Delaware Blue Coats, the Sixers’ G League affiliate. Aside from a brief appearance in a blowout loss early in the year, he didn’t see meaningful NBA minutes until the calendar flipped. But once the Sixers gave him a real opportunity, Edwards ran with it — appearing in every game he was healthy for down the stretch.

Over the final 42 games of the 2025 season, Edwards averaged 10.5 points, 3.5 rebounds, 1.6 assists, 1.1 steals and 0.4 blocks per game. He shot 45.3% from the field and 36.5% from three on 4.5 attempts per night, while logging 27.2 minutes per game. His consistent production and two-way impact earned him a promotion to a standard NBA contract to finish the year, along with a team option for next season.

That midseason surge didn’t just come out of nowhere. Edwards’ development in the G League laid the groundwork for his NBA breakout. With the Blue Coats, he honed his shooting mechanics, learned to operate within an offense, and embraced the physicality of pro-level defenders. By the time he got his chance in the big leagues, he looked comfortable — poised, even — on both ends of the floor.

Offensively, Edwards thrived in a complementary role. He didn’t force shots or overextend himself, instead picking his spots and capitalizing on open looks. His three-point shooting was particularly encouraging. At 36.5% on healthy volume, he proved he could stretch the floor — a trait that makes him a viable fit next to high-usage stars. He also flashed a little shot creation, showing the ability to attack closeouts and finish through contact with his long frame.

Defensively, he brought the kind of energy that earned him the trust of head coach Nick Nurse. With his size, instincts and quickness, Edwards routinely disrupted passing lanes and hounded perimeter scorers. He didn’t rack up gaudy block numbers, but he was rarely out of position and often made the right reads — the kind of stuff coaches love from role players.

What stood out most, though, was how seamlessly Edwards adapted to the NBA pace. Rookie mistakes were rare, and his effort never wavered. Whether he was starting, coming off the bench, or closing out blowouts, he played with a consistent motor. That consistency, paired with flashes of upside, made him one of the few players to make a real impression in a season full of forgettable moments.

Looking ahead, Edwards could be in line for a bigger role depending on how the Sixers shape their offseason. With veterans like Kelly Oubre Jr. weighing player options and the possibility of adding more youth via the draft, nothing is set in stone. But Edwards has shown he belongs — and for a guy who didn’t hear his name called on draft night, that’s already a big win.

Player Grade: A-

Justin Edwards surpassed expectations and earned a real spot in the Sixers’ rotation at a time when the team badly needed a spark. His shooting, defensive effort, and steady play stood out — and he looked every bit the part of a long-term NBA contributor. For an undrafted rookie, you couldn’t ask for much more.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025/4/30/24413083/justin-edwards-sixers-player-grade-kentucky
 
‘I think [Embiid and PG] are the two worst contracts in the NBA right now’

Memphis Grizzlies v Philadelphia 76ers

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Trysta Krick joins Liberty Ballers for a podcast putting a fork in one hideous 2025 for the Sixers — and the NBA analyst doesn’t sound too optimistic about their future either.

Liberty Ballers interviewed basketball analyst and sports comedy personality, Trysta Krick. The host of ‘The Heat Check with Trysta Krick,’ goes ALL IN on some of the ways things have fallen apart for the Sixers from Joel Embiid’s health and contract extension, to Daryl Morey’s biggest weakness as a GM, to Paul George’s shortcomings, the organization never living down the loss of Jimmy Butler, and she even goes in on “delusional” Philly fans who stanned for Ben Simmons way longer than they should have.

Spoiler alert, Krick admits she thinks the Sixers have the two worst contracts in the entire league, since Philadelphia still owes Embiid and PG a combined $410.5M in combined salary over the next four seasons.

Listen to the full pod here on Youtube, and read some of the scorched earth teasers from the podcast below.


I had the pleasure of joining @DavidEarly of Liberty Ballers to talk all things Sixers, including my long and sometimes rocky history with Philly fans ... it was a ton of fun !!!

Check it out wherever you get your podcasts and watch it here on YouTube:https://t.co/3cfl2J3do1

— Trysta Krick (@Trysta_Krick) April 30, 2025

Trysta Krick on...


Should the Sixers have traded Joel Embiid following his 2023 MVP season?

Krick: “I was ready to let go of JoJo right after he won MVP. Right after. Because that’s when his value was the highest. You need to get rid of players — and [Daryl Morey and Elton Brand are] in the building, if you run this team you’re in the building, you know everything that JoJo goes through. His knee hasn’t been unswollen in a long time.... It’s like he’s an injury velcro. So if you know that and he wins MVP. there’s a lot of teams like the Knicks at one point that were clamoring for him. Just fleece them.... I know he’s f—ing electric when he’s playing on the court and he’s healthy. But he’s never healthy. So get what you can, lots of picks, probably some good players, because as of now you’re just kind of in this situation where you’re having a very expensive asset that’s no longer seen as an asset. And you saw how that was with Ben Simmons when it took forever to get rid of him.”

The Sixers most likely would have laughed at any offer that didn’t include Jokic, Giannis or perhaps Anthony Edwards back in 2023. But maybe they should have worked the phones at least a little more. (I mean if Luka Doncic was had by the Los Angeles Lakers that cheaply, you never know.)

On Paul George

Krick: “I was sort of like on the fence. I wanted to kinda like get on the positive, optimistic side of Paul George, but... this guy is a combination of Ben Simmons and Joel Embiid. He’s got mental stuff, he’s not built for the bright lights, he withers under them. They call him ‘Pandemic P’ for a reason. He was again in a fetal position in the Bubble next to his bed cause he couldn’t handle the pressure. And he has injury issues like Joel Embiid. I don’t know why you pay that guy max money.”

Ouch. It’s harsh but so far, fair. And Trysta was only getting warmed up.

Krick: It just seems like [the 76ers] have been interested in the flashy headlines trying to win the offseason, trying to win the day, instead of building a roster that makes any damn sense....

And then [George] had to cancel the podcast cause he’s getting ripped in the media.”

Is the best case scenario here that the 2023 MVP, the exemplar of The Process, never plays in Philly (or anywhere) again?

Krick: “I guess the best case scenario is that [Embiid] can never play again for [the Sixers]... he’s never gonna be fully healthy, right?.... Best case for the Sixers is they can get yeah, a medical exemption. That’s the best case. Best case for Joel is probably he goes somewhere else and figures out a way to be a 55 game [season] guy... man, where would that be? That’s a great question.... it would be a smaller market team. It would be a team that is in need of a star. Charlotte isn’t a bad —, a Washington Wizards, right? Like somebody with cap space, somebody with young players, somebody where he doesn’t necessarily feel like he’s in the spotlight every night. Kinda like you saw with Ben [Simmons] so like a Utah [Jazz]... and maybe a place with very little distractions too.”

Wait for it...do the Sixers potentially have the two worst contracts in the NBA?

Krick: “Yeah. I think so, honestly. I mean, I think Bradley Beal is one of them too, cause you can’t trade him. You’re not physically allowed to trade him. So he’s up there too. But yeah, I mean you’re talking about guys making supermax money that can’t stay on the floor... now you’re thinking to yourself, man, maybe L.A. [Clippers] did everything that they shoulda done by just letting him walk out the door. And not taking any money back. And you just signed these guys... I think they are the two worst contracts in the NBA right now.”

Perhaps in the same vein as Embiid’s troubles might even be Daryl Morey’s potential enabling, per Krick.

On Daryl Morey

“I guess I’m kinda mixed on Daryl Morey as a whole. He’s done some good things, he’s done some shitty things. He’s great on the margins but I feel he’s just too player friendly. You’ve seen guys kinda wild out, like the James Hardens of the world. And they develop bad habits. If Daryl Morey’s paired with a Jimmy Butler, then he doesn’t need to put Jimmy Butler in line. Jimmy Butler’s putting himself in line... if you coulda gotten Jimmy back at the deadline, that woulda been incredible. That would have been an incredible win. Could you imagine? Maybe trade Paul George over to Miami and a bunch of picks and you get Jimmy Butler back together, and maybe all of a sudden Joel Embiid is taking his recovery process more seriously.”

Won’t spoil any more, and we’ll have a follow up post with more heaters. But holy mackerel, Krick pulled no punches. It may be tempting for some of you to dismiss her points. But remember, she does have a pretty darn good track record on this team.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...-mcain-nba-free-agency-2025-nba-draft-lottery
 
What life looks like when the Sixers stop orbiting around Joel Embiid

Utah Jazz v Philadelphia 76ers

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Everything the Sixers have done for nearly a decade has revolved around Joel Embiid. With so much uncertainty around his future, that won’t be the case much longer.

As the wise podcaster TrillBroDude once said, the Philadelphia 76ers as an organization are Joel Embiid merchants.

That is to say from the moment he stepped on the court in 2016, they’ve gone as far he’s been able to take them, and not a step further. That’s typically meant around 50 wins in the regular season and a postseason run ending in the conference semi-finals.

The first season in seven years that saw the team miss the playoffs was a direct result of Embiid being unable to stay healthy enough to consistently be in the lineup. In the 15 months since his Jonathan Kuminga fell on his leg, resulting in a meniscus tear in his left knee, Embiid has only played in 30 games.

Two surgeries later, his future is unclear as ever. Over the 19 games he was able to appear in during the 2024-25 season, he was never able to string more than four games in a row before having to sit. The last game he played on Feb. 22 saw him get benched for the fourth quarter. For the first time in his career the Sixers had a better chance to close out that game without him. They still lost 105-103 to the Brooklyn Nets in what could be their most important game of the year, depending on what happens on lottery night.

If there’s any room for optimism, Embiid’s second surgery was performed by the same doctor who operated on Kawhi Leonard. Leonard was able to turn back the clock with a ridiculous 39-point performance on just 19 shots in Game 2 against the Denver Nuggets. While he may finish his first playoff series healthy in five years, it still might not be enough to get the Clippers out of the first round.

They don’t really have a choice, but the organization is still projecting optimism for Embiid as a building block. At his exit interview, Daryl Morey said he still feels good about the core of this team, and that he expects Embiid to make a full recovery.

While no, they can’t come out and say that the former MVP will never be the same player, or that they regret extending him until 2029 for $64 million dollars last summer, the team may to have to internally except the reality that it’s time to pivot. The extension makes him virtually unmovable, but that doesn’t mean the Sixers revolve their team around the idea of MVP-level Embiid returning.

Barring a fairly unprecedented recovery, the Sixers are due for a sizable identity change. What was so jarring about watching Embiid this past season, or least his last stretch in February, was just how diminished he was defensively.

On top of the block numbers, Embiid’s been such a great defender over the course of his career because of how many players he deters from the rim altogether. Just the fear alone of attacking him has allowed the Sixers to have above-average defenses despite swapping out perimeter defenders like Ben Simmons and Matisse Thybulle for James Harden and Tyrese Maxey.

Over that eight-game stretch in February, it was disturbing just how much the Sixers drop coverage got torched. According to Cleaning the Glass, they ranked 22nd in defensive efficiency, allowing 118.9 points per 100 possessions. Opposing offenses had a 55.1 effective field goal percentage. They also rebounded 34.8% of their missed shots, which was the second highest rate of that time.

There’s no easy fix to replacing MVP-level production, but the Sixers have to do something. Step 1 needs to be getting bigger and more physical at other positions. Not only do they need more options for rim protection, but they’ve been a pretty mediocre rebounding team for some time as well.

During the Simmons era, the Sixers were always a top-11 team in opponent’s offensive rebounding percentage. They’ve only cracked the top 15 once in the four years since then. Getting bigger would be a necessity no matter what, but it’s even more important if the building blocks moving forward are Tyrese Maxey and Jared McCain.

Earlier in the season, I tackled some of the changes Embiid should make to his game offensively if he is in fact physically diminished for the rest of his career. For reasons related to McCain and Maxey, I think those will be a lot easier to make.

The team has been just as, if not more dependent on his defensive ability and how much ground he’s been able to cover up for. Figuring out what life looks like after that is an extremely difficult task, but it’s time for the Sixers to get that ball rolling.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...-sixers-joel-embiid-daryl-morey-kawhi-leonard
 
Kelly Oubre Jr. was one of few bright spots for Sixers in 2024-25

Oklahoma City Thunder v Philadelphia 76ers

Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

It’s not often you see 10-year veterans make improvements in their game, but that’s what Kelly Oubre Jr. did as he consistently showed up and played hard for the Sixers this season.

There really weren’t many bright spots for the Sixers this season, but Kelly Oubre Jr.’s play was one of them.

The 29-year-old wing returned to Philadelphia last offseason on a very reasonable two-year, $16.3 million deal and spent 2024-25 more than living up to it. While the team was constantly riddled with injuries, Oubre was reliable and available. He started all but three of the 60 games he played until he was ruled out for the last month for recovery/tanking purposes, and made some noticeable improvements in his game. Which, for a 10-year veteran, is usually a rarity.

In 34.6 minutes per game, Oubre finished the year averaging 15.1 points, 6.1 rebounds and career-highs of 1.8 assists and 1.5 steals. He even upped his true shooting percentage to 55.1 — nothing overly efficient, but still his highest since 2021-22 when he was in Charlotte. Which, considering everything Oubre brings to the table beyond sheer efficiency due to his subpar 29.3 percent three-point shooting, isn’t bad at all.

Of course, Oubre has his flaws. That underwhelming three-point shooting is probably at the top of that list. Fortunately, he does at least shoot with the confidence and volume (4.0 attempts a game) that still commands some attention from defenders, which means he has something to offer as a spacer alongside his teammates. Second is his aggressiveness can lead to him being a bit out of control at times, such as ill-advised pull-ups or erratic passes.

However, Oubre’s athletic aggressiveness is usually something that helps the Sixers, and we’ve seen that more and more over his time in Philly. He’s quick to act and attack when he does get the ball, beyond just firing those jumpers. He can soar to the rim with quick catches and drives past closeouts, make sharp cuts to add more value off the ball, and the touch of extra creation ability he provides out of isolations and pick-and-rolls is another plus alongside the team’s stars (whenever they’re actually available).

Oubre’s defense often stood out this year, too. In a season that went off the rails so fast and it was clear playing for contention was off the cards surprisingly early, Oubre continued to play hard when others wouldn’t. He has the speed and motor to cover guards plus the size and wingspan to defend forwards, and he did a fine job at both. He also upped his rebounding this year to average 6.1 and the third-best rebound percentage of his career at 10.0 percent. Apart from his defense on the ball and increased disruption off it in passing lanes, the way he fought on the glass really helped highlight his energy and mindset overall.

This summer, Oubre has a big decision to make. Now, with a $8.4 million player option for 2025-26, he can stay put on a solid (albeit short-term) salary, opt out and try to negotiate a new deal with the Sixers, or try his luck elsewhere. I won’t dive deep into the finances here and everything Oubre needs to consider, as our Bryan Toporek has done so in great detail here.

There’s little cap space available on the market this coming offseason, though, so Oubre likely isn’t to receive many offers of much more than the Sixers can pay him if he opts to leave. The issue for Philly at that point would be trying to re-sign all of Oubre, Guerschon Yabusele and Quentin Grimes. If they use some or all of the non-taxpayer MLE to re-sign Yabusele, it may not be possible to keep all three unless they trade away one of their star players’ salaries. And all things considered, keeping their versatile big in Yabusele and the breakout play of Grimes likely are (and should) be the priority over Oubre.

“I am a Philadelphia 76er,” Oubre said in his exit interview this season. “I’m blessed to be a part of this organization. I’m here in front of you guys right now, so taking it day by day. But also, this is a business, but at the end of the day I’m happy. And I feel like I like to finish what I start, and I don’t feel complete, so Godspeed.”

Will we see Oubre finish what he set out to do with the Sixers? For the right price, that could be beneficial for both sides. There’s certainly plenty of value Oubre has left to offer on the court to complement the team’s stars if they can get healthy and back on track for 2025-26. He deserves a lot of credit for showing up in a season when he could’ve easily taken his foot off the gas.

Player grade: B+

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...biid-paul-george-tyrese-maxey-nba-free-agency
 
Around the NBA: Pop steps away from coaching

Philadelphia 76ers v San Antonio Spurs

Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images

Legendary coach Gregg Popovich has decided to step away from coaching and move into the Spurs’ front office and more from Around the NBA.

An unfortunate end to one of the greatest coaching careers of all time.

The NBA Playoffs continue to pick up as the second round is set to get underway. With it there’s been plenty of news surrounding teams that are still playing and those who are already looking forward to next year. So it’s time for another look around what’s going on in the Association.

Pop will no longer coach Spurs, transition to front office role


It is at least good to hear that Gregg Popovich will still be pretty involved with the team. ESPN’s Shams Charania reported that the longest-tenured coach in the NBA will be stepping aside from his sideline duties. Instead, he will be transitioning to the full-time role of the team’s president of basketball operations.

Popovich missed nearly all of the 2024-25 season after suffering a stroke in November. His intent was on returning as the head coach, but there was a report in April that he suffered another medical incident.

Mitch Johnson, who took over at the time, can now remove “interim” from his title as he has officially been made the new head coach.

Coaching with San Antonio for 29 years, Popovich was easily the longest tenured coach in the league. The NBA has garnered a bit of a reputation for how much turnover there is, but this was still a mind-blowing stat.


The longest tenured coach in the NBA is now Erik Spoelstra. There were 303 coaching changes since Pop got the job.

— Tim Reynolds (@ByTimReynolds) May 2, 2025

It’s such a bummer that health caused one of the greatest coaching careers in the history of the sport to come to an end. Make sure to google your favorite Pop interaction with the media today. Here’s one to get started.


Congratulations on a Hall of Fame Coaching career & best of luck in your new role, Coach Pop! ❤️ pic.twitter.com/qHPxWY2rBr

— Philadelphia 76ers (@sixers) May 2, 2025

Rookie of the Year, Most Improved Player Awards announced


As the dust continues to settle from the regular season, awards have begun to trickle in. Sticking in San Antonio, Spurs guard Stephon Castle has taken home the Rookie of the Year award. Unsurprisingly, there aren’t really any Sixers in contention to take home any hardware. Despite only playing 23 games though, Jared McCain still earned himself a third-place vote for the award. It says a lot about what he did in that time compared to what the rest of the class was able to do.

There certainly weren’t any Sixers in the running for Most Improved Player of the Year after Tyrese Maxey earned those honors last season. Dyson Daniels of the Atlanta Hawks has won it this season, beating out Ivica Zubac and Cade Cunningham — and rightfully so. All three of those guys got a lot better this year, but it’s absurd how many high draft picks in their second or third year have been put up for that award.

Grizzlies hire new coach, Suns promote new GM


The Memphis Grizzlies completed their coaching search they got a head start on in the last few weeks of the regular season, and it’s another interim head coach promoted. ESPN’s Charania reported that Tuomas Iisalo will be replacing Taylor Jenkins. Iisalo spent much of his playing and coaching career in Europe before coming over to Memphis as an assistant last season.

More front office shakeups from another team that has a lot of figuring out to do — the Phoenix Suns have promoted Brian Gregory to the general manager role. Notably, this is just an addition to their front office. James Jones, who’s been in that role since 2019, is staying with the team and is transitioning to an advisor role according to ESPN. This will be a crucial summer for Phoenix as they deal with little room to make additions and a slightly grumpy Kevin Durant.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...eps-away-from-sideline-awards-season-rolls-on
 
Guerschon Yabusele was one of the few things that went right for the Sixers last season

Milwaukee Bucks v Philadelphia 76ers

Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

Signed to a minimum deal late last summer, Guerschon Yabusele exceeded all reasonable expectations in his year in Philadelphia.

Guerschon Yabusele re-entered many NBA fans’ lives last summer when he dunked on LeBron James in the gold medal game of the Paris Olympics. Let’s watch it again, just because it’s a sweet play.

More than that dunk, though, Yabusele was excellent for France in that contest, collecting 20 points and a pair of steals to almost help his country pull off that upset. So when Daryl Morey signed him later that month on a minimum contract, it was immediately heralded as a terrific move. There was very little risk in handing out a one-year, minimum deal. Yabusele was just 28 years old at the time with a former NBA first-round pick pedigree and had shown marked improvement in his game overseas. The upside was clear and the hope was Morey had potentially landed a rotation player at an end-of-the-roster price tag.

Yet, still, Yabusele exceeded any reasonable expectation in his season in Philadelphia. It’s probably a three-way battle between he, Jared McCain and Quentin Grimes for most joy brought to the Sixers during a largely miserable season. Yabusele appeared in 70 games for Philadelphia (second-most on the team behind Ricky Council IV), averaging 11.0 points, 5.6 rebounds and 2.1 assists. He even made 43 starts, often pressed into duty as the starting center with Joel Embiid’s career moving into an uncertain territory and Andre Drummond’s toe seemingly atrophying. The biggest question mark was whether his improvement as an outside shooter while overseas would translate back to NBA play, and Guerschon passed that test with flying colors, shooting 38.0 percent from three on 3.9 attempts per game.

Through it all, Yabusele was simply a joy to watch. He unleashed plenty of dunks reminiscent of that LeBron posterization, hustled like a madman after loose balls, and generally played hard-nosed and effective defense. Through it all, it just looked he was really giving his all, which wasn’t the case for everyone during a Sixers season that disintegrated into nothingness like half the universe in a Marvel movie.

Now, we worry about whether the Sixers will be able to keep Yabusele in free agency. Nearly every team would love to have a big man who shoots an above average percentage from behind the arc, is tenacious on the glass, and can switch between a few different positions. Guerschon should really be playing the four, as rim protection for Sixers lineups with him at center was rough, but he certainly offers at least the change-up of a five-out lineup in certain matchups. Yabusele will be commandering a pay raise from his minimum deal last summer, and the Sixers will have to hope they can bring him back using a salary cap exception of some sort.

They do have a couple things working for them when considering a reunion. First, very few teams have cap space where they could blow a Sixers’ deal out of the water. But also, Guerschon seemed to really enjoy his time in Philadelphia. You may remember him embracing the Eagles’ run to a Super Bowl victory.


@RTRSPodcast @SpikeEskin @Michael_Levin Yabu is PUMPED for the Super Bowl!! pic.twitter.com/Fh9E3nQkFt

— Sam Hinkie’s Burner (@HinkiesBurner) January 26, 2025

It’s good that he saw how the fan base can get behind a team here when times are good, and Yabusele’s relationship with Sixers supporters appeared great throughout the season. I don’t know exactly how things will shake out in free agency, but the Sixers at least seem well-positioned to reunite with the Dancing Bear, which would be a nice step towards pulling this franchise out of its current nosedive.

Player Grade: A

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...the-sixers-last-season-philadelphia-76ers-nba
 
Could Kasparas Jakucionis fit with the Sixers?

Illinois v Iowa

Photo by Michael Hickey/Getty Images

Illinois star guard Kasparas Jakucionis is a likely top-10 selection in the 2025 NBA Draft. Does he make sense for the Sixers?

Kasparas Jakucionis is a 6-foot-6, 205 pound 18-year-old star point guard out of the University of Illinois and a projected top-10 selection in the upcoming NBA Draft.

Jakucionis came to Illinois making the jump from Spanish club power FC Barcelona and made his presence felt right away as the key cog of a top-25 Illinois club that earned a six seed in the NCAA Tournament.

Let's take a look at what makes the Lithuanian sensation worthy of such a high draft selection.

Kasparas Jakucionis Stats (PER 40 Minutes):

18.8 PPG

7.2 REB

6.0 AST

1.1 STL

59 TS%

Strengths


Passing/Playmaking: Jakucionis possesses elite passing feel and processes the game at a very high level. He’s extremely adept playing out of pick-and-roll where he displays excellent passing and understanding of manipulating defenses. He graded out in the 96th percentile of pick-and-roll ball-handlers, per Synergy. Jakucionis is well versed at hitting pocket passes and lobs to rollers, throwing skip passes to shooters, drawing defenders and making the proper reads to get his teammates open looks.

He’s a capable scorer as well driven by his pull-up shooting ability. He leverages his pull-up shooting ability to bend defenses and hit teammates with on time and on target dishes. All of these attributes are what drives Jakucionis upside as a primary initiator and the hub of an offense.


One of my favorite passes of the year from Kasparas Jakucionis. pic.twitter.com/WNBPjW1EWH

— Will Rucker (@Will_Rucker3_AD) April 30, 2025

Pull up shooting: Jakucionis is an elite pull-up jump shooter. Jakucionis hoisted 151 off-the-dribble jumpers in his lone season at Illinois which made up 73.3% of his total jump shot attempts on the year. He ranked in the 97th percentile on pull-up twos and the 63rd percentile on pull-up threes, putting him amongst the elite guard shot creators in the country and in this draft class. Jakucionis possesses a nasty step back going in either direction that he uses to create space to knock down shots both out of isolation and in ball screen situations.

His step back going left is his go-to move in his scoring arsenal. Jakucionis is also an excellent free throw shooter, he shot just under 85% from the line at Illinois. Jakucionis does however struggle as a catch-and-shoot player which brings questions about his ability to potentially scale down or play as an off-ball player at the next level.


Kasparas Jakučionis pull up three point shooting pic.twitter.com/Ae3ERUVMYF

— Will Rucker (@Will_Rucker3_AD) April 30, 2025

Three-level scoring: Jakucionis is an efficient scorer at all three levels. He uses advanced craft, touch and footwork to evade defenders and score around the rim particularly when playing in ball screens. Jakucionis posted a 50% free throw rate this season, a trait that's often a positive indicator of a player’s ability to score at the next level. Jakucionis is an excellent pull-up shooter in the midrange going in either direction and is able to generate quality looks due to his size and ability to leverage his passing threat out of ball screens as well.


Jakucionis does get to the rim a solid amount out of pick and roll situations and is a crafty finisher. He also posted a near 50% free throw rate. pic.twitter.com/R68ILP90rh

— Will Rucker (@Will_Rucker3_AD) April 30, 2025

Areas of concern


Turnovers: Probably the biggest weakness in Jakucionis’ game at this point is his frustratingly high turnover rate. He had a 25% turnover rate in his one season in college. When you are a high-usage primary who's tasked with being the hub of an offense, you are going to have some turnovers. The frustrating part for Jakucionis is that many of his turnovers came due to opponents applying ball pressure in isolation situations and blitzing him on screens. Too often he would pick up his dribble or try to force an errant low percentage pass due to his inability to beat the pressure off the dribble.

Athleticism: Jakucionis, despite his 6-foot-6 frame, only threw down one dunk on the season which is indicative or his lack of vertical pop and explosion. The more concerning part of his athleticism is his lack of standstill burst or first step quickness. He struggled at times against the better competition he faced to separate downhill or create an advantage in isolation situations. He also lacks strength and force which make him almost fully reliant on using his craft, touch and footwork to score going to the rim.

Defense: As we touched on earlier, Jakucionis displays just average burst and speed which shows up on the defensive end as well. His lack of lateral quickness and agility cause him to struggle at times defending quicker guards and staying in front. His size does help him be able to contest shots of smaller players. His lack of strength makes it hard for him to defend more true wings as well. He does have a good understanding of defensive principles, has active hands, and has high feel and IQ which help him as a team defender.

Jakucionis’ biggest weakness as a defender is screen navigation. He often is taken out of plays when screened and struggles to fight through due to his lack of strength. He does not however lack effort on the defensive end which could lead to improvement down the line with added strength and some refinement to his technique.

Fit with the Sixers


The Sixers do have an excess of guards on the roster, including three young core pieces with Tyrese Maxey, Jared McCain and Quentin Grimes, who they expect to re-sign in free agency this summer. It could be argued that the Sixers lack a true point guard and Jakucionis would fill that void. With the Sixers having so many scoring options and off-ball scorers, it could allow Jakucionis to operate at his best running the offense as a pure point guard and playmaking out of pick-and-roll and dribble handoff actions with Joel Embiid as well.

Jakucionis’ pull-up shooting makes him an ideal pairing with Embiid, especially as the former MVP has had a ton of success in the past in dribble handoff situations playing with the likes of JJ Redick and Seth Curry. Jakucionis would allow Maxey to lean into and assume more of a primary perimeter scoring and secondary playmaking role — one that he thrived in next to James Harden.

Would this create a roster log jam though and shrink the minutes and role of McCain and Grimes? That’s a question that the Sixers’ front office would have to ask themselves while considering Jakucionis as an option. He would be a great fit as far as getting looks for the likes of Grimes and McCain off the ball but is there enough minutes to best optimize all of their roles and development?

Concerns over his defense, high turnover rate, and athleticism bring some pause on Jakucionis’ NBA projection, but his combination of positional size, feel, basketball IQ, high level passing, toughness, and diverse shot making arsenal give him an All-Star ceiling and an enticing upside as a primary creator in an NBA offense.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...id-maxey-mccain-grimes-2025-nba-draft-lottery
 
Sixers offseason mailbag: Do they have enough for Giannis?

Philadelphia 76ers v Milwaukee Bucks

Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images

Giannis trade talk was on the mind of Sixers fans (and everyone else) in the wake of the Bucks’ elimination on Tuesday.

As the dust settles on the Milwaukee Bucks’ third straight first-round playoff knockout, the national media coalesced on one thing: Giannis Antetokounmpo is more at risk of leaving Milwaukee than ever. The Bucks shouldn’t even necessarily wait for him to formally request a trade, either.

With that in mind, we asked you for your top Sixers-related offseason questions yesterday. Unsurprisingly, Giannis was front of mind for many of you. So, let’s start there!

Philly_Berlin
If the Sixers get a top-6 pick that is not #1, I'm sure it would not be enough to package that pick along with PG for Giannis. But how much more would they need to include to build a strong enough trade offer? Do we have enough picks to get it done or would we have to also include a young player or two?

Tony Jones of The Athletic took a stab at answering this question:


Philly can trade

1. Its first this season (top 6)
2. Paul George (salary)
3. Jared McCain (very good young guy)
4. Clippers 28 first unprotected
5. Clippers 29 swap
6. 2030 first

They have ammo to try while keeping together a terrific core https://t.co/S0lfJPFmlR

— Tony Jones (@Tjonesonthenba) April 30, 2025

Personally, I’m skeptical that the Sixers could get a deal done without including Tyrese Maxey. Jones later argued that no other team would offer Milwaukee a guaranteed top-six pick—provided that the Sixers don’t convey it to OKC this year—so they shouldn’t also have to include Maxey if they offer everything else.

Here’s the tricky thing about a Giannis trade (not just from the Sixers’ perspective): The Bucks have already traded control of every one of their first-round picks through 2030. They have zero incentive to tank if they decide to trade Giannis, but a team built around PG, McCain and Kyle Kuzma would be the definition of mediocrity. I’m guessing the Bucks will try to loop the New Orleans Pelicans into a Giannis trade—whether in a straight two-team deal or a multi-team blockbuster—since the Pelicans control their 2026 (pick swap) and 2027 first-rounders.

If the Sixers are willing to dangle Maxey and a top-six pick along with other future first-rounders, that’s at least a competitive offer. But if they’re sticking to George and McCain instead of Maxey, the OKC Thunder, Houston Rockets and San Antonio Spurs could all top that offer fairly easily. A top-six pick and McCain would be a great start to the Bucks’ rebuild, but that wouldn’t solve their lack of their own picks moving forward, and they’d be spending more than $100 million on George and Lillard through 2026-27. Yuck.

Booth12
He's going to OKC isn't he? This is the exact reason why you sit on a war chest of draft picks.

We’ll first have to see what happens to the Thunder in the playoffs this year. If they get knocked out in the Western Conference semifinals, they might be more tempted to shake things up, but a trip to the NBA Finals or a championship might compel them to stand relatively pat.

The Thunder can easily cobble together the most compelling offer of any team, although it’s unclear who they’d declare off-limits. If one of Chet Holmgren or Jalen Williams were on the table (along with some of their 15,000 future first-round picks), that’s a far more intriguing starting point than an offer built around role players such as Isaiah Hartenstein and Lu Dort.

The Thunder could throw caution to the wind and try to acquire the Greek Freak without including any of Williams, Holmgren or Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, but the bill would come due after next season. Williams and Holmgren both figure to sign max or near-max extensions this offseason that will begin in the 2026-27 season, while SGA is about to sign the richest contract in NBA history this summer. We’re already seeing how difficult it is to build around three max players under this CBA; would any team even dare to try to build around four?

The Thunder would almost have to include Hartenstein in a Giannis trade for salary-matching purposes, so they’d presumably try to keep Chet and trade J-Dub if they had to choose between the two. A Big Three of SGA, Chet and Giannis might justify however much it costs to acquire the Greek Freak, particularly if the Thunder can still maintain some semblance of depth after the deal. But I’m guessing they won’t be the team that’s most desperate to swing a trade for Giannis this offseason, which might leave them open to getting outbid

if the rockets did try to buy low on PG, i'm curious who they'd trade to match salaries. i assume you'd have to start with dillon brooks and jock landale...but they don't have a lot of guys making big money next year (so far).

Avi Wolfman-Arent (@avi-wa.bsky.social) 2025-04-29T14:35:16.222Z
i guess what i'm asking is...how do you even attempt to buy low when you'd have to include so many players just to match salary? or is there a way around that?

Avi Wolfman-Arent (@avi-wa.bsky.social) 2025-04-29T14:44:59.364Z

To be clear, this discussion spawned from a shitpost about the Rockets trading for Paul George if they aren’t able to get Kevin Durant this summer. It’s nothing more than a fun thought experiment—I’d be floored if it actually happened for multiple reasons—but let’s break it down anyway.

The Rockets could go one of two routes here. If they picked up their $44.9 million team option on Fred VanVleet for next season, he’d cover most of the salary match they’d need for George. Otherwise, they’d likely have to include Jalen Green ($33.3 million), as Dillon Brooks ($21.1 million) and Jabari Smith Jr. ($12.4 million) would still leave them more than $15 million short of what George will earn next season ($51.7 million).

If the Sixers re-sign Quentin Grimes this offseason, they’d presumably have zero interest in VanVleet, so the Rockets would need to find a third team to take him on. The same would likely go for Green, although other teams around the league might jump at the chance to acquire him.

The Rockets are currently projected to be $4.6 million below the first apron next season, which means they might be allowed to take back more salary in a trade than they send out. If they do, they’d be hard-capped at the first apron. They could give themselves more financial flexibility by declining their team option on VanVleet and re-signing him on a multi-year deal at a lower annual salary, though.

To be clear, this is a pure hypothetical. The Rockets have sent behind-the-scenes signals all season that if they do swing a blockbuster trade, they’re looking for someone who’s more developmentally aligned with the rest of their young core. General manager Rafael Stone recently told ESPN’s Tim MacMahon that the Rockets have “a very high bar to do a transaction that changes things.”

Would the Rockets change their minds if they strike out on the likes of Giannis and/or Kevin Durant this offseason? Don’t hold your breath.

As always, thanks to everyone for the questions this week! We’ll run it back next Wednesday when we have more carcasses of first-round playoff exits to pick over.

Unless otherwise noted, all stats via NBA.com, PBPStats, Cleaning the Glass or Basketball Reference. All salary information via Salary Swish and salary-cap information via RealGM.

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Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...giannis-antetokounmpo-trade-bucks-paul-george
 
Jared McCain to represent Sixers at 2025 NBA Draft Lottery

Utah Jazz v Philadelphia 76ers

Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

Philadelphia’s 2024 first-round pick will take part as we learn whether the Sixers will be able to select in the first round in 2025.

As anyone still tuning in for Philadelphia 76ers coverage during these troubled times knows, the 2025 NBA Draft Lottery is of vital importance for the Sixers. Thanks to Al Horford’s extreme moping during his time in Philadelphia, Daryl Morey traded his contract to Oklahoma City, resulting in the Thunder owning the Sixers’ 2025 first-round pick if it falls outside the top six picks. After Philadelphia finished with the fifth-worst record in the entire league this past season, the Sixers have a 63.9 percent chance of retaining the pick.

So we are looking at a 10.5 percent chance of first overall and Cooper Flagg, another 53.4 percent chance of selecting somewhere between picks two and six, and a 36.1 percent chance of utter and complete disaster. It sounds like the franchise needs some good vibes at the Lottery. Who you gonna call?


guess who will be representing us at the draft lottery this year… pic.twitter.com/hK3AeTK7Y3

— Philadelphia 76ers (@sixers) May 4, 2025

Jared McCain, the Sixers’ smiley, TikTok-dancing, 2024 first-round draft pick will be the team’s representative this year in Chicago for the Draft Lottery. He’s honestly the perfect choice and I’m glad the team agreed and saw fit to make it happen. Amidst everything that went wrong for the Sixers, McCain was one of the few things that didn’t. He went from being the 16th overall pick to being the surefire Rookie of the Year if his season hadn’t unfortunately been cut short by a torn meniscus in his left knee. Sure, McCain couldn’t escape the Sixers curse (no one can), but fans have nothing but positive feelings about the young man.

Plus, for an event that involves a super critical odds drawing in a closed room with 99 percent televised fluff around it, send in the hyper-charismatic guy who has an incredible appeal for a young audience. This NBA Draft Lottery may very well decide the Sixers franchise’s fate for the next decade. With McCain’s involvement, maybe we can also have some laughs and smiles along the way.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...-at-2025-nba-draft-lottery-philadelphia-76ers
 
Editor-in-chief mailbag: The lottery is nearly upon us

2024 NBA Draft - Round One

Photo by Jeff Haynes/NBAE via Getty Images

The Sixers have hinted at who their representative will be (seems like an obvious choice) with the NBA Draft lottery a week away. Hit me with your questions.

The 2025 NBA Draft lottery is a week away. Crazy. Crazier that it matters to Sixers fans for the first time since 2018 (we don’t have to talk about how that draft went).

The Sixers (very strongly) hinted at who will be their lottery representative next Monday.


guess who will be representing us at the draft lottery this year… pic.twitter.com/hK3AeTK7Y3

— Philadelphia 76ers (@sixers) May 4, 2025

Yeah, don’t break your brain overthinking that one. Given his unbeatable vibes and Duke connections (Capture the Flagg!), Jared McCain always felt like the natural choice.

With that said, let’s get to your questions! If you don’t have one, feel free to hop in the comments anyway. I try to lurk in there for most of the day.

(On a side note, would anyone be interested if we did a live stream or live discussion thread for the lottery? Comment below.)

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...n-chief-mailbag-the-lottery-is-nearly-upon-us
 
Liberty Ballers 2025 exit survey: where did it all go wrong?

Paul George Press Conference

Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images

The staff takes the time to reflect on the disaster that just happened and what’s next moving forward

Well, it’s safe to say that didn’t go according to plan.

Right before the beginning of the season, I asked the LB staff for their predictions and takes on the 2024-25 Sixers season. Under the assumption that the team would actually be healthy enough to take the court, it’s fair to say that we got a lot of things wrong.

So, I decided to torture my colleagues again, this time letting them reflect on what fell apart over the last nine months, as well as their thoughts on what should happen in the immediate future. Without further ado, here’s what our staff had to say about it all.

Health aside, who do you blame the most for this season? Why?


Bryan Toporek: Daryl Morey and the Sixers’ front office. They knew the risks of building around three max players under the new CBA—namely the restrictions they’d face when assembling the supporting cast—but they went ahead with it anyway. In his end-of-season press conference last year, Morey expressed his confidence in the front office’s ability to find guys “that are overlooked” like Kelly Oubre Jr.

To their credit, they did hit a home run with Guerschon Yabusele this offseason. However, they otherwise overindexed on experienced veterans such as Eric Gordon, Reggie Jackson and Andre Drummond with the playoffs in mind. That proved costly once injuries began to mount and they weren’t able to scale up.

After the season ended, Morey acknowledged that he erred in that approach. He pledged that the Sixers would become “younger” and “more dynamic” next year to help them survive the 82-game grind of the regular season. If he follows through with that strategy, at least this season wouldn’t be a total waste from a long-term perspective.

Erin Grugan: It’s hard to pick a specific person because I think there’s systemic issues running throughout the front office of this team. I have to go with Morey, if I’m going to blame one name, because this outcome of this season was not some huge unforeseen disaster, it was a completely-predictable disaster that was allowed to happen by Morey deciding to build a team that relied almost completely on the health of guys like Joel Embiid and Paul George (who are historically not healthy consistently). Plus, with their contracts, the team was hamstrung to give them a supporting cast, which resulted in bringing in players like Drummond, Jackson, Lowry (sorry Coach Lowry)…

Not a huge surprise that the strategy didn’t work.

Paul Hudrick: Health was the biggest issue, but if we put that aside, it has to fall on Morey. He assembled a team around two oft-injured players and surrounded them with aging players. Morey himself has already admitted this was a mistake — and already began rectifying it at the trade deadline. Morey hit big on Yabusele late in the summer, but whiffed on basically every other free-agent signing. Cycling out the oldies for more dynamic players is the only path moving forward.

Harrison Grimm: It has to be the guy at the top, right? Morey put all his eggs into the 2024 free agency basket — and for the most part, it didn’t pan out. Their marquee addition, George, struggled when he was available, which wasn’t often. Caleb Martin looked like a shell of himself and spent most of the season sidelined. Drummond, another key signing, was unplayable more often than not. At the time, all of these moves were widely accepted and even praised. But with the benefit of hindsight, it’s clear they didn’t work out — for reasons both within and outside of the Sixers’ control. And all of that is a tough sell when you spend an entire season optimizing flexibility.

What surprised you the most about this season?


BT: It’s a tie between Jared McCain and Quentin Grimes. I figured McCain would be on the fringes of the rotation as a mid-first-round rookie on a win-now team. In no way did I imagine him becoming the Rookie of the Year front-runner before he suffered his meniscus injury in mid-December. He went from a 10th/11th man to a possible long-term starter next to Tyrese Maxey in the span of roughly one month.

The same goes for Grimes, who figured to be a nice ancillary piece of the rotation when they acquired him at the trade deadline. However, injuries gave him an opportunity to flourish far more than expected. I don’t expect him to be a 20-plus-points-per-game scorer if the Sixers are ever fully healthy, but between Maxey, McCain and Grimes, the backcourt seems to be a clear strength of the Sixers for the first time in a long, long time.

EG: The depths of despair one could reach with a basketball team that was claiming to be championship contenders in the preseason. OK, maybe that’s a bit dramatic. I didn’t quite think they were contending for a championship before the season started, but I just didn’t expect it to be so painful to watch at times.

PH: In the pleasant surprise category, it has to be the play of McCain and Grimes. I liked both players before they were Sixers but both were revelations during a miserable season. Aside from those two, Justin Edwards and Adem Bona’s progress was a nice boon. Both players could factor into the team’s future plans.

On the negative side ... the injuries. My goodness. Whenever it felt like it couldn’t get any worse, it did. It was also surprising to see how long Embiid and George continued to play when it was clear neither guy was healthy and both were actively hurting the team. Hopefully that’s a lesson learned for 2025-26.

HG: It’s the Sixers’ 2024 rookie class — and honestly, I don’t think it’s close. It starts with McCain, who wasn’t just a productive player but arguably their best player when he was on the floor. Most expected him to be a good prospect heading into the year, but I’d be lying if I said I saw this level of production coming in Year 1.

Then there’s Bona, who developed from a project big into someone who thrived during the Sixers’ late-season tank stretch. He wasn’t just serviceable — he was often one of the better players on the court. It’s rare to see noticeable rookie-year growth, and I certainly didn’t expect it from Bona. Props to him for maximizing the opportunity.

Finally, there’s Edwards, an undrafted free agent. After a rough year at Kentucky, many of the issues that plagued him there have seemingly disappeared at the NBA level. He defended better than expected and, just as importantly, gave the team a wing who is a willing and confident shooter. Overall, the Sixers went 3-for-3 in a relatively weak draft class — without even having a lottery pick.

Huge credit to the scouting department.

What about this season disappointed you the most?


BT: Never seeing what this team could do fully healthy. Even if they managed to stay healthy, I’m not sure that they would have been on the OKC/Boston/Cleveland tier, but it’s hard not to feel like this season is a total waste since we never saw the full-fledged version of this squad. Even when Embiid played, he was clearly a shell of his former self physically.

At least that gives us something to look forward to next year? (Until one of them gets hurt in training camp, of course.)

EG: For me, it’s not the injuries that disappointed me but the handling of the injuries to guys like Embiid, George and Maxey that really disappoints me. We will likely never know what went on behind the scenes to make the decisions made this season, but there’s a plethora of questionable ones to scrutinize. Having Maxey and George out on the floor, both visibly hobbled by injuries, weeks after the season was realistically lost. The entire Embiid saga of playing two games at a time before his knee would swell again (after years of already questionable injury management). Take your pick.

PH: Yes.

HG: The Sixers made a point to add proven veterans to their rotation — names like Lowry, Jackson and Gordon. Not only did they underwhelm, but they were a major reason the Sixers couldn’t stay afloat through the wave of injuries. Morey has since gone on record saying we’ll see a younger, more versatile roster built around the Sixers’ core. If he sticks to that plan, I think it’ll make a huge difference — both on the court and, frankly, from a watchability standpoint as well.

Which non-McCain surprise do you think will have the biggest long-term impact?


BT: I’m not even convinced that Yabu is back next year, so I’m ruling him out immediately. As solid as Edwards looked late in the season, the clear answer has to be Grimes here, right? I’d imagine he’s the front-runner to start alongside Maxey next season, while McCain can serve as a super-sub/potential Sixth Man of the Year candidate off the bench.

EG: I’d like to see it be Grimes. He came into a team in complete disarray, with weeks of meaningless games (minus the tank) to play in when the Sixers’ season was already realistically over. Yet, he came in with confidence and a clear desire to prove himself as a player and a teammate, even if the games meant nothing. His attitude and play during that slog to end the season is exactly what you want from a young player that could become a leader in your organization down the line if he stays long enough and continues to develop.

I’m excited and curious to see him play some games with some actual weight to them, but the potential has certainly shown through.

PH: The obvious answer is Grimes, but I’ll also put Edwards into that conversation. It’s not often big wings that can shoot and defend fall into your lap. It’s even less likely those wings were once considered one of the top recruits in the country. If Edwards is just a slightly improved version of the player he was this season, that would be fantastic for the Sixers. But I think he might have even more to offer.

HG: Dare I say that Bona could have the biggest long-term impact? A lot of people tuned out of the Sixers towards the end of the season (and for good reason). Because of that, many might not realize just how impressive Bona was when given the opportunity. Sure, the games weren’t exactly high-stakes with the team tanking, but the Sixers have been searching for a long-term solution at backup center since Embiid first arrived. As a second-round pick, many saw Bona as a raw center with great physical potential but in need of development. And while it’s true that he needed time to adjust, the version of Bona we saw towards the end of the regular season was noticeably improved. He kept his fouls in check and capitalized on the increased offensive opportunities, even setting a career-high 28 points in one game. Embiid, as we all know, is a major question mark moving forward. Having Bona as a backup — or even as a potential starter — isn’t just a luxury. It’s a necessity.

Draft pick aside, what moves do you want to see made this offseason?


BT: No. More. Old. Guys. I’d also like the Sixers to explore all of their options with the taxpayer MLE rather than handing it to Yabusele before free agency even begins. One agent told ESPN’s Brian Windhorst that he’s preparing his clients for a “free-agent recession” because few teams are projected to have cap space this summer. Are we sure that Yabusele is the best that the Sixers can do with their $5.7 million MLE?

Last offseason, Gary Trent Jr., Taurean Prince and Tyus Jones all ended up settling for one-year, veteran-minimum contracts. Some veterans are bound to get priced out this offseason, too. That’s where I’d like to see the Sixers pounce. (Jake LaRavia is one of my favorite theoretical targets, especially since the Kings are limited in how much they can offer him.)

EG: Please stop signing guys in their 30s. I’m begging.

PH: I don’t have any specific players or moves at the moment, but I would say that Morey should trust his scouting department to find more guys like Oubre and Yabusele and less players like Eric Gordon and Reggie Jackson. It seems like Morey has already acknowledged this as the path going forward. They’ve crushed the draft in recent years and they’ve done a great job finding undervalued players. Lean into that.

HG: It might not be the most exciting move, but trading Drummond is pretty high on my list. He’s almost certain to opt into his $5 million player option, which could make him a useful piece in a salary-matching deal. If the Sixers can’t find a worthwhile return, they could simply dump his salary — opening up more opportunities for Bona (who could be even better next season) or for any new additions. It would also give the team extra flexibility to either pay Grimes or retain Yabusele.

If they do keep the pick, what would you like to see them do with it?


BT: If they get the No. 1 or No. 2 pick, the decision seems pretty straightforward (take Cooper Flagg and Dylan Harper, respectively). If they’re anywhere in the Nos. 3-6 range, they should explore all of their options—trading up, trading down or trading out of the draft entirely.

EG: Don’t trade it for a “star” in his 30s. It sounds like a joke but it’s not, because Morey would do it. I don’t care if the Sixers get 1st overall or 6th, I would rather see them take a chance on the young talent towards the top of this draft than take that pick and trade it to someone else for some aging “established star”. It doesn’t work. It hasn’t worked. It’s not going to start working.

I don’t know that the Sixers are one first-round pick away from a huge turnaround as a team and organization by any means, don’t get me wrong, but I desperately want to see a shift in this front office’s strategy away from trying (and failing) to plug and play random 30-year-old players into this squad. It’s shortsighted in a way that also doesn’t even work in the short-term.

PH: Take the best player available at whichever pick they get. Don’t overthink it. Again, drafting has been a strength of this front office. Trust your scouts and don’t focus at all on fit. If they decide to trade the pick, they should only do so for future draft capital, not any type of win-now player (unless a superstar in their 20s somehow becomes available).

HG: Over the past month, I’ve spent a ton of time analyzing prospects with my colleagues here at LB, so I’ve put a lot of thought into this question.

In my view, there are four prospects who are worth taking with little hesitation: Flagg, Harper, Ace Bailey and V.J. Edgecombe. Each brings something different to the table, but based on talent alone, any of them would be a strong pick.

Of course, as many know, the Sixers’ pick could fall outside the top four — which makes things a bit murkier. There’s a noticeable gap between four and five, where players like Tre Johnson, Kon Knueppel and Jeremiah Fears are likely to be in the mix. I have some serious fit concerns with Fears, though he might be the best player available at that point. Knueppel would add another smart shooter to the roster, but there are legitimate questions about his ceiling. Johnson is a fascinating prospect with the potential to develop into several different types of players, though some worry about his limited impact outside of scoring.

Bottom line: If the pick lands in the top four, I think they should keep it. There are names outside that range who could help, but it would be tough to find a veteran in a trade who could offer more long-term value than Flagg, Harper, Bailey or Edgecombe. However, if the pick falls to the five or six range, I’d be much more open to exploring the trade market for veteran additions.

Obviously Embiid is a huge question mark, but how much hope do you have for a Paul George bounce back?


BT: I’m cautiously optimistic, albeit only to an extent. I don’t think George suddenly lost his battle to Father Time between last year and this year and is now completely washed. The injuries he dealt with throughout the season undoubtedly contributed to his mediocre production. If he stays healthier next year—and Embiid can stay on the court as well—a bounce back should be well within reach.

With that said, George turned 35 on May 2 and has missed at least 20 games in five of the past six seasons. The Sixers need to build the rest of their roster with the expectation that he’ll miss at least that much time each year moving forward.

EG: I have more faith that he can bounce back than Embiid right now. George was playing All-Star level ball before this season (that was derailed by injuries before the regular season even started). I think if he’s able to stay on the floor, he’s able to get back into that groove. It is a little concerning to see him having visibly hyperextended the same knee twice this season, and it’s something I hope doesn’t develop into a long-term issue with stability in the knee. But if his knee can hold up and he doesn’t fall victim again to really unfortunate luck as well (like the pinky injury), I think George still has the potential to bounce back quite easily next season.

Enough to justify the contract the Sixers gave him in his mid-30s? Well, I’m not going to go that far…

PH: It was a rough year for George. Sure, he signed a max contract and that will provide generational wealth for his family, but he’s still a human. He moved his wife and kids across the country and had to learn a whole new organization and teammates. His best teammate and one of the biggest reasons he came to Philly started the year on the shelf. Then he had trouble staying healthy himself. You could sense all year that George and Embiid were putting pressure on themselves to play when the other was out or not feeling 100%.

I always point to the stretch George had in January to have any type of optimism. He was at his healthiest and was playing efficiently offensively and was impactful defensively. Is that version of him worth a max deal? Debatable. Am I optimistic the now 35-year-old can remain healthy enough over the course of a season to provide the team that version of him? I honestly don’t know.

If he’s healthy, I think George can still be an impactful two-way wing. But that staying healthy thing has proven to be quite tricky.

HG: I think I’m more optimistic than the consensus when it comes to Paul George. Yes, it was a rough season from just about every angle. But I don’t believe PG was ever truly healthy during the regular season. He dealt with multiple leg hyperextensions, a finger injury, and likely other issues that weren’t publicly reported. It’s clear he played through a lot.

Assuming he can stay healthy — which admittedly is a big “if” — I think we’ll see a version of PG next season that’s much closer to what was advertised. He showed stretches of strong defense this year, and I believe he still has more to offer than what we’ve seen so far in a Sixers uniform.

How do you think Quentin Grimes will fit in with the real version of this team, assuming that exists?


BT: I’m more optimistic about it than Georges Niang is, that’s for sure!

Assuming the Sixers re-sign him, I’d imagine he’ll have the inside track to the starting 2-guard job. His size and point-of-attack defense make him a more natural complement to Maxey than McCain is. The offense still figures to primarily run through the Big 3 (when healthy), but Grimes’ ability to serve as a secondary creator should take some pressure off George and Embiid in particular. Maxey, Grimes and McCain should be the main facilitators on the team, creating more catch-and-shoot opportunities for George in particular.

EG: Grimes is someone that I think can genuinely be a large part of the next “real” version of this team. Well, the version of the team I hope for, which includes more reliance on younger guys like Grimes alongside Maxey or McCain getting to become more creative playmakers and run the show a little more. I think that strategy has a lot more potential short-term and especially long-term than the current status quo of “Maxey brings down the ball and has to force it to Embiid or George every possession” (assuming the “Big 3” of them even play games together… it was rare this season).

PH:
Great. What makes Grimes such a great fit is that he’s proven to be scalable. When the team has all its stars healthy, Grimes can be be a reliable spot-up shooter and a demon defensively. When the team is down a guy or two (or more) Grimes showed that can he can create shots and carry the offensive load for stretches of games. He’s an ideal two guard playing next to Maxey and/or McCain.

HG: The Sixers have deserved plenty of criticism over the past few months, but I think Morey absolutely nailed the addition of Grimes. I see him fitting in perfectly as a defender. While he doesn’t rack up big steal or block numbers, he stays attached to NBA guards and can hold his own against some wings as well. Offensively, it’ll be interesting to see how they use him. Nick Nurse experimented with putting the ball in his hands late last season and has hinted we could see more of that next year when Grimes plays alongside Maxey and McCain. He’s already proven he’s a more than capable shooter and can make plays when chased off the three-point line. Overall, it’s hard to imagine a better glue guy to slot between Maxey, George, and Embiid.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...l-embiid-tyrese-maxey-paul-george-daryl-morey
 
Paul George’s first impression with Philadelphia could use a second take

Golden State Warriors v Philadelphia 76ers

Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images

Constant injuries and cold shooting made every aspect of PG’s first year with the Sixers go as poorly as possible.

Get it? Because he does podcasts?

The addition of Paul George to the core of Tyrese Maxey and Joel Embiid prompted Sixers’ governor Josh Harris to proclaim this was the most talented team of his tenure.

Then everything went wrong.

Not only did Embiid’s knee injury become such a constant issue that he was never able to play full time, but George hyper-extended his knee in his second preseason game as a Sixer.

After that caused him to miss the first week of the regular season, George hyper-extended the very same knee eight games into his Sixers’ tenure, giving him a second bone bruise in less than a month.

That knee injury seemed to trouble him the whole season, as did the groin and finger injuries he picked up in January. George’s season finally ended in March when he decided to explore treatment options for everything he banged up during the year.

His season ended at just 41 games. The three of him — George, Embiid and Maxey — played in just 15 games together, and the three of them were only able to finish 12 of them.

In that time he averaged 16.2 points per game on 43% shooting while making 35.8% of his threes. Those were all the lowest marks in seasons where he’s played at least 40 games since his third year in the league. Only 16% of his shots last season were at the rim, which was a career-low.

Some looked to explain away this entire year to injuries, while others used it as proof that the 34-year old has become completely washed. The truth lies somewhere in the middle. There actually are some positives to be taken from George’s debut year with the Sixers, but also just as many troubling signs.

It is vague just when and how often George’s knee started to bother him, but it was around December and January he would mention starting to feel more like himself. Over that time he had a 20-game stretch where he averaged 18.8 points per game, making 39.7% of his threes with an effective field goal percentage of 53.7%.

Something that also became clear during this time was that George and Maxey had begun to figure out each other as a pairing while that chemistry with Embiid did not follow.

Per Cleaning the Glass, lineups with Maxey and George with Embiid off the floor were still outscored by 1.2 points, but had figured things out offensively. Those groups scored 118.5 points per 100 possessions, putting them in the 79th percentile for offensive efficiency.

Lineups with Embiid and George with Maxey on the bench though scored 91 points per 100 with a 43.8% effective field goal percentage, both of these are in the worst percentile in the league. Keep in mind how small these sample sizes are though, the Maxey and George lineups had over 1000 more possessions of reps together.

Getting George to click with Embiid will be the first step in making lineups with all three of them work. With Embiid constantly in a state of needing to ramp himself up, he and Maxey would typically spam their two-man actions while George would fade into the background for long stretches of games.

With all three on the floor they were outscored by 0.9 points, posting a middling 109 points per 100 possessions and 51.9% effective field goal percentage.

Obviously a larger sample size would be helpful, but the health of this team’s top stars can’t be relied upon at this point. Embiid’s knee problems are what they are, and George has played more than 56 games just once since the 2018-19 season.

This past Sixers’ season was a showing of everything that could have gone wrong going wrong, but those are the risks when building around two stars in their 30s with extensive injury histories.

Season Grade: D

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025/5/8/24422611/paul-george-injury-sixers-player-grade-joel-embiid
 
Sixers offseason mailbag: How Celtics’ meltdown could shake up the Eastern Conference

Boston Celtics vs New York Knicks

Photo by Matt Stone/MediaNews Group/Boston Herald via Getty Images

The Celtics are now staring down a 2-0 hole against the Knicks after back-to-back chokes. Could the Sixers stand to benefit from that this offseason?

You’ll have to pardon me for a second… AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

Sorry, sorry. I just got done watching the Celtics become the first team in the play-by-play era to blow multiple 20-point leads in a single postseason. Funny what happens when you have to face full-strength teams in the playoffs for the first time in two years!

Yesterday, we asked you for your top Sixers-related offseason questions with the draft lottery fast approaching. I’ll be honest: Most of the comments were just schadenfreude about the Celtics. (I might have joined in, too.)

With that said, we did get a few non-Celtics-chokejob-related questions, so let’s dive right in! Don’t worry, we’ll return to Cus Crise at the end.

Imperfectkey
Around the league, there is talk of multiple stars(KD, Zion, Giannis) being available this offseason. What rotation players would you be interested in if the Sixers become a third team in those trades?

I love this question. Let’s start with the three stars mentioned here first and then branch out to a few other ideas.

The Phoenix Suns don’t have much by way of tradable rotation players. Grayson Allen ($16.9 million) would be too expensive for the Sixers unless Kelly Oubre Jr. opts in, and he wouldn’t fill a need anyway. Royce O’Neale ($10.1 million), Cody Martin ($8.7 million) and Nick Richards ($5.0 million) would be of more interest, although Martin and Richards’ contracts are non-guaranteed, so the Suns could waive them outright to trim their tax bill.

The Bucks are similarly devoid of helpful rotation players. I’d have zero interest in Pat Connaughton if he picks up his $9.4 million player option. AJ Green ($2.3 million, non-guaranteed) would be a nice bench shooter, but the Bucks aren’t in position to give up their few players under the age of 30 if they’re heading into a rebuild. Bobby Portis would be the only player of mild intrigue if he picks up his $13.4 million player option, although it’d be tough to make the money work without Oubre and Andre Drummond ($5 million player option).

The Pelicans are where things would get interesting. If the Sixers land the fifth or sixth pick in this year’s draft, would you send that pick and salary filler for Herb Jones ($13.9 million) and future draft considerations? The Sixers don’t have the salary to acquire Trey Murphy III ($25.0 million) unless they’re sending out one of Paul George or Joel Embiid, and Kelly Olynyk ($13.4 million) might even be a stretch, but Herb would be well worth a call at least.

The Houston Rockets are the other team I’d be eyeing for multi-team frameworks, provided that Tilman Fertitta is willing to trade with Daryl Morey. If the Sixers could acquire Tari Eason ($5.7 million) or Cam Whitmore ($3.5 million) while giving the Rockets more draft ammunition to trade for a superstar like Durant or Giannis, it might be a win-win.

Those are the types of deals that might make more sense—where they’re giving assets to the team acquiring the superstar rather than the one selling them. The big problem from the Sixers’ standpoint will be coming up with enough matching salary to avoid triggering a first-apron hard cap, which they’d do if they took back more salary in a trade than they sent out. Unless they land a top-six pick and are willing to part ways with it for a win-now rotation player, they might have to limit their search to players earning around $8 million or less.

SixersPhlan
Did anyone ever determine if that Ben for Haliburton trade was legit?

Reporting on this has been mixed. Before Simmons got traded, Keith Pompey of the Philadelphia Inquirer reported that the Kings had “considered packaging Buddy Hield, Tyrese Halibuton, Harrison Barnes and two first-round picks” for Simmons, Tobias Harris and Matisse Thybulle. However, a source told Pompey that the Sixers weren’t “interested in that package,” while another source said the Sixers hadn’t “received a formal trade offer.”

Shams Charania of The Athletic reported at the time that the Sixers did ask the Kings for Haliburton and “multiple first-round picks,” although he added that the Kings did “not plan to move De’Aaron Fox or Haliburton and want to build around them.” (They’d wind up trading Haliburton to the Pacers in a package for Domantas Sabonis a few weeks later.)

Long after the dust settled on the Simmons trade, there wasn’t much more clarity on the Haliburton-Simmons rumors. In May 2023, Jake Fischer of Yahoo Sports reported that the Kings had put Haliburton “on the proverbial table” for Simmons. Two months later, longtime NBA insider Marc Stein rebutted that.

“Sources briefed on those trade talks insisted to The Stein Line last week that, contrary to persistent speculation about Sacramento’s reported interest in Ben Simmons back then, Philadelphia was not offered a Tyrese Haliburton-centric package for Simmons,” Stein wrote at the time. (Ironically, Stein and Fischer are now teammates at The Stein Line, which all NBA slop addicts should subscribe to.)

During an appearance on Podcast P (sigh), Haliburton confirmed that he caught wind of the rumors about the Sixers and even called Georges Niang to check if a deal was imminent. However, without specifically naming names, team president Daryl Morey told Anthony Gargano of 97.5 The Fanatic that the Sixers had “turned over every rock,” but the Harden trade “was really the only one available.”

“I think as evidence that we turned over every rock, there have been players recently who said they thought they were about to be traded by us,” he added. “And that’s because we had pushed very hard for those kinds of players. Unfortunately, those deals were never there, and we were thrilled that James [Harden] became available because we really had no other option.”

Does that clear things up?

In my head it's either Embiid is back and untradable or essentially not coming back and untradable. Is there any world where they can entertain something in the middle? Something like he's diminished but tradeable? I'm grasping at straws here

Philly Front Office (@phillyfrontoffice.com) 2025-05-07T17:45:56.761Z

Let’s start with the caveat that we have no idea about the current state of Embiid’s knee. Thanks to the Sixers’ relentless obfuscation, we likely never will. With that out of the way… that middle-of-the-road outcome very well could be within the realm of realistic possibilities.

Even if Embiid can’t reach his full-fledged MVP heights upon his return, his trade value is in the toilet right now because of his health. If he makes it through next season healthy, some team might be desperate enough to gamble on him in the summer of 2026, risks be damned. Multiple teams appear to be clearing their books for that offseason, so there may be a handful of legitimate suitors for him, particularly if they strike out on their Plan A.

There’s always the chance of a rebuilding team losing patience and looking to accelerate its return to the playoff mix, too. (Here’s looking at you, Charlotte Hornets.) Given the relationship between Embiid and Rockets head coach Ime Udoka, I can’t help but wonder whether they’d be a dark horse for him if they eventually decide to move off Alperen Şengün as well. (Again, provided that Fertitta is willing to trade with Morey.)

Embiid’s massive extension certainly did his trade value no favors. But with the salary cap likely to rise by 10 percent each of the next few years, it will take up slightly less of a team’s overall cap space with each passing season. Still, health is the paramount consideration. He’ll need to avoid major setbacks next season or he could become legitimately untradable.

Hikemeister
I can't help but laugh at the Celtics. I can't stand this Knicks team but lol Celtics. Maybe their model isn't sustainable.

This isn’t a question, but I did want to end on this for two reasons. First, to bask in the glory of the Celtics completely crapping their pants against the Knicks. Twice!

This should also serve as a reminder of how quickly things change in the NBA. A week ago, the Celtics were one of this year’s title favorites. Now, they’re two losses away from getting sent home in the conference semifinals, and they’ll need to win at least two games on the road to advance any further.

Losing before the conference finals would be a catastrophic setback for a team that’s staring down an NBA-record $500 million payroll and luxury-tax bill next season. Regardless of how the rest of this series plays out, the Celtics might not be able to run it back next year.

“The rest of the league is bracing for some level of change to come to the Celtics roster this offseason,” Charania recently said on the Pat McAfee Show. “Sources have been telling me for weeks now that the Celtics will be exploring trade options in the offseason. This iteration just is not gonna be sustainable.”

The Celtics masterfully manipulated the one-year grace period in 2023-24 as the new CBA got phased in, but the full array of penalties—including stiffer repeater-tax bills—will be in effect starting this offseason. Charania said the Celtics “knew when they traded for Jrue Holiday and they traded for Kristaps Porziņģis that they’d be staring at this in the face this summer,” but to their credit, they did at least cash in with a title in the meantime.

The Sixers often tailor their roster each offseason specifically with the Celtics in mind, as they’ve been a fixture in the deeper rounds of the playoffs for the past decade. This year, the Sixers might get a reprieve in that regard if the Celtics do sell off one of their big-name players. If anything, the gap between the two finally might shrink rather than widen. (Famous last words.)

That’s all for this week! Thanks as always for the questions, and we’ll be back next Wednesday either celebrating the lottery results or on a two-day tequila bender.

Unless otherwise noted, all stats via NBA.com, PBPStats, Cleaning the Glass or Basketball Reference. All salary information via Salary Swish and salary-cap information via RealGM.

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Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...eltdown-could-shake-up-the-eastern-conference
 
Dylan Harper is a superstar and more than just the 2025 NBA Draft’s consolation prize

Minnesota v Rutgers

Photo by Ed Mulholland/Getty Images

If the Sixers don’t land the No. 1 overall pick, the best option is simple: draft Dylan Harper.

With just three more sleeps until we know the Sixers’ draft lottery fate, all Sixers fans are hoping and wishing upon that 10.5% chance that they land the No. 1 overall pick and the right to select franchise savior Cooper Flagg. However, if the Sixers do not land the top selection, who is the next best option and fit for the Sixers?

The answer is simple: draft Dylan Harper.

Let's talk about it.

While Harper is the no-brainer No. 2 overall pick. He would also be an excellent fit with the Sixers in both the immediate and long-term future. Harper is a legitimate offensive engine, has excellent positional size at 6-foot-6 with a reported 6-foot-10 wingspan, and is the second-best advantage creator in the class. Harper has perennial All-Star and All-NBA upside should he reach his ceiling.

Harper ranks in the 86th percentile in finishing at the rim. Harper finished an astonishing 70% of his attempts at the basket, with 82.4% of those attempts being unassisted (via Bart), and in the 83rd percentile as a pick-and-roll ball handler where he shows a ton of patience, creativity and feel operating in such situations, doing so all with a less-than-ideal supporting cast in his one season at Rutgers.

Harper’s mixture of high-level passing feel, elite rim finishing, self-creation, playmaking ability, vision, as well as his deep arsenal and capability as a primary go-to scoring option, all make him an excellent prospect. His game has drawn comparisons to a young James Harden, Cade Cunningham and a pre-shoulder injury Markelle Fultz.

Dylan Harper Stats (PER 40 Minutes):

24.0 PPG

5.6 REB

5.0 AST

1.8 STL

58.7 TS%

While both Tyrese Maxey and Jared McCain are capable passers, they are both naturally more gifted and more wired to score. Harper being naturally a better playmaker and a more creative passer would optimize both Maxey and McCain in more secondary playmaker and primary shooting slots. The same would be true of Quentin Grimes. Harper’s constant rim pressure and ability to bend defenses with his passing and pull-up shooting threat make him a dynamic offensive juggernaut who will make life much easier for anybody who plays alongside him.


Dylan Harper put on a passing exhibition in a an early season matchup vs Kennesaw State. Nothing to out of this world in this one but just consistent, precise, on target, and on time dishes to set up teammates for easy scores. pic.twitter.com/2wKmJG4Sed

— Will Rucker (@Will_Rucker3_AD) May 8, 2025

A couple of my favorite Dylan Harper dishes from a season in which he had a lot of them. pic.twitter.com/9mlUVs4Lf4

— Will Rucker (@Will_Rucker3_AD) May 8, 2025

Harper’s true go-to scoring ability coupled with his fantastic passing prowess make him a nightmare to scheme against and cover.


Dylan Harper is extremely polished as a driver and self creator. Blend of handle, creativity, footwork, and touch consistently show up on a game to game basis. True go to guy ability. His passing threat makes it hard to want to send multiple bodies, so he punishes single coverage pic.twitter.com/mjYOPfdgDE

— Will Rucker (@Will_Rucker3_AD) May 8, 2025

Harper is an effortless and smooth athlete with an explosive first step and plenty of vertical pop to go upstairs and finish emphatically above the rim.


Dylan Harper is a smooth operator. Effortless first step quickness, glides up and down the floor, and has plenty of vertical pop as well. pic.twitter.com/KHcxnqH6vA

— Will Rucker (@Will_Rucker3_AD) May 8, 2025

Harper also is a fantastic off-ball player, both as a spot-up player and off-ball mover. Not needing to be a heliocentric hub to be effective makes him an even more enticing fit from a roster and role flexibility standpoint alongside those other guards. Harper ranked in the 86th percentile as a spot-up player, per Synergy. He can punish defenses as a shooter and attack a moving defense with the threat to score and create additional advantages as a passer.

Some would argue that it would create a logjam at the guard position, but Harper’s size and primary skillset, which differs from his peers in the Sixers’ backcourt, make him an ideal fit as the team’s point guard. Harper is also a very good defensive prospect who uses his size and quickness to smother ball handlers at the point of attack, jump passing lanes off the ball, and rack up deflections thanks to his tremendous instincts and length. Harper would give the Sixers a defensive option in the backcourt that they do not currently possess. While Maxey has improved a ton as a defender over his time with the Sixers, he is not the defensive prospect or event creator that Harper has the potential to be.


Dylan Harper is excellent at jumping passing lanes. With a reported 6-foot-10 wingspan, he flashes good instincts as a defensive playmaker, then he glides in the open floor for finish in transition. pic.twitter.com/V0PBnbXLkF

— Will Rucker (@Will_Rucker3_AD) May 8, 2025

Harper would take on the toughest guard assignments allowing Maxey and McCain to guard down on the scouting report which would be optimal for both. Maxey has shown tremendous growth as a defender and could turn into a real problem on that end drawing more advantageous matchups alongside Harper.


Excellent perimeter defense from Dylan Harper on this possession. Fights over the screen, cuts off the drive, forces a tough step back three over a contest. pic.twitter.com/ydEbitq2GJ

— Will Rucker (@Will_Rucker3_AD) May 8, 2025

Harper’s elite ability as a pick-and-roll ball handler and DHO playmaker also makes him a fantastic fit with Joel Embiid and really any big man. If Embiid can ever get healthy enough to stay on the floor, I would predict a Harper and Embiid two-man game would rank amongst the best sources of offense in the NBA on a points per possession basis. Embiid and Harden made for a dynamic duo in there time together with the Sixers. Harper would bring a lot of those same tools to the table as the Sixers’ primary ball handler that Harden once did. While not quite the all-time playmaker and passer as Harden is at this stage, Harper would provide more as a downhill attacker and rim finisher.

While Cooper Flagg is viewed as the crown jewel of this draft class — and rightfully so — Harper is more than just a consolation prize and is a legitimate superstar prospect worthy of being the top overall pick in most drafts. He has the ability to change the fortunes and outlook of a franchise overnight.

Dylan Harper’s Mona Lisa of the 2024-2025 season was his 37-point explosion vs. Alabama.


Dylan Harper game vs Alabama was one of the very best games of any prospect all year. Finishes at the rim, explosive plays above the rim, dynamic pace and creativity out of pick and roll, pull up shooting, constant pressure on the rim which led to 15-16 from the FT line. STAR. pic.twitter.com/L3ogeJwltn

— Will Rucker (@Will_Rucker3_AD) May 8, 2025

Draft Dylan Harper.

Source: https://www.libertyballers.com/2025...rs-embiid-maxey-mccain-pick-mock-lottery-star
 
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