eyeatoma wrote:LongLiveHinkie wrote:Of course there's a mental aspect. There's a mental aspect to every injury with every player who gets hurt. When you hurt your knee you have to trust running on it again. Same thing here with the shoulder, he needs to trust it to be able to shoot effectively. Needs to get comfortable being in a competitive environment. Aside from a few games, he really hasn't played basketball since early this year. We're coming up on almost a full year now of true competitive basketball. It takes time.
Don't get all the confusion, it's like people have never watched a guy come back from an injury before.
This!
Why are people so shocked it's gonna taking him a while to get back up to speed? Sounds pretty normal to me. Sounds like we don't want him back out there until he looks like UW Fultz. That's a GOOD thing. Jessica Camerato tweeted this:
On top of that, I'm sure they're looking for him to get his original shot back. Although he probably hasn't forgotten how to shoot, his confidence might not be there.
Let's see what happens in 3 weeks. If by 3 weeks they say he's not ready, but we've seen clips of his shot either looking horrible, or great, then that'll be the determining factor of whether the Sixers organization is a recipient of my ire. Until then, you gotta have some patience.
I'm patient, but let's be clear, this isn't Embiid's navicular bone. There were clips of him being on a basketball court doing stuff with that arm a month ago. Him still needing such a long ramp up time indicates that there's something more than just getting up to speed. This is almost certainly entirely about the second thing you said, rebuilding his shot and getting his head on straight.
Again, I'm all for them taking as much time as he needs to get right, but this isn't normal.