Joel Embiid isn’t eligible to win a second straight Most Valuable Player award, but that doesn’t bother him at all, writes Keith Pompey of The Philadelphia Inquirer. The Sixers center will fall far short of the 65-game minimum to be considered for postseason honors after sitting out two months following meniscus surgery. Embiid returned this week and he’s enjoying being able to play without having to worry about the MVP race.
“I’m happy I’m not even in the conversation,” he said. “That conversation has been toxic for a very long time. I’ll be honest, this year is kind of boring. This year, there’s not enough toxicity going around. So it’s pretty fun, but at some point, it’s pretty bad, too. I’m glad I’m not nowhere near that. I’m just focused on getting back healthy. Obviously, all great candidates and they all deserve to win, which is unfortunate that only one person has [a chance] to win.”
Embiid admitted that he battled depression after tearing the meniscus in his left knee in late January, Pompey adds. Embiid is still dealing with those issues, but he said returning to the game and being with his teammates has helped improve his mental state.
“For me personally, I didn’t have to come back, but I want to play,” Embiid said. “I love playing basketball, and I want to be on the floor.”
Embiid will miss tonight’s game at San Antonio for injury recovery purposes, Pompey tweets.
There’s more from the Atlantic Division:
- Coach Nick Nurse experimented with a Twin Towers approach in Saturday’s win at Memphis, Pompey adds in a separate story. Embiid and Paul Reed played together for part of the second quarter, allowing the Sixers‘ perimeter players to be more aggressive with two shot blockers protecting the rim. “That’s something that I hope that we can go back to at some point,” Reed said. “I always look forward to playing with him at the same time. And I’m just glad I was able to play with him tonight, get the opportunity.”
- The “stay ready crew” that comes off the Celtics‘ bench is significantly better than the reserves Joe Mazzulla had to work with last season, according to Gary Washburn of The Boston Globe. Mazzulla rested his starters for the final six minutes of Friday’s win over Sacramento, giving the reserves some experience with a game on the line. “I feel like he’s doing a great job of keeping everybody involved,” Svi Mykhailiuk said. “That makes everybody stay ready because you might get that call at any time. You’ve got to be prepared, make sure you do your work, and buy into whatever we’re doing. You’ve got to understand we’ve got one of the best teams in the league — five, six All-Stars on the team — and just seeing the big picture. I think tonight showed that we’re a really deep team and coach really believes in us.”
- Xavier Tillman, whom the Celtics acquired at midseason to provide frontcourt depth, was thrilled to hit his first NBA game-winner Friday night, per Souichi Terada of MassLive. Tillman sank a floater with 7.4 seconds remaining, and Boston held on for a one-point victory. “It was great getting the opportunity to do that,” Tillman said. “I feel like because it was crunch time, I was really locked in. Obviously the crowd was loud, but I was really zoned in, so it didn’t faze me as much. But it was great practice as far as what we’re going to go through as far as having that mental fortitude.”
- Blake Murphy of Sportsnet.ca examines the unlikely journey of Malik Williams, who signed a 10-day contract with the Raptors this week and wound up starting in his NBA debut. Toronto has used 30 players — one short of the record set this season by Memphis — which is why there was an opportunity for Williams, who was cut by the G League team in Sioux Falls earlier this season.
Why has the word ‘toxic’ become so prevalent in people’s everyday conversation? Every time someone doesn’t like something….practical anything, it’s referred to as being toxic. Embed is such a moron. People have been having MVP debates for what? a hundred years or so? And because he doesn’t get all the praise and people didn’t think he shouldn’t have gotten all the MVP votes he says it was toxic. Such a prima donna.
Liked everything Embiid just said. Starting to admire his smarts in spite of me being a Boston Celtic fan. Embiid certainly has an IQ better than moron status which today is the lowest 12% intellect in America.
You dislike the usage of “toxic” and then call someone a moron. hmm.
Embiid is literally the most toxic part of the MVP conversation. Elite level narcissism rattling around in his head.
LeBron*
why in the world would anyone GAF about Embiids deep thoughts?
“I’ll be honest, this year is kind of boring. This year, there’s not enough toxicity going around.”
That might say more than Embiid meant for it to…
Would love for Embiid to have gone into more detail about his depression, which is something I think a lot of players grapple with as part of an injury/recovery process. Instead he talks about toxicity in a way that tries to be self-aware but comes off as the total opposite.
Then again what was I really expecting lol.
So the rule is the reason he’s not in discussion ? Don’t even understand why this needed to be posted
“I’m not nowhere near that”… so you’re saying you’re near it, Joel. Well done. In a conversation about why you’re not in the MVP race you say you are.