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Tag: Jared McCain

  • The Sixers Experience: Wins, Drama, Deadline Decisions – Philadelphia Sports Nation

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    Credit: Justine Willard-Imagn Images

    Despite Paul George’s 25-game suspension, the team rides a hot streak into a pivotal trade deadline week.


    The Philadelphia 76ers have been dealing with some real drama lately, but they’re not letting it slow them down. Paul George got hit with a 25-game suspension without pay for violating the NBA’s anti-drug program—something he attributed to taking improper medication while seeking mental health treatment. He took full responsibility in his statement, and the ban started at the end of January. George won’t be back until around March 25, 2026, meaning the team will miss his two-way impact on both ends for a big chunk of the second half of the season.

    Coach Nick Nurse has been clear about what that means: others have to step up. And so far, they have. The Sixers just wrapped a back-to-back that extended their win streak to five games—their longest of the season. They beat the Clippers on the road to make it four straight, then crushed the Warriors 113-94 on Tuesday night, with rookie VJ Edgecombe leading the way (25 points, seven rebounds, seven assists). Guys like Tyrese Maxey and Joel Embiid are playing at MVP levels—Maxey lighting it up as the primary ball-handler, Embiid looking dominant again after his resurgence. The chemistry is strong, and the bench is contributing more consistently.


    In the middle of all this, the front office made a surprising move right before the deadline: they traded second-year guard Jared McCain to the Oklahoma City Thunder. In return, Philly gets a 2026 first-round pick (via the Houston Rockets), plus three second-rounders (a favorable 2027 pick among OKC/HOU/IND/MIA, 2028 from Milwaukee, and 2028 from OKC). It wasn’t the move most expected—plenty figured Quentin Grimes would be the one shipped out first given the logjam at guard. But moving McCain clears minutes and creates real flexibility. It drops the Sixers out of the luxury tax apron territory, which opens the door to convert Dominick Barlow’s two-way contract to a standard deal without penalties.

    Whether this trade ends up being a win depends on how the picks play out and what else happens, but it’s a clear signal: Daryl Morey is prioritizing cap space and depth over holding onto every young piece. This could be the setup for a bigger swing before the deadline passes on Thursday, February 5, at 3 p.m. ET, or just a smart way to stay under the tax while addressing needs. With the East wide open—teams dealing with injuries and inconsistencies—Philly has a real shot if they add the right role players.

    Credit: Justine Willard-Imagn Images

    The week wraps with the road trip continuing: they face the Lakers in Los Angeles tomorrow night (February 5), then the Suns in Phoenix on Saturday. They’re currently one game out of the No. 4 seed in the East, and with Embiid healthy and Maxey carrying the load, the ceiling feels high. The next 24 hours could reshape the roster, but the momentum is there. This team is built to compete now—let’s see if Morey pulls off something to push them further.

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    Jake Mayson

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  • Instant observations: Dominick Barlow’s career-best performance powers an easy Sixers win over Clippers

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    The best game of Dominick Barlow’s young, promising NBA career lifted the Sixers past the Los Angeles Clippers, who may or may not be on the verge of trading James Harden.

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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Instant observations: Tyrese Maxey, Joel Embiid carry the load from start to finish as Sixers escape vs. Kings

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    All day Thursday, the Sixers’ messaging was clear: they could not take a perceived easy matchup against Sacramento lightly. Tyrese Maxey and Joel Embiid certainly did not.

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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Instant observations: Tyrese Maxey nabs eight steals, leading Sixers to a win powered by defense

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    After a few days of being asked about why they kept struggling in fourth quarters, the Sixers dominated the Indiana Pacers in the final frame on Monday night to get back in the win column.

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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Instant observations: Sixers lose another last-second game, swept in two-game set vs. Cavaliers

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    The Sixers and Cavaliers alike have described their pair of games as having a playoff feel. The distinct differences in makeup between the teams creates a compelling matchup.

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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Instant observations: Sixers go wire-to-wire, split back-to-back in what might be Kyle Lowry’s final trip to Toronto

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    The night after an embarrassing late-game collapse, the Sixers responded exactly as they hoped to, handling the Toronto Raptors with ease on Monday night.

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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Sixers mailbag: Who will lose playing time when Kelly Oubre Jr. and Trendon Watford make their returns from injury?

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    The Sixers have two rotation forwards set to return from long-term injuries in the near future. How will head coach Nick Nurse’s rotation change when Kelly Oubre Jr. and Trendon Watford get back on the floor?

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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Instant observations: Sixers fall to short-handed Nuggets in overtime, marking worst loss of season

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    The Sixers missed a prime opportunity to bank a stress-free victory on Monday night.

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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Sunday stats: How a lineup the Sixers had never used before won them a game

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    With 1:11 on the clock in the third quarter, Sixers head coach Nick Nurse tried out a brand new lineup. It played so well that he never made another substitution.

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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Instant observations: Nick Nurse’s Quentin Grimes-centric adjustment backfires in Sixers’ loss to Raptors

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    After two successful trial runs, a new tactic being used by Sixers head coach Nick Nurse to solve the team’s woes in third quarters did not work. The Sixers have a 44-26 frame out of intermission to blame for their latest loss.

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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Sixers list Paul George questionable to make season debut vs. former team on Monday; Joel Embiid out vs. Clippers

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    Nine-time All-Star Paul George appears to be primed to make his season debut for the Sixers on Monday night against his former team, the Los Angeles Clippers. The Sixers listed George as questionable to play on their injury report unveiled on Sunday evening. Meanwhile, Joel Embiid remains out due to a right knee issue:

    George had multiple left knee injuries during his debut season with the Sixers, only logging 41 appearances while also being derailed by ailments related to his finger and groin. The nine-time All-Star injured his left knee again during the offseason, requiring an arthroscopic procedure in July. George has not yet played in 2025-26 despite fully participating in Sixers practices for a month now, causing significant frustration among fans. The latest substantive update on George’s status came on Tuesday, when the Sixers said his final step before returning was strengthening his left quadricep.

    Embiid, who has played in half of the Sixers’ dozen games to begin the season, has not appeared in a game since Nov. 8, his best and longest performance of the campaign to date. The next day came his fourth absence of the season; all four of those missed games came as planned rest days as the team managed his troubled left knee. But he has missed the Sixers’ last two games because of soreness he reported in his right knee, though imaging confirmed there is no structural damage. His designation has changed from “right knee soreness” to “right knee injury management.”

    Elsewhere, the Sixers said on Sunday afternoon that Kelly Oubre Jr. and Adem Bona would both be out for Monday’s game. Oubre suffered a left knee hyperextension during the team’s loss to the Detroit Pistons on Friday, missing the second half of the game. The Sixers said on Sunday that Oubre’s injury involved his LCL and his return timeline was unclear. His official designation on the injury report: “left knee sprain.”

    Bona, meanwhile, suffered a right ankle sprain in Detroit and will miss at least three games, beginning with Monday’s contest. The earliest Bona could return is on Thursday night in Milwaukee, the second leg of the team’s next back-to-back.

    Jared McCain, who missed the Sixers’ last game because he was on assignment in the G League, has been recalled to the team, practiced with the group on Sunday and, according to Nurse, is going to be part of the rotation on Monday. He is officially available.


    MORE: McCain makes progress with Delaware Blue Coats: ‘I’m getting there’


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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Looking to ‘get back’ to himself, Sixers guard Jared McCain makes progress with Delaware Blue Coats: ‘I’m getting there’

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    WILMINGTON, Del. – An eventful day of news in the world of the Philadelphia 76ers on Thursday began in Camden, N.J., where the team practiced in the morning before boarding its flight to Detroit for Friday night’s NBA Cup Group Play game against the Pistons.

    But for Jared McCain, the day ended in Wilmington, Del., where the second-year guard made his first appearance with the organization’s G League affiliate, the Delaware Blue Coats. McCain’s foray into G League action is expected to last at least a pair of games, with the Blue Coats hosting the G League affiliate of the Charlotte Hornets, the Greensboro Swarm, on Thursday and Saturday nights.

    McCain, who underwent a meniscus repair in December and then tore the ACL in his right thumb in September, made his season debut for the Sixers on Nov. 4. But across three appearances, the 21-year-old failed to register a point. As McCain has tried to get his feet wet, his minutes have been scarce on a competitive team and he has been limited to very short bursts of action.

    When McCain has been on the floor, his struggles have been significant. McCain has worn a bulky brace on his left knee, and now nearly 11 months removed from surgery McCain is trying to regain trust in his burst and balance. McCain had been open and honest about his struggles with the brace and has sought out the advice of Joel Embiid, who has more experience than just about anyone playing under those circumstances.

    McCain’s brace looked like this:

    McCain braceColleen Claggett/For PhillyVoice

    “I feel like I’m just trying to get used to playing, and I feel a little off-balance,” McCain said on Sunday. “…I think it’s just going to take some time, but I’m getting there.”

    In the immediate term, McCain’s ramp-up process and the Sixers’ ambitions at the NBA level became, for lack of a better word, incompatible. But the Sixers know that a humming version of McCain would be a massive addition to a team that already boasts an impressive young guard rotation comprised of Tyrese Maxey, VJ Edgecombe and Quentin Grimes.

    The solution the team landed on: sending McCain to Delaware for at least the two games against Greensboro, which would allow him to play much longer stints and not feel as much pressure to contribute.

    The plan for McCain, still on a minutes limit, was simple: he would play two long stretches in the first half, and when the teams returned from their locker rooms to begin the third quarter his night would already be over. McCain totaled 20 minutes and eight seconds of action in all; he played the first 10 minutes and 16 seconds of the game, sat for about four minutes and then played up until intermission.

    “Especially with the Sixers, coming into a game you never want to mess up the rhythm of the game,” McCain said after Thursday’s game. “When you’re playing with Tyrese, VJ or Quentin, the guards, you never want to mess up what they’ve got going. Coming in and playing five or six minutes, it was tough to get something going, because you miss one shot and don’t see the ball for a little bit… In these longer stints, you’re able to play through mistakes and get out there and get some shots up.”

    McCain got noticeably more physical and aggressive as the game went on, scoring 10 points on as many shot attempts. Something that might have helped: McCain replaced his massive brace with a sleeve called “Incrediwear,” he said, which he had under tights. The goal was to give McCain’s knee protection without hindering its freedom of movement as much. “More freeing, less restrictive,” as McCain described it. It certainly sounded like a more comfortable arrangement. Could he stick with it moving forward?

    “I think know it [will be determined] by whatever the medical staff says about my knee,” McCain said. “Depending on how I feel tomorrow – especially playing, now, 20 minutes – seeing how it responds to playing a game like that. But hopefully I can play with no brace and move forward with that.”

    McCain’s assignment is not a demotion; a minor-league rehab assignment in baseball is a much closer comparison. A low-pressure environment in which a player can flesh out all of the nuances of his game, stay on the floor for prolonged stretches, feel empowered with the ball and not shy away from making mistakes is exactly what McCain needed in this moment. So when the team brought the idea to him on Wednesday, he was eager to give it a shot.

    “It’s something that I feel like will help me in the long run,” McCain said.

    McCain went 3-for-10 from the field, 0-for-4 with a few close misses from beyond the arc and 2-for-3 on free throws for four points (in the G League, a player shoots one free throw for two points instead of two free throws worth one point each).

    McCain’s best moments came midway through the second quarter, when he was able to overwhelm defenders with physicality.

    To help compensate for his lack of explosion, McCain has always utilized what he describes as a “stocky build” in combination with his natural smarts to bump defenders off spots and play with the sort of force that many defenders are not suspecting from an undersized guard. On Thursday, he signaled a willingness to rely more on all of that while he waits for his mobility to return.

    “I keep saying it, but it’s all about feel for me, and using my body is something I’ve done since I was a kid,” McCain said. “…I really just want to get back to feeling like that, feeling like I can push off my left a little bit more, just getting it stronger. It’s hard getting it stronger through the games, but you have to. You’re going to have to get through these mistakes, and get through some turnovers, get through some bumps where you don’t feel on-balance, but I know I can do it, and it’s a great way to do it down here.”

    Speaking of, there were times when McCain probably pushed the envelope a bit too much. As much as he was trying to play within the flow of the Blue Coats’ offense it was likely difficult for McCain to resist the urge to be especially assertive when he was acutely aware of the purpose of him being in the game. 

    McCain’s mobility is clearly still limited by his brace, and it is not as if his short-but-stellar rookie season was powered by explosive athleticism to begin with. He had a few strong drives where he manipulated a defender and got by them to create an advantage, but he was more successful utilizing his muscle than his speed.

    McCain was one of three guards in a small starting five also featuring the 6-foot Kennedy Chandler (that is a generous measurement) and Sixers two-way rookie Hunter Sallis. McCain began the game playing off the ball, but most of his minutes ended up coming in an on-ball role.

    Rarely is a professional athlete as in tune with the mental side of their performance as McCain. He is young, but he has fully embraced that aspect of his life inside and outside of basketball. And for all of the talks about braces, sleeves and tights, none of it matters without McCain keeping himself in the right frame of mind. And even for a person who typically oozes positivity and cannot contain their smile, it has been a challenge.

    McCain is a social media personality. He admitted on Thursday that reading what people say about him online amid his struggles makes it harder to flush disappointing results. “You’ve just got to block it out,” McCain said, but that is much easier said than done. On Sunday, McCain talked about his focus on giving himself “grace and compassion” through this process. But what does that actually look like in practice?

    “It’s a lot of talking to my psychologist about everything. It gets frustrating, I can’t lie,” McCain said. “You want to, obviously, play for the Sixers and be up there contributing to the team. But when it’s not clicking, you’ve got to find yourself. The easiest way to do that is always look inward. Giving myself grace means don’t get too mad at myself. I try not to base my performance off of the outcomes and results and more so just how I feel. If I feel good, if I felt like I had a quiet mind out there, I felt like I’m myself, I know what that feels like and I know how that can look. So that’s really all I’m going for.”


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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Observations after Edwards has monster night off bench in Sixers’ win over Celtics 

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    The Sixers shook off another rough third quarter and beat the Celtics on Tuesday night at Xfinity Mobile Arena.

    Justin Edwards played a giant role off the bench, scoring 22 vital points in a 102-100 win.

    Ironically, the Sixers got their game-winning hoop on Edwards’ one miss. Kelly Oubre Jr. scored the go-ahead put-back layup with 8.7 seconds left. 

    Tyrese Maxey had 21 points and nine assists. Quentin Grimes posted 18 points. Andre Drummond tallied a 14-point, 13-rebound double-double.

    Jaylen Brown scored 24 points to lead the Celtics. Derrick White added 18.

    The Sixers were without Joel Embiid (right knee soreness), Paul George (left knee surgery recovery), Dominick Barlow (right elbow laceration) and Johni Broome (right ankle sprain). 

    Next up for the 7-4 Sixers is a trip to Detroit and a Friday night matchup with the Pistons. Here are observations on their victory over Boston:

    Early shooting woes

    The Sixers scored on their first three possessions and the Maxey-Trendon Watford duo continued to show off its chemistry. Maxey took a Watford handoff and canned an open three-pointer. Watford nailed an early catch-and-shoot jumper assisted by Maxey. 

    Though the Sixers soon hit a dry spell, their defense was very successful in the early going against both Brown and White. Each missed several clean looks. Brown started 1 for 7 from the floor and White opened 1 for 8, including a three he air-balled wide left. Payton Pritchard began 0 for 5, too. 

    The Sixers were not exactly on fire either and ended the first quarter up 23-22.

    VJ Edgecombe defended well but remained cold as a shooter, starting 0 for 5. Edgecombe finished 2 for 11. Over his last five games, the rookie has gone 17 of 61 (27.9 percent) from the floor.

    It was a real nail-biter for 76ers’ fans on Tuesday night, but they went home happy. NBC10’s Johnny Archer has the story. 

    Edwards a big bright spot off bench

    Jared McCain checked in late in the first quarter and shared the floor with fellow guards Edgecombe and Quentin Grimes.

    In his third game of the season, McCain still did not look close to the player he was his rookie season. He missed a mid-range jumper and couldn’t convert a leaner through contact. The 21-year-old was called for a charge when he tried to drive and kick the ball out to Edgecombe on the wing. 

    Overall, McCain again appeared to have trouble moving freely and trusting his instincts with the brace on his left knee. He had some shaky moments as a ball handler. Jordan Walsh poked the ball away from McCain a couple of times well behind the third-point line.

    McCain logged seven minutes and did not play in the second half. He’s 0 for 9 from the floor so far.

    Sixers head coach Nick Nurse used a five-man bench. Edwards was a big bright spot in the first half.

    The lefty wing had two long-range jumpers, an and-one layup, two assists and two offensive rebounds. When Maxey checked back in with 5:18 to go in the second quarter, the Sixers held a nine-point lead. Grimes polished off an and-one to make it 41-31. 

    Edwards kept rolling and truly caught fire in the fourth quarter (more on that below). He shot an incredible 8 for 9 from the field.

    Sixers overcome more 3rd-quarter struggles

    Boston managed a mere 41 points in the first half. The Celtics shot 28 percent from the field and 19 percent beyond the arc over the first two quarters. 

    Again, the fate of the game largely came down to whether the Sixers could be better than their early-season norm in the third quarter. Going into Tuesday night, the Sixers had an NBA-worst net rating of minus-36.3 in third periods

    They added another abysmal third quarter to the list vs. the Celtics.

    After a Drummond missed three, Neemias Queta jammed in a dunk. Brown sunk a turnaround jumper. Oubre turned the ball over and White made a triple that lifted the Celtics to a 54-53 lead.

    At that point, Maxey grew more aggressive, driving hard and drawing frequent contact. He drained a three to give the Sixers a 66-63 edge.

    The Celtics had a lot left in the tank. Brown scored six straight points and White made threes on Boston’s final two possessions of the third. Grimes rather miraculously cut the Sixers’ deficit to 77-71 by hitting a half-court shot at the third-quarter buzzer. That shot meant the Sixers lost the third by 16 points.

    After an Edwards steal and slam early in the fourth quarter, the Sixers trailed by three and Maxey subbed back in.

    Instead of Maxey, it was Edwards who pushed the Sixers back in front. He believed he could make everything and was correct.

    Edwards drained threes on three consecutive possessions to put the Sixers up 93-92.

    The game stayed tight down the stretch. Edgecombe appeared to have missed a three long, but he got a high, generous bounce through the hoop to build the Sixers’ lead to 100-96.

    They couldn’t extend that advantage. Maxey missed two tightly guarded shots in the paint. Brown got Oubre to bite on a pump fake and drew two free throws with 33.5 seconds left. He split them, knotting the game at 100-all.

    Maxey then probed the Celtics’ defense and found Edwards open on the perimeter. He finally missed, but Oubre was there to grab the rebound and score the go-ahead bucket.

    The Sixers disrupted the Celtics’ plans on their final play and White threw up a deep heave. Queta had a put-back chance just before the final buzzer, but he couldn’t convert and the Sixers celebrated a nervy win. 

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    Noah Levick

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  • Trendon Watford continues breakout by posting triple-double in first start as Sixers beat Raptors on debut throwback night

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    In need of their first momentum-shifting victory of the 2025-26 season, the Sixers whipped out their throwback black jerseys for the first time on Saturday night. Some good fortune came in tow.

    The Sixers defeated the Toronto Raptors on Saturday, 130-120, to improve to 6-3 on the season and avoid a three-game losing streak. While the stars were star-like – Tyrese Maxey managed 31 points to lead all scorers while Joel Embiid had the easiest 29 points of his season on 16 shots in 26 minutes – the story was Trendon Watford, who received his first start of the season and responded with a 20-17-10 line to mark the first triple-double by a Sixers player this season.

    With those three stellar showings, another strong performance from Kelly Oubre Jr. and helpful efforts from VJ Edgecombe and Quentin Grimes, the Sixers had enough to overcome their disastrous defensive start, take control of the game and eventually land the knockout blow in the fourth quarter.

    Everything that stood out from a night that most will remember for the jerseys, the court and the return of an old friend:

    Trendon Watford keeps on getting better

    As if a three-game stretch averaging 13.3 points, 5.3 rebounds and 5.0 assists off the bench was not enough of a statement for Watford, the soon-to-be 25-year-old had the best game of his NBA career on Saturday in his first start as a member of the Sixers.

    Inserted into the starting five ahead of Jabari Walker, Watford had his fingerprints all over this game from the start. He followed up a surprisingly strong scoring performance on Wednesday night in Cleveland with an even better one on Saturday; 11 of his 20 points came in the opening frame. Watford knocked down an early triple once again. He is shooting accurately and confidently from beyond the arc, and even on low volume that will be a major help.

    “I’ve been putting in work all summer, all year on it,” Watford said after the Sixers held a practice on Friday morning. “…Obviously being able to do a lot of things on the court, I think that me shooting the ball at a high level can play to my advantage a lot. But I’ve got all the confidence in my shot, all the confidence in my game.”

    But even at 6-foot-9, everyone has learned that with Watford it is the passing and playmaking to really watch out for. He collected a career-high 10 assists; a staggering six of them went to his close friend Maxey. The two of them predictably have already put together some stellar two-man work:

    After a hamstring injury forced Watford to miss training camp and preseason, Watford has found a way to seamlessly fit into his new team’s offense despite a lack of familiarity and an unconventional style.

    Watford looks like a significant weapon moving forward, especially enticing on top of the Sixers’ terrific group of young guards. On Saturday, what was just as notable as Watford’s scoring and facilitating was another career-high: 17 rebounds, rounding out the first triple-double of his NBA career.

    Watford is generally not considered a particularly strong rebounder for a player of his size, but he certainly is one for a player with his level of ball skills. And time and time again, as he snares a defensive rebound and leads his team into transition offense, the value of having a jumbo-sized ball-handler is on display.

    The Sixers might have a new backup center

    It certainly feels like Andre Drummond has officially taken the Sixers’ primary backup center job from Adem Bona. Drummond has just been better early on in 2025-26; the veteran’s rebounding has been a stabilizing force for a team struggling to string together stops. On Friday, Sixers head coach Nick Nurse more or less acknowledged that things could be headed in this direction.

    “Yeah, I think so,” Nurse said. “…I think it’s always something we’re looking at. More than anything, I’m trying to put the guys on the floor than can best help us, period. If that moves around a little bit, it moves around, and it’ll probably move around again and all that kind of stuff. Ride the guys who are playing well, ride the better matchups.”

    Exhibit A: Saturday’s game. Bona checked in for Embiid halfway through the first quarter and the Sixers allowed Toronto to score 28 points in six minutes. Trailing 43-33 after one quarter, Nurse decided that once Embiid needed more rest it would become Drummond’s game. Drummond paid it off by going +8 in 18 minutes the rest of the way while Bona sat for the remainder of the action.

    Given Embiid’s constant availability issues, Drummond and Bona are both crucial pieces to this puzzle. And if Bona is demoted to the third-string center spot, it will still be the most important third-string center spot in the NBA. Embiid will sit on Sunday night against the Detroit Pistons, and Bona very well may start. But it is hard to imagine that Drummond has not clearly separated himself from the player he has taken under his wing.

    The Sixers have been better with Drummond manning the middle than Bona. It is not an inherent statement about their individual abilities; it is clear that Bona can hang in plenty of matchups in which Drummond’s lack of mobility makes him unplayable. But when Nurse has a chance to roll with his bruising big off the bench, for now that looks like the plan.

    Odds and ends

    Some additional notes:

    • Jared McCain was listed as available for the Sixers on Saturday, but ended up not playing. The guess here: Nurse planned on using McCain at the start of the second quarter, but after his team opened the game with a horrid defensive frame he opted to keep McCain on the bench in hopes of turning things around defensively and saving the 21-year-old guard for the second leg of this weekend’s back-to-back.

    • Drummond’s quality minutes were especially important because with McCain not in the mix, the Sixers were awfully thin. Drummond (16 minutes) and Grimes (28 minutes) were Nurse’s only reserves to reach double-digit minute totals. Justin Edwards played seven minutes and Jabari Walker logged five minutes in addition to Bona only playing eight minutes. That forced Maxey into a 43-minute night, with Watford, Edgecombe and Oubre all surpassing 36 minutes.

    • Edgecombe did not have a good scoring night; he is in a bit of a slump on that front. Edgecombe only made five of his 15 shot attempts in this game, but once again found other ways to leave his mark. Edgecombe grabbed seven rebounds, dished out four assists and nabbed three steals. Plus, he helped put the game away by finally finding some scoring juice and getting three consecutive buckets down the stretch.

    • Embiid’s scoring outburst felt casual in a familiar way. To be fair, perhaps Embiid should be expected to have a relatively easy time against a team like this one: Toronto started wing Scottie Barnes at center; their only true big in the rotation was Sandro Mamukelashvili, who logged 17 minutes off the bench. Embiid made the most of his size advantage on many occasions.

    Up next: The Sixers will get right back to work on Sunday against the Detroit Pistons – once again wearing their throwback jerseys. Embiid will be out of action, but McCain should be available.


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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Joel Embiid and Jared McCain available for Sixers-Raptors on Saturday, Paul George (knee) remains out ahead of ‘final hurdle’ meeting with doctors

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    Joel Embiid and Jared McCain are not listed on the Sixers’ initial injury report ahead of Saturday night’s home contest against the Toronto Raptors, while Paul George (knee) and Dominick Barlow (elbow) remain out:

    Embiid sat in the Sixers’ loss to Cleveland on Wednesday, the second leg of the team’s second back-to-back of the season. With another back-to-back on the docket, it appears Embiid will play against Toronto on Saturday before sitting against the Detroit Pistons on Sunday. The same will be true for McCain, who also sat in Cleveland. According to head coach Nick Nurse on Friday afternoon, McCain is not yet at the stage of being available on consecutive nights.

    Meanwhile, the Sixers said on Friday that George would be meeting with doctors over the weekend to determine the next steps in his recovery. While that initially appeared to indicate a longer timeline than the one the team has been projecting publicly, Nurse clarified moments later that he believes this meeting with doctors is “the last hurdle” for George to be cleared for game action. George has been fully participating in Sixers practices for more than three weeks.

    Barlow, who started the first two games of the season for the Sixers at power forward, missed the second half of the team’s home opener due to an elbow laceration which eventually required a procedure. Sixers head coach Nick Nurse said on Sunday in Brooklyn that Barlow was wearing a brace which was needed to keep his arm straight so the wound would heal. He did not describe the injury as too serious but acknowledged it had already been trickier than the team had anticipated. The Sixers added on Friday that Barlow’s surgeon will be consulted on Monday, which means the 22-year-old will be sidelined for both legs of the back-to-back.


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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Sixers guard Jared McCain probable to make season debut on Tuesday

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    Jared McCain is probable to make his season debut on Tuesday night against the Bulls, as Tim Bontemps of ESPN reported would be the case, while Joel Embiid is not listed on the Sixers’ injury report for Tuesday’s road game against the Chicago Bulls, the first leg of the team’s second back-to-back of the 2025-26 season.

    It indicates that McCain is going to suit up for the first time since Dec. 13 of last year, and that Embiid will sit Wednesday night when the Sixers travel to face the Cleveland Cavaliers.

    Otherwise, the report is status quo:

    Embiid did not play in the Sixers’ win over the Brooklyn Nets on Sunday, and a source told PhillyVoice that it was a planned absence, not a response to any new issues with his left knee. Among the Sixers’ top priorities in the management of Embiid’s health early in the season is padding his appearances with as many off days as possible.

    Paul George (knee) appears to be inching closer to making his season debut; he has been practicing in full of late. An update on Dominick Barlow (elbow) is expected in the coming days; he has not played since the first half of the Sixers’ second game of the season.


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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Paul George (knee) remains out for Sixers-Celtics in NBA Cup opener, Joel Embiid not listed on injury report

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    Paul George (knee) will remain out when the Sixers host the Boston Celtics in their NBA Cup Group Play opener on Friday night, according to their initial injury report for the game unveiled on Thursday. Meanwhile, Joel Embiid is not listed on the injury report, indicating he is set to start for the fourth time in five chances:

    Jared McCain, whose third-year team option was officially picked up on Thursday afternoon, was a full participant in the team’s practice hours earlier, but it was a light practice without contact, head coach Nick Nurse said. Meanwhile, two-way power forward Dominick Barlow will miss at least two more games after undergoing a procedure to address an elbow laceration.


    THE SIXERS ARE 4-0 (INSTANT OBSERVATIONS)

    Sixers 117, Celtics 116 | Hornets 121, Sixers 125

    Magic 124, Sixers 136 | Sixers 139, Wizards 134 (OT)


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  • Report: Sixers exercise Jared McCain’s third-year team option

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    Jared McCain’s third-year team option has been exercised by the Sixers, according to Michael Scotto of HoopsHype. McCain will now earn a guaranteed salary of $4,422,600 in the 2026-27 season.

    This was the no-brainer of all no-brainers for the Sixers; third-year options are rarely declined by teams even when players fail to show promise as rookies. McCain did the opposite: the 21-year-old guard played 23 games in his first NBA season before suffering a torn meniscus, but they were filled with flashes of future stardom.

    After his rookie season ended prematurely, McCain’s sophomore campaign will begin late, as McCain is now recovering from a torn UCL in his right thumb suffered at the end of last month. He has not yet played in the Sixers’ first four contests, and has been expected to miss at least the first handful of games to begin 2025-26.

    Around this time next year, the Sixers will almost certainly exercise the fourth-year option in McCain’s deal, which would lock him in with a guaranteed salary of just under $6.8 million in the 2027-28 season. In the summer of 2027 the Sixers and McCain will be able to discuss a rookie extension which would kick in during the 2028-29 season; if no agreement is reached he would become a restricted free agent in the summer of 2028.


    MOREIs McCain the next face of this franchise?


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  • Instant observations: Finally, Sixers look like they have an identity without Joel Embiid – and a 3-0 record to show for it

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    PHILADELPHIA – For the first time in 2025-26, the Joel Embiid-less Sixers took the floor on Monday night, looking to upend the Orlando Magic without their franchise cornerstone. On the front end of a back-to-back, the Sixers opted to sit Embiid, while also missing starting power forward Dominick Barlow. They still felt they had enough to win.

    In terms of manpower, the Sixers were at a clear disadvantage against a very good Orlando team. But for the first time in Embiid’s career, when he sits the Sixers look like more than capable of maximizing their available personnel. So, the Sixers were right. They had enough. It is the complete opposite of how things have always been here, and it was on full display in a 136-124 win on Monday.

    Once again, No. 3 overall pick VJ Edgecombe dominated in the opening frame, and his scoring was the headliner early on. Edgecombe and Quentin Grimes’ hot starts made up for a poor opening frame from Tyrese Maxey, but the sixth-year star guard erupted as soon as the second quarter began and was on a tear for the remainder of the game, flashing signs of superstardom as a scorer and facilitator. Maxey and Edgecombe combined to score 69 points, and filling in many of the gaps for a depleted frontcourt was Kelly Oubre Jr., whose all-around production was a total godsend. The Sixers held a healthy lead for much of the game and got a remarkable closing effort from Maxey in his second 40-plus-point night of the season. It was their first true wire-to-wire victory over the season.

    The Sixers, unbelievably, are 3-0. Observations from a wildly successful night of basketball in South Philadelphia:

    The Sixers finally look like they have an identity without Joel Embiid

    For the entirety of Embiid’s career, the Sixers have outperformed their talent level when he is on the floor and drastically underperformed it when he was not, whether that meant Embiid was resting during a game or sidelined for all 48 minutes. In the first three games of this season, the non-Embiid Sixers – both during his 28 minutes of rest in the opening two games and Monday’s complete contest – have displayed an ability to be more than the sum of their parts. Save for successful management of Embiid’s left knee, there is perhaps no greater revelation that the organization could experience.

    The Sixers have had more than enough talent to stay afloat without Embiid in the past, from stars like James Harden, Jimmy Butler and Ben Simmons to players paid as stars like Tobias Harris. But each iteration of the Embiid-led Sixers has talked a big game about not needing Embiid to carry the load, and failed to prove that it was actually true.

    At its core, the issue was a lack of identity. The Sixers knew they could not throw the ball to Embiid in the post or at the nail, and they knew they could not anchor their defense. But they were constantly grasping at straws looking for alternatives. It was not Simmons and shooters; not even Harden and a rim-running center could truly stabilize the non-Embiid minutes.

    Now, there is a clear focus and identity here, and it revolves around pace. The Sixers have tremendous guard play, and they have devised a scheme that brings out all of the best qualities in players like Maxey, Edgecombe and Grimes. The team has been adamant since the offseason began than with the way NBA basketball is trending, having as many ball-handlers on the floor as possible is optimal. It is more than a theory; the Sixers’ optionality in terms of offensive initiation has given them an enormous amount of leverage.

    It is not just that the Sixers have guards out there. Last year Nurse used many three-guard lineups; the guards were not good so the units were also not good. But Nurse has clearly found something in terms of maximizing a roster that lacks balance. When they reach full health, four of the six best players on this team will be guards. Even with Jared McCain on the shelf due to a torn UCL in his right thumb, this guard rotation is humming, and it is hard to imagine a collective backcourt playing better team basketball.

    The best version of the Sixers will always include Embiid, as Nurse himself stated before Monday’s game. But for them to know who they are and what they are about when he is not on the floor is absolutely paramount. The Sixers, finally, seem to have a brand of basketball they can rely on when the going gets tough.

    Odds and ends

    Some additional notes:

    • Nurse said before Monday’s game that McCain, who was seen at the team’s morning shootaround with a much smaller brace on his right hand, is on his second day without the more restrictive cast, which means he is allowed to shoot normally now. McCain still has to be reintroduced to contact work, with many other steps still to come before his return to NBA action, but he is making progress. A more official update will likely be provided by the team in the next week or so. 

    • Nurse also said pregame that Bona needed to provide more rim protection and shot-blocking in an expanded role than he had during limited minutes behind Embiid in the first two games of his sophomore NBA campaign. Bona responded with two emphatic rejections in the first quarter, sandwiching one from Oubre. Bona’s first swat created a transition opportunity for Edgecombe. It was a promising sign and created a whole lot of buzz in the building:

    However, minutes later Bona picked up his second personal foul and had to check out of the game. It is the dichotomy of a player whose motor and risk-taking are hallmarks of his game, but has to find the right ways to maintain composure.

    • Nurse went with an eight-man rotation for much of the first half, then inserted veteran Eric Gordon, not a huge surprise. But seconds later, undrafted rookie two-way guard Hunter Sallis checked in, and that was a bit of a stunner. Sallis played less than a minute, checked out and then returned for a 33-second stint.

    • Oubre had a very good game on Saturday night against Charlotte. But he was on another level on Monday, and his early-season contributions should not go unnoticed. Oubre is shooting the three-pointer well right now, and if teams continue to respect him as a threat from beyond the arc he will only become a stronger driver. Oubre has never been much of a passer, but made some intriguing strides as a playmaker last season. He totaled four assists in the first half alone on Monday while also making himself a force on the glass. It was huge in a game in which he had to play small-ball power forward quite a bit out of necessity.

    Up next: The Sixers will be back in action on Tuesday in the nation’s capital, facing off against the young, 1-2 Washington Wizards. 


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    Adam Aaronson

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