Iverson Armband wrote:Negrodamus wrote:What are we even talking about here though? He was arguably worthy of two MVPs and has been dominant when healthy. He has grievances. If he had Jordan’s mentality, he’d still be injury prone.
It’s not like he was this massive bust because he had a bad attitude. In the end, his attitude has no bearing on his availability. You can’t prevent a meniscus injury from happening if Kuminga falls into your knee. You can’t lose enough weight or get strong enough to prevent Fultz and Siakam from bashing in your orbital bone.
His own teammates, including probably the most fun-loving guy on the planet in Tyrese Maxey, called him out last year for his lack of professionalism.
So let’s not sit here and pretend that the only issues with Embiid are injury related. He’s been relatively healthy at times and still hasn’t produced when it’s mattered.
Yep, but he still puts up monster numbers despite the lack of professionalism when healthy. He’s not a liability on the court. I have no gripe with Maxey calling him out to be better, but until Maxey can carry this team by himself, Embiid is our best bet at winning it all. I’m not saying he’s faultless, but I also think the takeaway being that Embiid shoulders most of the responsibility here and he’s continuing to be a blight on this team is incorrect; but everyone is entitled to their opinion.
I can’t help but imagine how difficult life would be for me at 15-16 going to a foreign country where I’m still learning the language, try to navigate three different levels of competition away from my family and have many levels of despair, feelings of betrayal, and a ton of pressure. I get it, he should have “grown up” but it’s easy for me to say from my couch where I’ve had zero percent of his lives experience.