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With Joel Embiid out for 2024-25, what's next for Sixers?

At 21-38 and sitting 11th in the Eastern Conference, Philadelphia faces plenty of questions about its future and path forward.

The 76ers are buried in the standings, and with Joel Embiid ruled out, are likely reviewing their future options.

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PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Joel Embiid is done for the season, at last shut down following the lingering effects of knee surgery.

The final answer on the perpetual will-he or won’t-he play tonight question that canvassed the 76ers’ season came Friday when the Sixers said Embiid was “medically unable to play” and will focus on treatment and rehabilitation of his left knee.

Uncertainty, however, remains in Philadelphia.

Is Embiid finished for good? At the very least, as a productive All-Star player?

Are the 76ers faced with years of mediocrity or worse with fat contracts tied to aging, unproductive players all while facing the possibility of losing a first-round pick this season?

There are no easy answers for team president Daryl Morey headed into the offseason and Embiid’s uncertain future only complicates any potential long-term success for the Sixers.

“Not what we hoped,” coach Nick Nurse acknowledged Saturday night.

This setback was the latest in a steady string of them with Embiid since the 76ers made him the No. 3 overall pick in the 2014 draft.


What’s wrong with Embiid?

Embiid’s career has been ravaged by injury — a bone bruise here, a meniscus tear there, a busted orbital bone, a sprained shoulder, tendinitis, torn ligaments, even Bell’s palsy — over a career that started with him missing his first two full seasons.

The latest one: Embiid had meniscus surgery on Feb. 6, 2024, after he was injured when Golden State’s Jonathan Kuminga fell on the 7-footer’s left leg. Embiid returned in time for the playoffs, where the 76ers were eliminated by the Sixers in the first round.

Embiid never fully recovered from the knee injury, and he played only 19 games this season.

Nurse said Embiid didn’t have a setback from the knee surgery, it simply never got back to 100% for the 2023 NBA MVP.

“It felt good at times, it felt not as good at times,” Nurse said. “It’s been kind of an up-and-down thing. It gets to the point where it feels a little bit better and he can go play. Then it swells up again and it doesn’t feel that good and he can’t play as well, can’t move as well.”

Embiid could still opt for surgery if rest and rehab doesn’t work and any invasive procedures on his knee could cost him a significant amount of time next season.


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