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The Sixers were far and away the better team for 33 minutes on Thursday night. Then came a 15-minute stretch they would like to forget.
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Adam Aaronson
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The Sixers have not beaten the Phoenix Suns since Nov. 4, 2023.
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Adam Aaronson
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When the Sixers and Knicks face off at Madison Square Garden, chaos and intensity typically ensue. That was no different on Friday night.
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Adam Aaronson
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Tyrese Maxey’s sixth NBA season is quickly becoming historic.
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Adam Aaronson
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While the Sixers’ 7-5 record is a relatively positive outcome given the lack of certainty surrounding the team, their problematic health and the memory of their miserable start to a nightmarish 24-58 campaign last season, it is also representative of some missed opportunities.
Of the Sixers’ five losses, a few of them – including Friday’s defeat at the hands of a depleted Detroit Pistons team – have been avoidable. That the Sixers can withstand some injuries, bungle some games and still see plenty of reasons for optimism is a testament to how much more pleasant everything has been this season.
However, there are some real causes for concern, both in terms of recent play and looking ahead. This is a very flawed team, even if it is one much closer to being good in a normal capacity than anybody expected it to be.
A look at some of the good and some of the bad in this week’s edition of Sunday stats:
The percentage of Quentin Grimes’ appearances in which he has recorded multiple turnovers.
Quentin Grimes and VJ Edgecombe have tag-teamed backup point guard duties when Tyrese Maxey has been off the floor this year; the level of success accomplished in those minutes has been difficult to quantify. Twice the Sixers have overcome relatively poor Maxey outings by winning his rest minutes, but on the whole they have been shredded with the sixth-year star guard off the floor.
While both Grimes and Edgecombe have more than enough chops to handle some ball-handling duties in an NBA rotation, neither one is a true primary creator. With Edgecombe in a particularly tough slump of late, more responsibility has befallen the 25-year-old Grimes, whose optimal role is likely as a secondary option on the perimeter and a tertiary option overall. Grimes gets to fill that role when sharing the floor with Maxey and Embiid, but because Embiid has missed six of the team’s 12 games and no other competent ball-handlers exist on the roster outside of Edgecombe, Grimes has rarely gotten the chance to be utilized in an ideal fashion.
A player having the ball a decent bit racking up turnovers is not breaking news, but Grimes’ issues with ball security have been pretty pronounced for the last few weeks:
| Game | Quentin Grimes turnovers |
| Oct. 22 @ BOS | 5 |
| Oct. 25 vs. CHA | 2 |
| Oct. 27 vs. ORL | 2 |
| Oct. 28 @ WAS | 2 |
| Oct. 31 vs. BOS | 3 |
| Nov. 2 @ BKN | 4 |
| Nov. 4 @ CHI | 4 |
| Nov. 5 @ CLE | 4 |
| Nov. 8 vs. TOR | 3 |
| Nov. 9 vs. DET | 3 |
| Nov. 11 vs. BOS | 4 |
| Nov. 14 @ DET | 2 |
On Friday, Grimes was not the lone bad actor in the Sixers’ disastrous 15-point fourth quarter, but he certainly did not help them stay afloat:
Quentin Grimes had a pair of costly turnovers during the fourth quarter of the Sixers’ loss on Friday; the second one exasperated Tyrese Maxey: pic.twitter.com/WUV3pPpxfS
— Adam Aaronson’s clips (@SixersAdamClips) November 16, 2025
It is not that Grimes should be used as an off-ball role player, on this team or any other. But in a perfect world, the blossoming skill he showed with the ball in his hands during the final two months of last season would be treated as a luxury more than a necessity. On this Sixers team, Jared McCain’s troubles have forced Grimes into being an essential piece of any path to piecing together 48 viable minutes at point guard. It is not the best way to use Grimes, who has largely been very good in his first full season with the Sixers but quietly could be one of the most significant beneficiaries of McCain eventually getting right, even if it cuts into his minutes.
MORE: Jared McCain makes progress with Blue Coats: ‘I’m getting there’
Justin Edwards’ three-point attempts per 100 possessions.
When a player shoots 8-for-9 from the field and 5-for-6 from three-point range on national television to swing a game against a rival in front of his hometown crowd, it to be expected that their confidence will skyrocket. Justin Edwards had looked jarringly timid to begin his second NBA season, but his signature performance last week might have unlocked something.
During his rookie campaign, what made Edwards such a tantalizing prospect and a player head coach Nick Nurse rapidly grew so fond of was his ability to make quick decisions. Self-awareness is a tremendous skill, and Edwards immediately understood that he was not a player who should be dribbling a whole lot. When the ball swung his way, any decision – a shot, a swing pass or a drive – was made instantaneously, and more often than not Edwards was making prudent judgments as well.
Early on this year, Edwards was in his head. It was clear when watching him hesitate on spot-up threes, fail to drive with force or get caught in between two different ideas and turning the ball over. But after Tuesday’s eruption against the Celtics, Edwards shot another six triples on Friday night in Detroit, connecting on three of them. Edwards’ season-long three-point shooting numbers suddenly look stellar, but actually watching the shots he took against the Pistons shows a massive difference from where he was just a week or so ago:
After making five of his six three-point attempts in a career night vs. Boston on Tuesday, Justin Edwards looked particularly confident shooting spot-up threes quickly in Friday’s loss @ Detroit: pic.twitter.com/4rOX0ECuvX
— Adam Aaronson’s clips (@SixersAdamClips) November 16, 2025
After what happened at the end of the first half of Friday’s game, Edwards continuing to find his best self will be all the more important…
MORE: Edwards stays ready, and ‘the work shows’ with late-game heroics vs. Celtics
Kelly Oubre Jr.’s minutes per game in 2025-26 before leaving Friday’s game early with a left knee hyperextension.
Kelly Oubre Jr. has been an incredibly consistent piece for the Sixers this year; after a so-so performance on opening night he strung together eight consecutive quality outings before falling into a mini-slump of sorts. His constant availability and effort have been extraordinary; Oubre cares deeply about starting and had earned every bit of a job many suspected he would lose early in the season.
Kelly Oubre Jr. continues to set the tone for the Sixers defensively while providing three-level scoring. Oubre’s full highlights from Tuesday’s game in Chicago (18 points, 7-11 FG, 2 steals, 2 blocks): pic.twitter.com/h71g7gCJot
— Adam Aaronson’s clips (@SixersAdamClips) November 5, 2025
The Sixers will have an injury report for Monday’s game against the Los Angeles Clippers by Sunday evening, but left knee hyperextensions are typically not injuries players can suffer without missing any time:
Kelly Oubre Jr. will not return tonight vs. Pistons with a left knee hyperextension.
Looks like this is where it might have happened. You can see Oubre’s left leg plant awkwardly and he was in some pain right after. pic.twitter.com/KfSuaYLz43
— Erin Grugan (@eringrugan) November 15, 2025
If Oubre does miss time, first of all, Paul George getting back on the floor would be particularly helpful. The slow nature of the nine-time All-Star’s return to game action has been painstaking for many Sixers fans, even as the team acknowledges that George is in the final steps of his recovery.
Elsewhere, Edwards becomes especially important as someone whose defensive range is similar to that of Oubre’s. Edwards is a wing by trade, but Nurse likes putting him on guards and asking the 21-year-old to chase them around. Grimes sliding up to small forward in three-guard lineups alongside Maxey and Edgecombe even more often is the most obvious solution, but the aforementioned issue of their nonexistent guard depth behind those three would be exacerbated. Another option: Eric Gordon, who has rarely been used this season but remains the ultimate floor spacer and has Nurse’s trust guarding above his size.
MORE: Sixers falter offensively late, drop winnable NBA Cup game @ depleted Pistons
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Adam Aaronson
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More PHL•News•Sixers•Unique Columns


On Tuesday night — with Paul George not yet in the lineup and Joel Embiid existing in the first half with a knee injury — the younger generation of 76ers helped to power Philadelphia (7–4) to a 102–100 win at the buzzer and second place in the Atlantic Division.
The Sixers were led by thunderous performances by Tyrese Maxey with 21 points, Justin Edwards with 22, Quentin Grimes with 18, Anthony Drummond with fourteen points accompanied by 13 rebounds. The Sixers trailed 90–82 with 6:46 left in the final period — when Edwards helped to cut the led with a pair of three-pointers. With just over 2:00 minutes left — VG Edgecombe nailed a three pointer to put the Sixers up 100–96. Kelly Oubre then scored the winning bucket with just under nine seconds left to secure the win.
The Sixers also had the good news after the win with some additional good news as it appears that Joel Embiid has avoided a major knee injury as the team prepares for the return of Paul George.
Next up — Detroit on Friday night. Not the Lions, mind you — the Pistons.
Categorized: More PHL News Sixers Unique Columns
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Michael Thomas Leibrandt
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PHILADELPHIA – It is very rare for someone to beat Tyrese Maxey to a basketball gym.
In fact, Maxey’s close friend and new teammate Trendon Watford said on Tuesday morning that during the offseason, Maxey has often completed two or three workouts by the time Watford arrives at 9:00 a.m. to begin his day. Maxey’s work ethic has almost become legendary around these parts.
On Tuesday morning, the Sixers held their typical 10:00 a.m. shootaround to finish preparing for their third contest against the Boston Celtics in as many weeks. Maxey was floored by what he saw when he stepped onto the court: another player getting shots up before him. It was Justin Edwards, the second-year wing desperate to submit a quality performance if his name was called.
“He was up here at, like, 8:00,” Maxey said. “Those little mental things, they mean something. I was really proud of him for being there. He didn’t play last [game], in here early, 8:00 a.m., shot the ball well before shootaround… The work shows.”
The work indeed showed on Tuesday night, as Edwards flushed a challenging 10-game stretch to begin the season and nearly posted a perfect shooting line. Edwards made his first eight shots against the Celtics, with five of those buckets coming from beyond the arc. On his lone miss, Kelly Oubre Jr. – one of Edwards’ most vocal supporters – grabbed an offensive rebound and scored the deciding basket of the game.
“It didn’t feel good, but I shot it,” Edwards said. “Like I said, a game-winning miss… It all worked out in my favor, right?”
MORE: Edwards’ heroics lead Sixers to dramatic win over Celtics
Edwards unquestionably earned the right to have a teammate pick him up. He spent the entire game keeping his team afloat with the most well-rounded performance of his season, and quite possibly of his young NBA career. Edwards played tremendous defense across multiple positions, had a few key assists and rebounds… and made his first eight shot attempts. Edwards’ efforts were not limited to shooting, but everything looks better when shots go down:
Justin Edwards in Tuesday night’s win over Boston:
22 points
8-9 FG
5-5 3P
+12Edwards swung the game from a Celtics win to a Sixers win. All of his made shots from a career night: pic.twitter.com/9BzCuXD83x
— Adam Aaronson’s clips (@SixersAdamClips) November 12, 2025
In general, Edwards is rather muted. His answers to questions from reporters are short and to the point. He is not nearly as gregarious in front of cameras and microphones as he is behind the scenes. On the court, even in his finest moments Edwards’ reactions have been tame.
But after Edwards knocked down the third of three consecutive triples on Tuesday night to put his hometown team ahead of their rivals, the emotion poured out of the 21-year-old. He started screaming as the Celtics called timeout. He said he “low-key” got chills as he realized the reaction he had generated from fellow Philadelphians.
In many ways, it seemed like an out-of-body experience for Edwards. But it turns out that was actually him in his natural form.
“I actually kind of chilled out when I got to the NBA, honestly. I’ve aways been that type of guy,” Edwards said, before he pointed to a special guest in the back of the room. “You can ask my Momma, she’s standing right there.”
What did Edwards say in that moment? Before he could answer, maternal instincts took over 15 feet away.
“If he says it,” Ebony Twiggs, Edwards’ mother and a former professional basketball player said, “he’s going to get a beating.”
Edwards has a lot working in his favor. He has the natural talent that made him a five-star recruit. He has basketball in his blood. He has tremendous feel for the game and can make quick and prudent decisions in a way very few young players can. He has a sturdy wing frame. He has the requisite mobility to chase guards around the perimeter as he did for much of Tuesday’s game. He has composure. But perhaps the most important thing Edwards has is Sixers head coach Nick Nurse in his corner as a passionate advocate.
Nurse has the utmost belief in Edwards. It has been clear since Edwards emerged as an undrafted rookie on a two-way contract and became one of the silver linings of a miserable 2024-25 season.
That is why, after not playing him at all in the Sixers’ previous game, Nurse confidently called upon Edwards to check into Tuesday’s contest early on. Edwards’ season-long slump was just about meaningless to Nurse. Asked about Edwards’ ability to stay ready, Nurse provided one of the most flattering quotes a head coach has given about a player in recent memory.
“I love him,” Nurse said. “I don’t worry about him. He works extremely hard. He really worked on his shooting. He goes out there and tries as hard as he can on defense every time. He’s not perfect, but he’s a really good, developing young player that I love. He has a bad game, it doesn’t even phase me, because I love him.”
Edwards flashed a wide grin as Nurse’s comments were read back to him. He thought back to an early personal low during one of the Sixers’ first practices of the year. Edwards was already having trouble finding himself on the floor, but his coach lifted his spirits. Edwards was sitting on the sideline, he said, when Nurse walked over and said something to him.
“I’m not worried about you,” Nurse told Edwards. “And you shouldn’t be worried about yourself, because it’s all going to work out.”
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Adam Aaronson
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For six months, very few people would even entertain the prospect of the 2025-26 Sixers season being encouraging, enjoyable or successful. And yet the 2025-26 Philadelphia 76ers have found a way to win once again. They are 4-0.
After three victories to begin the season ranging from thrilling to chaotic, the Sixers dug themselves a hole against a lowly Washington Wizards team but once again staged a double-digit turnaround, notching a 139-134 overtime victory on the road.
Tyrese Maxey and Joel Embiid were brilliant right away, but their early barrage of baskets was met by a greater one from the Wizards. The Sixers had a strong offensive night behind Embiid’s best scoring performance of the season, but for much of the game their defense was so putrid that it did not matter. Then the comeback crew did it again, erasing what was a 13-point deficit inside of the five-minute mark of the final frame as Maxey got hot down the stretch again while Quentin Grimes posted an outstanding stretch of two-way play. Adem Bona closed the game with Embiid at his minutes limit and blocked shot after shot. The Sixers found a way to force overtime, found themselves on the wrong end of a five-point deficit right when it started and still had enough to mount another comeback and emerge victorious, with Bona’s shot-blocking and offensive rebounding taking center stage.
This team just keeps one-upping itself. Takeaways from, amazingly, another winning night of Sixers basketball:
Even during their wildly successful three-game stretch to begin the season, the Sixers did not defend well enough. They are undersized right now, and to some degree that will remain the case, but it is also not an excuse to struggle as much as they had been struggling. It is perhaps now the most important area where nine-time All-Star Paul George will help them.
Embiid has been one of the best defenders in the NBA for several years, but at this juncture he is a burden on that end of the floor as he manages every movement closely. It is easier to understand the Sixers’ struggles on defense when he is in the game just because his mobility is so limited. When he is off the floor, they have been unable to contain drivers and it puts undue stress on whichever player is filling in as a rim protector.
Many things can be pointed out here – that Washington made a ton of difficult shots; that the Wizards have so much youth and energy; that the Sixers were on the second leg of their first back-to-back of the year; that head coach Nick Nurse’s team was simply due for a rough night – but again, these defensive issues were not exclusive to Tuesday’s action. They just became so egregious that no talent advantage or individual scoring heaters could make up for their lack of cohesion.
It was not for a lack of trying offensively. Embiid was outstanding in tandem with Maxey; the two cornerstones of this team went all-in on embracing their lethal two-man work early and often in this one. It took away from VJ Edgecombe, Quentin Grimes and others’ chances to get shots up, but it was hard to argue with this:
Offense was never the Sixers’ problem in this game; they played more than well enough to win on that end of the floor. Embiid posting season-highs in points (25) and minutes (23) was an important benchmark. But Sixers’ defense went from very bad to dreadful in this one. It will have to be addressed moving forward, because even in their victories the Sixers were not doing nearly enough to provide resistance toward opposing offenses. It places too large of an offensive burden on the team’s stars.
Finally, down the stretch the Sixers started playing decent defense, with Bona’s five blocks at the center of it all. He also had the go-ahead basket, a jam off an offensive rebound:
Bona provided jaw-dropping plays time and time again, with Grimes serving as the perfect two-way role player in the clutch. The Sixers’ marvelous offensive attack suddenly had a chance to lead the way, and it did just that. Maxey ended up with an enormous 39-point performance, but the value Grimes and Bona gave in the biggest minutes of this game cannot possibly be overstated.
After missing all of training camp and the preseason, the Sixers finally got a look at their lone external addition to the team’s standard roster via free agency over the summer. Watford, the 6-foot-9 point forward with a unique set of skills, was available in a limited role off the bench after being sidelined for the team’s first three games in the regular season.
Watford kicked off his Sixers career by bullying Wizards rookie Tre Johnson en route to an easy left-handed jump hook:
The 24-year-old forward’s minutes were largely encouraging, particularly given his unusual style. Watford is not exactly an easy player to drop into a preexisting rotation; he does a lot of things that most players at his size are never asked to do when it comes to ball-handling. His first stint lasted about eight minutes, which was a pleasant surprise in itself.
Watford moved a lot better than one would expect for a player who was returning from such a longstanding hamstring ailment, and even without a jaw-dropping box score line his overall utility on this roster was evident right away. Watford made plenty of nifty passes, and his very first possession with Embiid was a picture-perfect pick-and-pop resulting in an Embiid triple. The Sixers were looking for him as soon as they grabbed defensive rebounds so he could initiate transition offense.
For Watford’s fit to not look particularly shaky right away is a major win for the Sixers, and it bodes well for his ability to carve out a niche within this offense moving forward.
Some additional notes:
• Nurse made a change to his starting lineup with Dominick Barlow (elbow) still sidelined. Instead of starting Jabari Walker at power forward, Nurse plugged in Justin Edwards as a small-ball four. Washington started two small guards, two wings and one big, so Nurse did not feel compelled to be as big against one of the tinier starting units in the NBA. Of course, the other change was Embiid starting over Bona.
• Jabari Walker’s best stint as a member of the Sixers came in the first half on Tuesday; he scored eight points and grabbed three rebounds (two offensive) in a six-minute burst while also nabbing a steal. But he was not part of the rotation in the second half. Walker has some competition for frontcourt minutes moving forward; Watford has joined a mix that will once again include Barlow soon. George’s eventual return looms large as well.
• This was Edgecombe’s quietest NBA game yet from an offensive perspective, yet the rookie still managed to convert two separate four-point plays. He really is fearless:
Edgecombe handled the ball much less than usual, but was just as ambitious as a spot-up three-point shooter and had plenty of success, knocking down four triples. Clearly, the Sixers needed each one of them.
Up next: The Sixers will have two days off before returning to action at home, where they will play host to the Boston Celtics in the opening game of NBA Cup Group Play.
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Adam Aaronson
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