Philadelphia’s superstar duo isn’t making promises. Instead, they’re betting on patience, health, and a little faith.
The Philadelphia 76ers opened their season narrative not with fireworks, but with a cautious whisper: Joel Embiid and Paul George are “taking it day by day.” For a franchise that has lived through more heartbreak than triumph in recent memory, those four words might be the scariest — or the most reassuring — phrase fans have heard in years.
Embiid, the reigning face of the Sixers and a former MVP, walked into media day five minutes early, flashing a grin and a casual “’Sup, guys?” as if nothing in the world was wrong. Sitting beside him, Paul George carried a calm but measured tone, just months removed from knee surgery. Both men looked eager, but not reckless. Both sounded hopeful, but not desperate. The message was clear: Philadelphia will not rush this.
The Aftermath of a Lost Season
The Sixers entered last year with championship aspirations. Instead, they stumbled to a brutal 24-58 record, a collapse defined by injuries and inconsistency. Joel Embiid played just 19 games, averaging 23.8 points and 8.2 rebounds but often hobbled by persistent knee issues. Paul George, recruited to be the missing piece, barely made it through half the season before his own body betrayed him.
Fans expected fireworks. What they got instead was a medical drama. In total, the Sixers’ two stars combined for just 60 appearances, leaving the roster patchworked and the season derailed before it even began.
This year, the script is supposed to change. But can it?
Embiid’s Reality Check
When asked about his current workload, Joel Embiid didn’t sugarcoat the uncertainty. “We’re just going to listen to the body,” he admitted. That honesty — almost uncomfortably transparent — reflects a man who knows his career has been defined by as much fragility as brilliance.
The 2022-23 MVP had yet another surgery in April. Now, he’s easing back into court sessions, slowly rebuilding his strength. “Everything is on schedule,” he assured reporters, but quickly added that there was no firm expectation for when he’d return in full force.
The truth is, Embiid doesn’t want to change who he is. Known as one of the few true two-way forces in basketball, he dominates both as a scorer and a defensive wall. Yet, the question lingers: at 30 years old with multiple knee surgeries, can he keep playing at that intensity without sacrificing his longevity?
Embiid seemed reluctant to reinvent himself. “If you ask me to change the way I play,” he hinted, “I don’t know if I could.” That’s a bold stance — but also a risky one.
Paul George: The Silent Optimist
On the other side of the table, Paul George sounded more optimistic. At 35, coming off arthroscopic knee surgery, George insisted he feels “more and more like myself each day.” That phrase struck a chord — not quite a guarantee, but enough to give fans hope.
He’s already lifting weights, drilling one- and two-dribble moves, and shooting without hesitation. The swelling in his knee is down, and the Sixers’ medical staff calls that the “best possible news.”
Still, George avoided putting a date on his return. “I don’t think there’s a timeline,” he said. “It’s about how the body is doing, how it ramps up.”
For a player brought in to be a savior, George’s patience might frustrate some fans. But make no mistake: if the Sixers are going to bounce back, they need him healthy in April, not October.
Daryl Morey and Nick Nurse: The Balancing Act
Behind the scenes, Sixers president Daryl Morey and head coach Nick Nurse are managing expectations. Morey highlighted the addition of Dr. Jonathan Glashow — the surgeon who operated on Embiid — to the big man’s personal health team as a game-changer. The team is in “constant consultation” with doctors and players, ensuring no step is rushed.
Meanwhile, Nurse is preparing for the inevitable. “When those missed games come, we need to forge forward immediately,” he told reporters. Translation: the Sixers aren’t planning on 82 games of Embiid and George. They’re planning on survival until the stars are ready.
That’s where the younger roster additions come in. The front office is banking on athletic newcomers like VJ Edgecombe, Trendon Watford, and Jabari Walker to provide the energy, defense, and hustle that will carry the team through the storm.
The Systemic Shift
Nick Nurse is also reimagining how the Sixers play. He wants the team to push the ball faster, run harder in transition, and defend with relentless urgency. No more slow, half-court grinds that collapse without Embiid. Instead, the Sixers will play quicker, lighter, and more adaptable.
And when George returns, he’s open to a new role. He’s willing to play more at power forward, spacing the floor and serving as a “point four” — a secondary playmaker who gives younger wings room to grow. It’s a subtle but crucial shift that could extend his career and make the Sixers’ offense harder to guard.
What’s at Stake
Here’s the reality: Embiid and George know their availability is everything. Without them, the Sixers are a scrappy team fighting for respect. With them, they’re a contender in a brutal Eastern Conference that still runs through Boston, Milwaukee, and Miami.
The patience strategy — “day by day” — is both logical and terrifying. Logical because the Sixers cannot afford to break their stars by rushing them back. Terrifying because fans have heard this before. They’ve lived through “trust the process” slogans, only to watch dreams crumble under the weight of injuries.
This season feels like a final test. Not just for Embiid and George, but for the Sixers’ front office, their coaching staff, and their long-suffering fan base.
The Big Question: Can Patience Deliver a Title?
Philadelphia has bet its future on two aging stars with fragile knees. The championship window is still open — but just barely. Every practice, every rehab session, and every cautious step matters.
If Embiid and George stay healthy come spring, the Sixers could be the most dangerous team nobody wants to face. A healthy Embiid is unstoppable. A healthy George is a nightmare for defenses. Together, they could finally bring a banner to a city that has waited far too long.
But if the injuries linger, if “day by day” turns into week by week, month by month, then Philadelphia may once again find itself in the cruelest place of all: so close, yet so far.
Conclusion
The Sixers’ story heading into 2025 isn’t about bold proclamations or flashy guarantees. It’s about humility, caution, and the hardest thing in sports: patience.
Joel Embiid and Paul George are telling fans not to look too far ahead. No timelines. No promises. Just one day at a time.
It may not be the headline Sixers fans wanted. But it just might be the one they need.