The 76ers expressed their unhappiness with each other earlier this season.
Three straight losses – to the Hawks by 10, Celtics by 21 and Heat by 31 – has Philadelphia sounding like it might be entering full-blown crisis mode.
Kyle Neubeck of Philly Voice:
This is the full exchange, for context: pic.twitter.com/oQtgXgAHQ3
— Kyle Neubeck (@KyleNeubeck) February 5, 2020
Joel Embiid: "I got to spend a lot of time at the three-point line just to make sure there's some spacing. Everybody keeps saying, 'Get in the post!' but if you actually understand basketball, you've got to find that balance."
— Kyle Neubeck (@KyleNeubeck) February 5, 2020
Jon Johnson of 94WIP:
Joel Embiid said the reason he hasn’t been himself is due to “trying to fit in.”
Said team needs to learn “to sacrifice” for one and other. pic.twitter.com/zYI9lLzdhG— Jon Johnson (@jonjohnsonwip) February 5, 2020
Al Horford said, “There’s some stuff going on in our locker room.” What is “some stuff”? Strife? Productive communication among players? It’s unclear, and there’s obviously a vast difference. I wouldn’t jump to the most drastic conclusion.
But Joel Embiid‘s comments sound more safely alarming. By saying he has been trying too hard to fit in and that the team needs to sacrifice, he seems to be implying he has done his part. He sounds fed up with everyone else.
Embiid, who has said he doesn’t like to shoot 3-pointers, is stuck with Ben Simmons, whose reluctant 3-point shooting has made a punchline. The 76ers have charged ahead building around Embiid and Simmons, seemingly never seriously exploring whether the star pairing – not the supporting cast – was the issue.
Horford hasn’t helped. He and Embiid tend to step on each other’s toes offensively. Josh Richardson and Tobias Harris aren’t good enough outside shooters to compensate. So, floor-spacing can be downright awful.
The 76ers looked more cohesive with Embiid sidelined recently. Though they didn’t actually score that efficiently, players could associate positive vibes with feeling more comfortable on the floor and winning. That’d make returning to Simmons-Embiid lineups jarring.
The good news: Philadelphia is still 31-20. This fairly new roster always needed time to jell. The 76ers were always expected to be better in the playoffs than the regular season.
But Philadelphia is just sixth in the Eastern Conference. That’s tough to accept in the moment, especially during a losing streak. With so many expensive players, the 76ers will have a difficult time making major changes before tomorrow’s trade deadline.
Still, even a minor move could jolt a team that seems pretty frustrated.