USA TODAY International Edition

76ers need Embiid to dominate

- Dan Wolken Columnist

Most of us have never had a torn meniscus, much less tried to play basketball on it, much less carried the playoff hopes of an NBA franchise on it. You can imagine it does not feel great, particular­ly when those knees support all 7 feet, 280 pounds of Joel Embiid for 35 minutes against a tough- as- nails Hawks team in a game that the 76ers absolutely had to have.

But to any extent Embiid is feeling the pain this postseason, however much ice he has to use, whatever treatment he needs to deploy to get on the floor, it is clear Philadelph­ia has no other option. There is Embiid, or there is eliminatio­n.

It has been difficult to tell how much ( if at all) Embiid has been bothered by that knee in the first two games of the NBA Eastern Conference semifinals against the upstart Hawks. In a seasonsavi­ng 118- 102 win that evened the series at 1- 1 Tuesday, Embiid had arguably the best playoff performanc­e of his career with 40 points and 13 rebounds and impacted the game defensivel­y in myriad ways, including a few possession­s when he contained Atlanta star Trae Young on perimeter switches.

In other words, if the Hawks were counting on something less than a 100% Embiid to give them an edge in this series, they were sorely mistaken. And if the 76ers have aspiration­s of holding the Larry O’Brien Trophy in July, they’ll need whatever is left of that meniscus to hang on for dear life through the rigors of at least 11 more games and likely many more than that.

“I want to win it all,” Embiid said, which is both an obvious sentiment in the middle of a playoff run and an explanatio­n for why he’s gutting this out despite an injury that often requires surgery or knocks players out for weeks.

But regardless of how he was feeling, Embiid had everything working in Game 2: The fadeaway jumpers, the step- throughs, the hesitation moves that lead to easy dunks. He made 13 of 25 field goals and completely neutralize­d Hawks center Clint Capela, who has been one of the NBA’s best post defenders all season. He made 6- foot- 9 rookie Onyeka Okongwu look comically small when he was asked to defend Embiid 1- on- 1.

With seemingly minimal effort, Embiid got wherever he wanted on the court. Even on one good knee, he made scoring 40 points look laughably easy.

“Everybody in the league needs help against Embiid,” Hawks forward Danilo Gallinari said of his team’s failures to make him uncomforta­ble for even a second of this series.

Despite missing the last game of the 76ers’ first- round series against the Wizards and being listed as questionab­le for the first two games against the Hawks, Embiid has played 38 and 35 minutes, respective­ly, in this series.

He’s scored one- third of Philadelph­ia’s points against the Hawks. He’s made 26 free throws by himself, while the Hawks as a team have made 35.

There has been little evidence Atlanta has much of a way to slow him down, other than hoping he misses shots.

“He basically just went down to his spot and got deep post position, and we have to do a better job of fighting early to deny his catch, as well as allowing him to get deep post position,” Hawks coach Nate McMillan said. “We’ll make some adjustment­s to how we’re defending him and some of the things we’re doing to try to guard him, but tonight we were allowing him to basically just walk down to the post and set up.”

Embiid’s Game 2 performanc­e may have been fueled to some degree by finishing a distant second to Denver’s Nikola Jokic in the MVP voting – an award Embiid feels he should have won.

“There’s only some things I can control,” he said. “Nothing I can do about it, just have to come out every year and be ready and do my job.”

Embiid has to do that and more for the 76ers, because it’s increasing­ly clear their playoff run would be shortlived if the meniscus got bad enough that he couldn’t play.

Without Embiid’s ability to create baskets when the 76ers aren’t really running much offense, they just don’t have the firepower to compete with Atlanta over a seven- game series.

The bottom line for the 76ers is that everything depends on how strong that knee can stay for the days and weeks ahead.

So far, no matter what kind of pain Embiid is feeling along the way, it’s still good enough for him to dominate.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States