NBA media poll: Joel Embiid is the current MVP favorite ahead of LeBron James

NBA media voters share their top five MVP rankings through the first two months of the season anonymously with HoopsHype.

Two months into the NBA season, we’ve seen a ton of parity throughout the league – not just in the standings but in the Most Valuable Player race as well.

In our January media MVP poll, Kevin Durant took the top spot. Now, he doesn’t rank in the Top 5 according to the same media members.

So who’s standing out through February? HoopsHype anonymously polled 15 media members who voted on last year’s awards to find out.

As with the official vote, the top player received 10 points, the second received seven points, the third received five points, the fourth received three points, and the fifth player received one point for each ballot.

NBA media poll: Kevin Durant is the early favorite for MVP

NBA media voters share their top five MVP rankings through the first month of the season anonymously with HoopsHype.

One month into the NBA season, we’ve seen one of the league’s top players return from a serious injury better than ever, a center averaging a triple-double, and other stars elevate their games to a new level.

With that in mind, HoopsHype anonymously polled 15 media members who voted on last year’s awards for their current top five MVP rankings before games played on January 22.

As with the official vote, the top player received 10 points, the second received seven points, the third received five points, the fourth received three points, and the fifth player received one point for each ballot.

After the James Harden trade, what’s next for Bradley Beal, Ben Simmons, Andre Drummond and Victor Oladipo?

What’s next for James Harden and Victor Oladipo after the trade, and possible destinations for Ben Simmons, Bradley Beal and Andre Drummond.

On this episode of the HoopsHype podcast, Michael Scotto is joined by colleague Yossi Gozlan, our salary cap expert. Scotto and Gozlan discuss what’s next for the Nets, Rockets, Pacers, and Cavaliers after the James Harden four-team blockbuster trade. The duo also examines Harden, Kevin Durant, and Kyrie Irving will mesh in Brooklyn and what potential extensions could look like for the Nets and their luxury tax bills. They also look at the trade market for Ben Simmons, Bradley Beal, and Andre Drummond, and the upcoming free agency of Victor Oladipo. Listen to the podcast above or check out some snippets of the conversation in a transcribed version below.

2:45 What could an extension look like for James Harden with the Brooklyn Nets? 

Gozlan: If he (Harden) wanted to maximize his money, the best thing for him would be to sign an extension where he opts into his $47 million player option for 2022-23 (season) and then adds an additional three years. Because he’ll have two years after this, including the player option, he can add an additional three more years starting this summer. That would be for about $161 million. Then, Kyrie and KD can both sign extensions as well. KD can add four years, $198 million. Kyrie can add four years, $165 million. I have both of them in those extension numbers declining their options for 2022-23 (season), but just replace it with a slightly higher raise than what those player option amounts would be. So about $160 million basically for Harden and Kyrie each and almost $200 million for KD. Those extensions put all of them through 2026. Just so you get an idea how expensive it’s going to be to keep these three, and I’m going to go ahead and say they’re going to get the maximum extensions… Next year, they’re already combined about $15 million below the luxury tax, just them three, alone. Let’s say they sign these max extensions that put them through 2026. KD would be making $55 million in 2026, Harden would be making $58 million, and Kyrie would be making $45.5 million.

6:15 Luxury tax implications and future revenue for the Brooklyn Nets 

9:15 What assets do the Nets have to make a trade? 

Scotto: A younger guy like Nic Claxton. I know that teams around the league from when I was at the arena last year would always come where opposing scouts and executives when Claxton would warm up. He was a guy that drew some interest from teams around the league because he came out a lot of people felt he came out maybe a year early. If he would’ve stood another year in college, he would’ve been a lottery pick. I think that’s an interesting guy that’s a trade chip they still have if they want to flip down the line.

10:20 Brooklyn had interest in acquiring Bradley Beal if he was ever made available before trading for Harden

Scotto: Internally, there were some members of the Nets organization who coveted Bradley Beal. A similar package of Caris LeVert, Jarrett Allen, some salary fillers, and draft pick compensation that they gave up for Harden would’ve been on the table for Beal with the Washington Wizards too. However, members of the Wizards organization weren’t as high on LeVert or Allen, to my knowledge. Washington still wants to hold onto Beal, and they want to make it work with him looking ahead long term.

11:45 Did the Nets give up too much for Harden? 

More: Five most likely candidates to sign with Nets after James Harden trade

16:00 What the small mass on Caris LeVert’s left kidney could mean long-term 

Scotto: The Pacers could’ve voided the trade, and they didn’t. Hopefully, that signals from their medical staff and the doctors who did the physical that I’d hope there’s some optimism for his health moving forward long-term.

17:50 What the 76ers failing to trade for Harden means for Ben Simmons 

More: NBA executives sound off on Simmons and 76ers for failing to trade for Harden

22:45: Is Bradley Beal the next All-Star who will be moved by the trade deadline? 

Scotto: He’s the guy that I think a lot of executives around the league are keeping a close eye on. That’s really the next star player that could be on the move and a guy that can make a difference for a franchise.

More: Six potential free-agent replacements for Thomas Bryant

26:25 More teams who could have interest in trading for Beal 

33:55 Which teams could make sense to trade for Andre Drummond? 

36:10 What’s Drummond’s value as of now? 

40:45 Victor Oladipo’s future

Scotto: Ryan McDonough, the former GM of the Suns, tweeted Oladipo was offered an extension of about $25 million (starting annual salary), there was fear he’d walk away for nothing, and that was part of the reason why Indiana moved him and got Caris LeVert back. He’s a younger guy, less expensive, and under control.

A league source that I spoke to with knowledge of Indiana’s thinking said that Oladipo was available since September on the trade market.

Gozlan: With Houston getting Oladipo, I’m guessing Oladipo was open to the possibility of a future in Houston. I don’t know why else Houston would’ve taken him instead of keeping LeVert.

Scotto: You could make the case that maybe Houston wasn’t fully enamored with LeVert, and maybe they still want to compete. That said, I don’t think you give up a young guy like that for a guy that’s a free agent that’s going to walk. I think the optics of the situation there’s a possibility Houston thinks Oladipo is a better asset that you can flip at the trade deadline and get more back. If they keep Oladipo past the trade deadline, then there’s pressure from an optics standpoint that you just traded for this guy, and you can’t let him walk. This is a guy that’s in the prime of his career. That would give Oladipo and his camp leverage going into free agency.

Related: Art of the smokescreen: The thought process behind execs and agents leaking info

Related: How NBA players ask for trades: ‘It does get vicious. It’s a divorce’

You can follow Michael Scotto on Twitter: @MikeAScotto

What the four-way James Harden trade means for each team

NBA execs explain what the four-team trade between the Nets, Rockets, Pacers and Cavaliers means for James Harden, Victor Oladipo and more.

As you may have heard, the Rockets, Nets, Pacers, and Cavaliers have agreed to a four-team blockbuster trade. James Harden heads to Brooklyn. Victor Oladipo, Dante Exum, Rodions Kurucs, and a ton of draft picks are going to Houston. Caris LeVert and a second-round pick are going to Indiana. Jarrett Allen and Taurean Prince head to Cleveland.

The Nets and 76ers were the two teams battling it out for Harden’s services at the end of the race, but Philly felt the Rockets were using them as leverage to extract as many assets from the Nets, Harden’s preferred destination, a league source told HoopsHype.

According to one executive, Philadelphia blew a chance to improve their options as a contender by failing to land Harden.

“I think Philly missed an opportunity and now is stuck being in the middle of the East,” one Eastern Conference executive told HoopsHype. “They’re not as good as Brooklyn, Milwaukee, Boston, and in the end, Miami. They might just be a No. 5 seed by end of the season. Ben Simmons has not improved in one area of his game at all since coming into the league. He’s the same player today as he was in his rookie year, and teams have figured him out in the playoffs. He’s why they won’t go far.”

HoopsHype spoke with multiple executives about their reactions to the trade and what it means for all four teams that were involved moving forward.

“I like the deal for the Pacers and Houston,” another Eastern Conference executive told HoopsHype. “Brooklyn gave up a king’s ransom. Not sure why Cleveland took on Taurean Prince as well as giving up an unprotected pick swap. Harden is the best player in the deal, but Brooklyn is all in, and they have no protection in the future. Cleveland will look to dump Andre Drummond, and Jarrett Allen has a bright future in the league.”

Below is a breakdown of what the trade means for each team involved.

Sources: Lakers, Clippers, others interested in Glenn Robinson III

Glenn Robinson III is drawing free agent interest from the Lakers, Clippers, Rockets, Nets, and Jazz, league sources told HoopsHype.

Glenn Robinson III, one of the top wings remaining on the market, has drawn interest from the Los Angeles Lakers, Los Angeles Clippers, Houston Rockets, Brooklyn Nets, and Utah Jazz, league sources told HoopsHype.

Robinson III, 26, is entering his prime and is considered a 3-and-D wing around the league. The 6-foot-6 forward averaged 11.7 points on 48.6 percent shooting from the field and 39.1 percent shooting from downtown in 62 games played last season. He started all 48 games played for the Golden State Warriors before being traded to the Philadelphia 76ers.

Our HoopsHype salary cap expert, Yossi Gozlan, has the latest available spending power for the teams interested. In Los Angeles, the Clippers can offer as much as the $3.6 million bi-annual exception while the Lakers can offer the veteran’s minimum. The Rockets have around $8 million remaining with their mid-level exception, while the Nets have the $5.7 million mid-level exception. The Jazz has the $3.6 million bi-annual exception remaining.

For teams looking for help on the wing, Robinson III and Nicolas Batum are considered the top options.

According to ESPN, the Charlotte Hornets are searching for a third team to take on Batum’s contract in a Gordon Hayward sign-and-trade deal with the Boston Celtics.

Batum, 31, is coming off a down season with the Hornets in which he averaged 3.6 points, 4.5 rebounds, 3.0 assists, and 23.0 minutes per game in 22 games played.

Some executives around the league believe Batum can be motivated by a change of scenery and the opportunity to contribute as a role player for a playoff team.

As colleague Frank Urbina noted, Batum has been linked to six teams if he enters the free-agent market.

Both Batum and Robinson III have been linked to the Nets, Clippers, and Jazz.

You can follow Michael Scotto on Twitter: @MikeAScotto

NBA execs on Doc Rivers to the 76ers and what’s next for Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons

The 76ers sought Doc Rivers to motivate Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons, handle the media in a big market and bring a championship pedigree.

The Philadelphia 76ers sought a new voice who could motivate Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons, handle the media in a big market and bring a championship pedigree.

According to several executives who spoke to HoopsHype, the Sixers landed the right man for the job by hiring Doc Rivers and signing him to a five-year contract.

“I think he will do a better job with Philly’s culture and with Embid and Simmons,” one Eastern Conference executive told HoopsHype. “From what I’ve heard, Brett (Brown) allowed Joel and Ben to do whatever they wanted, and it really hurt the culture.”

Brown and the Sixers lost in Game 7 in the semifinals on a Kawhi Leonard gravity-defying shot at the buzzer in 2019 and were just swept in the bubble with Simmons sidelined. Before his injury, Brown moved Simmons to power forward in an attempt to make the tandem of Embiid and Simmons more cohesive. It’s unclear how Rivers plans to use Simmons going forward.

Ben Simmons, Joel Embiid, Trade Rumors, Philadephia 76ers

One thing is clear, Sixers general manager Elton Brand plans to keep Embiid and Simmons together for the foreseeable future before considering moving either player. It’ll be up to Rivers to maximize the duo’s potential, which is a task he can handle, according to one of his former colleagues.

“I think Doc in Philly is a great fit,” a former executive who worked with Rivers told HoopsHype. “I feel like he’ll be able to mesh extremely well with Ben and Joel. Now whether or not they are a great fit with one another in terms of skill set is another question, but I think Doc will do a great job with managing the personalities. He’s an excellent coach and a wonderful human being as well, so I think it will be a very good partnership there.”

Another rival executive who will face Rivers and the Sixers often next season agrees that Rivers is the best person to toe the line between a coach, mentor, and disciplinarian to help Embiid and Simmons coexist better on the court. However, even if Rivers can improve the chemistry of his All-Star tandem, he’ll have a difficult time balancing out the rest of the team’s unbalanced roster.

“I think what Doc does well is exactly what the Sixers need,” the executive told HoopsHype. “He will hold guys accountable and push the best players to be better. Ben and Joel need someone that isn’t afraid to tell them what they need to do. That being said, they still need to change parts of the roster.”

Changing the roster, however, is easier said than done. Philadelphia is projected for a $147 million payroll next season, according to our Sixers salary page. Al Horford is owed $81 million over the next three seasons and struggled mightily in the playoffs, which makes him an albatross to trade. Josh Richardson is on the books for $10.8 million, a bargain for a starting-caliber player in today’s NBA market. Theoretically, he could be traded to shake things up, but given the team’s payroll situation, it would be tough to find equal value at that price.

With seemingly little flexibility to alter the roster significantly, Rivers will have to help one of his former players regain his top form for the overall success of the team.

Tobias Harris, Philadelphia 76ers

Tobias Harris is entering the second year of his five-year, $180 million contract. Harris played the best basketball of his career under the tutelage of Rivers averaging a career-high 20.3 points and 7.2 rebounds per game. Harris also shot the ball better than any other time in his career from the field (.487), beyond the arc (.426) and the free throw line (.856).

“They need Tobias to start playing like a max player every night,” one Eastern Conference executive told HoopsHype bluntly.

Expect more turnover on the bench than the player side of Philadelphia’s roster.

Former New Orleans Pelicans coach Alvin Gentry is a “serious” possibility to join Rivers’ coaching staff, according to ESPN. Other names to keep an eye on are Los Angeles Clippers assistant coaches Rex Kalamian, Sam Cassell and Brendan O’Connor.

Of course, those dominoes falling are also dependent on whether the Clippers hire Ty Lue as their head coach or not. If Lue takes over for the Clippers, a potential assistant to keep an eye on is James Posey, who shared the bench with Lue for four seasons with the Cleveland Cavaliers. Posey is currently a writer and host of “The Posecast” on BasketballNews.com.

MORE: Find out where Ben Simmons ranks among top players under 25 to build around according to NBA executives

MORE: NBA execs react to Clippers and Doc Rivers split

MORE: Should the 76ers trade Joel Embiid or Ben Simmons? NBA executives and coaches weigh in

You can follow Michael Scotto on Twitter: @MikeAScotto

Michael Scotto and Sam Amick on NBA coaching rumors and the Kings

Michael Scotto is joined by Sam Amick of The Athletic to discuss Sacramento’s hire of Monte McNair as GM and Luke Walton’s future.

On this episode of the HoopsHype podcast, Michael Scotto is joined by Sam Amick of The Athletic. Scotto and Amick discuss Sacramento’s hire of Monte McNair as GM, who in the front office wanted to take Marvin Bagley over Luka Doncic in the draft, and what the hiring means for coach Luke Walton’s future. The duo also discusses the coaching openings for the Chicago Bulls, Houston Rockets, Indiana Pacers, New Orleans Pelicans, Oklahoma City Thunder, and Philadelphia 76ers. Finally, the pair touch on Chris Paul trade scenarios and the futures of coaches Mike D’Antoni and Billy Donovan.

:46 NBA bubble life

2:33 McNair joining the Kings as GM and thoughts on the hiring search

Amick: “The Kings’ reputation for the last 14 years is the kind of thing that has put them in the challenging position when it comes to conducting a search like this. They settled on six candidates and each of them bringing something different to the table, but before that the three that pulled out being Trajan Langdon, Adam Simon, and Calvin Booth, but before that, you can definitely believe that a lot of guys made it clear through back channels that they didn’t have interest partly I think because of concerns about Vivek Ranadive, the Kings owner, who’s got such a checkered past in his short time in the NBA world. I think money came into play like it always does.”

“I like the Monte hire. For one, I’ve gotten to know him a decent amount over the past couple of years, doing a lot of coverage on the Rockets’ side. Specifically, where I find him so interesting is every person on that candidate list had a fairly deep analytics background, but with Monte, I’ve seen him in real-time have the ability to not only extrapolate what’s happening with the team analytically and make the best of the roster but to communicate with the coaching staff.”

6:45 Vlade Divac, Sachin Gupta’s time with Sam Hinkie, and the front office dynamic with Joe Dumars

Amick: “You hit on this earlier, some of the candidates coming in, and, really, I think all of them, wanted some clarity on the question of where does Joe’s voice fall here? They made it very clear the GM doesn’t work for Joe, but his voice still matters. I think the thing that Kings fans are nervous about and locally is there’s been a lot of discussion about the fact that Vivek has this habit that’s repeated itself over and over again where he’ll have a GM and then he’ll have a former player, which in his mind is the Jerry West role. There’s nothing inherently wrong with that, but what’s happened several times now is that when things get a little sideways with the GM, that former player who has Vivek’s ear ultimately becomes a threat to the GM. The irony of Vlade Divac stepping down was a direct result of Vivek telling Vlade that he wanted Joe to be above Vlade on the basketball operations food chain. Vlade did not react well to that and he bounced. Before that, the ironic part is you had Pete D’Alessandro as the GM and out of nowhere they brought in Vlade Divac, who is obviously a beloved former Kings player, and he was the one in the advisor role and Pete wasn’t happy about that.”

13:00 Doug Christie as a potential player development coach down the line

Amick: “I’ve seen Doug work with a Buddy Hield and work with some of the younger dudes. I’ve told him myself you need to be in player development. He’s really good.”

13:55 Who was pounding the table in the front office for Marvin Bagley over Luka Doncic?

Amick: “I’ve got to take Vlade at his word, Vlade has said publicly and privately that he wanted Bagley.”

“They were through the roof on De’Aaron Fox. He had just had a breakout year. You had a general concern that a guy like Luka is going to take the ball out of De’Aaron’s hands, so you’re going to take some of the superpower away from a young guy that you think can be your franchise centerpiece.”

“It is a brutal pick. It’s the reason Vlade’s not there. If he picked Luka and Luka took off, Vlade would absolutely still be in charge of the Kings’ basketball operations. It’s an all-timer. Making matters even worse, I do believe that Vivek was on Bagley as well. There’s kind of a new person in the Kings’ space. Vivek’s son, Anil, was also part of this GM search and he’s kind of inserted himself into the equation over the course of the past year. I’ve heard several times that he was pounding the table for Luka.”

MORE: Fox voted one of the top players under 25 to build around in executives poll

17:43 Some other bad draft misses, including the Celtics and Nuggets

Amick: “For the Celtics, Jimmy Butler. They had JaJuan Johnson and Butler. That was their two-man list. JaJuan is nowhere to be found, and Jimmy is pushing this kind of underrated Heat team into a possible Finals appearance. The one that (Tim) Connelly shared, the one that gets a lot of focus, is Donovan Mitchell. They traded Donovan as you know and sent him to Utah.”

18:53 With the new front office in Sacramento, what is Luke Walton’s future?

Amick: “I think he’s definitely fine for the foreseeable future. I do think that the message was sent to Monte because that’s who they hired that they’re pretty invested both financially and kind of spiritually in Luke.”

20:24 Potential roster changes

Amick: “You’ve got the Buddy Hield situation. He does not see himself as a sixth man. He’s not happy as a sixth man. That problem is not going away, and you gave him starter money. Do you test the market on Buddy? Can you get anything back?”

Bogdan Bogdanovic is a restricted free agent, and I guarantee you that Bogdan is looking at this situation now and just simply deciding, ‘Am I really buying into this?’ You can’t really blame him if he’s somewhat skeptical just because of all of the turmoil and the change.”

21:46 Bogdanovic’s future

22:30 NBA coaching carousel starting with the Bulls

Scotto: “When I look at the Bulls, Kenny Atkinson always seemed like an ideal fit there given what he did in Brooklyn building up the culture and really developing guys, which Chicago is built around. They have a ton of young guys in Wendell Carter, Lauri Markkanen, Zach LaVine, Kris Dunn and Coby White. You’ve heard talk of assistants like Ime Udoka and Wes Unseld Jr., who worked with Arturas Karnisovas. I think he’s a sleeper. Somewhere in there, I can see Billy Donovan having interest as well because I think they’re on the rise.”

26:23 D’Antoni’s future and the coaching search for the Indiana Pacers

Scotto: “(Indiana) has talked to a bunch of other candidates. They’ve done a lot of extensive research. I know they’ve done background on Atkinson.”

Amick: “If I had to handicap it, I don’t see that (Indiana) as a fit (for D’Antoni). I don’t see that happening.”

“Another name that’s been tied there is Mike Brown, the Warriors’ assistant, who I heard that Steve Kerr was advocating on his behalf with the Pacers.”

“(D’Antoni) is definitely going to be considered for the Philadelphia situation. I was told that the word considered is perfect. It’s not the front runner. It’s not short lister. They’ll think about it. I think Billy Donovan would be above D’Antoni on that list. That’s my sense anyway”

31:35 Coaching search for the 76ers and Udoka background stories

34:49 Will the Thunder begin rebuilding and trade CP3?

Amick: “Myself and Eric Nehm, who covers the Bucks for us, have two sources telling us that the Bucks have zero plans of pursuing a Chris Paul trade.”

MORE: Chris Paul trade scenarios for the Bucks and Giannis Antetokounmpo’s 2021 free agency

MORE: What’s next for Giannis Antetokounmpo, Mike Budenholzer and the Bucks? NBA GMs and executives weigh in

Scotto: “Steven Adams is a guy I certainly look for OKC to dangle out there. They’ve done it before. Dennis Schroder as well. He’s a guy who was in the Sixth Man of the Year conversation. I don’t know if his value would be higher than it is right now.”

39:10 OKC’s coaching search and Donovan

42:18 Rockets, Pelicans searches, Ty Lue, Jeff Van Gundy and Jason Kidd 

Amick on the Rockets: “Another name that wouldn’t surprise me to get involved is Alvin Gentry.”

MORE: NBA talent evaluators on the future of Rockets, Harden: ‘Can’t keep it the same’

You can follow Michael Scotto on Twitter: @MikeAScotto

Should the 76ers trade Joel Embiid or Ben Simmons? NBA executives and coaches weigh in

We spoke with five executives, three coaches, three scouts, and two GMs to get their takes on whether to move either Embiid or Simmons.

Philadelphia is anything but the city of brotherly love right now. Sixers management is under fire for the bloated Al Horford and Tobias Harris contracts, who woefully underperformed in the playoffs. Coach Brett Brown is on the hot seat and is expected to be fired soon.

After losing in back-to-back Eastern Conference Semifinals, Philadelphia took a step back, getting swept in the first round of the playoffs without Ben Simmons.

Now, the 76ers head into the offseason with major changes expected, starting with Brown. Unlike at the end of last season, Joel Embiid didn’t come to Brown’s defense when his job security was called into question, likely knowing his coach’s fate is sealed.

“I’m not the GM,” Embiid said after Game 4. “I don’t make the decisions. All I know is we have a great organization, a bunch of great people.”

Embiid also said Brown would be a “friend no matter what.”

Horford, who signed a four-year, $109 million deal, shot a paltry 40 percent from the field and averaged only 5.3 points in 30.7 minutes through the first three games of the series against Boston. Harris, who signed a five-year, $180 million deal, shot an abysmal 38.3 percent from the field and 13.3 percent from downtown in the series.

In terms of the roster, Philadelphia’s most valuable trade chips are Embiid and Simmons, whose long-term fit together has been questioned.

HoopsHype spoke with five executives, three coaches, three scouts, and two general managers on the condition of anonymity to get their takes on whether to move either Embiid or Simmons or keep the two All-Stars and restructure the roster elsewhere.

Five of the talent evaluators said to keep both stars, another five said to trade Embiid, and the remaining three voted to trade Simmons.

Joel Embiid, Philadelphia 76ers

TRADE EMBIID

Embiid did his best to carry the 76ers without his All-Star teammate averaging 30 points, 12.3 rebounds, 1.5 steals and 1.3 blocks per game against the Celtics.

In a league where playing small ball has become more of a trend, Embiid remains one of the league’s most dominant big men with his ability to score from anywhere on the court and provide rim protection around the paint.

The talent evaluators who voted to trade Embiid predominantly cited injury concerns and the belief that spending cap space at different positions made more sense while trying to find a defensive big man who can be effective in pick-and-roll action. If the big man can spread the floor, it’s a bonus.

“I would trade Embiid,” one Eastern Conference general manager told HoopsHype. “He’s older and has injury concerns. I think it’s easier to fill in around Simmons. Some teams still value a player like him. You should try to get a young player with All-Star potential and a starter-level player.”

Embiid and Horford never fit together from a frontcourt standpoint. The 34-year-old Horford and Embiid are not quick enough to guard big men around the arc or switch onto guards in pick-and-roll sets. Offensively, both can stretch the floor adequately but are not elite shooters. Embiid has a nice mid-range touch and likes to face up his defender in the post. Horford has become more of a pick-and-pop player in the latter stage of his career. By having Embiid and Horford together in the same frontcourt, it also limits the effectiveness of Harris, whose preferred position is the four where he can stretch the defense.

“I think you trade Embiid and turn Simmons into someone like Giannis (Antetokounmpo) or Pascal (Siakam),” one rival Eastern Conference coach told HoopsHype. “Add shooting, find a cheap center but end the game with Horford at the five and Tobias at the four. You can’t get off Tobias or Al anyway. The roster fit doesn’t work, and it didn’t work from the start of the season.”

With Brown expected to be fired as well, the next coach’s style of play will also factor into management’s consideration.

“If I were a new coach, I’d like to coach them together for a year first before trading either, but if I had to pick, I’d trade Embiid,” one Western Conference coach told HoopsHype. “I think Simmons is more versatile. I’d just surround him with shooters and open the floor up like Milwaukee for Giannis. There can be more creativity with Simmons on the offensive end. I would try to trade Embiid to Miami and get some of their young, hungry shooters and guards like Tyler Herro, Kendrick Nunn, Duncan Robinson, etc. Ideally, I’d get Bam, but I doubt Miami would trade him. I am a big believer in Simmons’ motor and defensive versatility. He reminds me a lot of a young Jason Kidd. He’s got incredible open court speed and is an elite passer, but is an average ball-handler in tight spaces and a poor shooter. He has elite defensive hands with incredible defensive instincts and strength.”

Kidd, who reportedly had a strong interview with the New York Knicks before Tom Thibodeau was hired, could be the type of coach who unlocks Simmons’ potential as a point forward. Should the 76ers look to promote from within, Ime Udoka would be the leading candidate.

Ben Simmons, Philadelphia 76ers

TRADE SIMMONS

You know what you’re getting from Simmons on a nightly basis as a 16-8-8 guy. Similar to another versatile lefty, Lamar Odom, Simmons leaves you wanting more, especially if he’s going to draw some comparisons to Magic Johnson as his ceiling.

“Simmons has been in the league long enough now that you should see improvement on that jump shot,” another Eastern Conference executive told HoopsHype. “He hasn’t put in enough work. If you move Ben, you need to get back a dynamic point guard. I never thought you could win with him as a point guard because he can’t shoot from three and the foul line, and that lane gets smaller and becomes a halfcourt game in the playoffs. For people to compare him to Magic Johnson is f—— blasphemous.”

While players such as Kidd and Johnson got triple-doubles without a consistent jump shot, Simmons has shown a severely limited willingness to shoot beyond the arc, as evidenced by his 24 career attempts in three seasons. According to Basketball-Reference, Simmons has only attempted 10.5 percent of his overall field goal attempts from 10-16 feet and two percent from 16 feet to the arc area.

“Embiid has big-time talent,” one longtime Western Conference executive told HoopsHype. “If healthy, I would be reluctant to trade him. As talented as Simmons is, I’m skeptical about his shooting ever really improving. Horford is the ultimate shooting five. I think Harris’ best position is the four.”

Another executive echoed Simmons’ shooting woes as a major red flag, and the executive deviated from the notion that small ball and a bunch of shooters around Simmons can win at a high level.

“For sure, I’d trade Ben Simmons because Embiid is a much better player, but you have to factor the injury factor for Embiid,” one longtime Eastern Conference executive told HoopsHype. “He’s been fortunate to stay healthy, but how long can that last? Ben had knee and back injuries too. It’s hard to build a team around Simmons because of his deficiencies. When you have a big guy that’s dominant, all the best teams are big. Toronto, Milwaukee, the Lakers. If you have a player as good as Embiid, it’s no question. I think Simmons is overrated.”

Last season against Toronto in the playoffs, Simmons averaged a pedestrian 11.6 points, while shooting 57.5 percent from the foul line, with 4.9 assists in 36.3 minutes of action as Philadelphia lost to Toronto on Kawhi Leonard’s shot at the buzzer in Game 7.

KEEP EMBIID AND SIMMONS 

The consensus among those who voted to keep the two All-Stars was primarily it’s hard to get equal value for two stars at young ages, even if the fit isn’t ideal. There’s a belief that the two can work together effectively if the right supporting cast is around them.

Atlanta Hawks coach Lloyd Pierce, who coached both players as an assistant coach on Philadelphia’s staff during the 2017-18 season, vehemently was against moving either player.

I think it’s blasphemy,” Pierce told HoopsHype during a recent podcast appearance. “I think in this league, the challenge is, can you win? Are you a winner? If you’re that guy, it doesn’t matter who you play with. Winners get extra rebounds, run the floor, attack, defend, compete. To think you have a top-10 and a top-15 talent and you have two of them, and they can’t co-exist? I think they both impact winning. I’m not getting rid of one to go find another because you might not find another. It’s hard to find top-15 talent that impacts winning and is competitive. Both of those guys, I think, have shown that. They were a basket away from going to the Conference Finals last year. Chemistry is real. You have to have team chemistry. You have to develop it. You have to continue to work at it. Impacting winning and competing is real as well. I think both of those guys have that. I’m more concerned with how do you make it work, not let’s get rid of it and try another route. I don’t really agree with that approach for any team.”

Embiid is under contract for the next three seasons for a combined $94.7 million, and Simmons begins his five-year, $170 million extension next season, per our 76ers salaries page.

“I would keep them both,” one Western Conference executive told HoopsHype. “You’re not going to get equal value in a trade. The issue is the Horford and Harris contracts. If I had to trade one, it would be Simmons. I think Embiid is too dominant and able to control the game on both ends of the floor. The only reason I would trade him is if I’m afraid of his medical because they should know better than any other team.”

Philadelphia had a potent offense when shooters like JJ Redick, Ersan Ilyasova, and Marco Belinelli spread the floor for Embiid to operate more predominantly in the post and open driving lanes for Simmons to penetrate.

“I wouldn’t trade either,” one Eastern Conference scout told HoopsHype. “Especially in this market climate. I’d surround them with a mix of elite shooters and defenders (hopefully both) and give it a few more years. It’s tough to replace those types of talents.”

For a look at potential free agent shooters hitting the market this offseason, check out our HoopsHype rankings by clicking here

The Sixers are the worst away team (relative to their home record) since 1955

After their loss to the L.A. Clippers last night, the Philadelphia 76ers have continued a rough trend indicative of their season at large.

After their loss to the Clippers Sunday night, the Philadelphia 76ers have continued a rough trend indicative of their season at large.

Their performance has been a stark contrast from what we wrote about the Dallas Mavericks last month. Dallas has been significantly better on the road than they have been at the home. The Sixers, on the other hand, have had an abysmal season when surrendering their homecourt advantage.

The 76ers are currently 28-2 (.933) when playing at home in 2019-20 but just 9-22 (.290) on the road. The difference is a whopping 64.3 percent, which is actually the largest among all NBA teams since the Boston Celtics in 1954-55.

Here is what head coach Brett Brown said about this when asked by beat reporters on Saturday (via Sixers Wire’s Ky Carlin):

“To me, it gets down to the real naked details of scouting reports. It’s what are you going to do with Kawhi? What’s the plan with Lou Williams? What are you going to do in after timeout defense? How do you make sure Landry Shamet doesn’t come out and go bombs away? What are you going to do if Paul George gets a mismatch at the block? It’s playoff intricacies of accountability, responsibility, detail that’s a little watered down at times. I think there’s been a few games where our energy was something you weren’t proud of. At Miami, as an example, in Cleveland, as an example, but for me it’s more coach stuff on the granular details of executing a game plan.”

For a deeper dive, Philadelphia has outscored opponents by 10.0 points per 100 possessions at the Wells Fargo Center. That net rating currently ranks second-best among all teams when playing at home so far this season. Their defensive rating (102.4) ranks second-best among teams playing at home as well.

On the road, for comparison, the Sixers have been outscored by 5.9 points per 100 possessions. That ranks seventh-worst among all teams playing on the road thus far.

Philadelphia star Joel Embiid is averaging 24.3 points per game on 50.0 percent shooting from the field at home. However, the big man is averaging 21.9 points per game shooting 43.6 percent from the field on the road.

This will be a significant area that the Sixers need to improve on moving forward as they head closer to the postseason.

[lawrence-related id=1314952]

Matisse Thybulle shooting better off catch than he ever did in college

Philadelphia 76ers rookie wing Matisse Thybulle was drafted for his defensive prowess but has also improved on the offensive side as well.

Philadelphia 76ers rookie wing Matisse Thybulle was drafted for his defensive prowess but has also improved on the offensive side as well.

Thybulle was electrifying during a victory against the defending-champion Toronto Raptors, hitting five three-pointers on December 8. The rookie ended the night with a career-high 20 points.

After 23 games, the first-year player is shooting 44.0 percent from three-point range. That is currently quite a bit better than league average (35.7 percent) in the NBA. Despite the fact that the college three-point line is shorter than the professional distance, that mark is also better than he ever shot in the NCAA.

The 23-year-old has never been a player who has been able to create his own shot from the perimeter. During his four-year college tenure at the University of Washington, per Hoop-Math, over 90 percent of his successful shots from beyond the arc were assisted.

This season, all of the 22 three-pointers he has made have come off an assist. That means he relies on his teammates for his outside attempts, used mostly as a spot-up finisher for Philadelphia.

Especially considering how much attention is required by opposing defenses for Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons, there are often open shooters waiting on the perimeter.

For example, watch how much space Thybulle has as Simmons drives to the basket. While he may have been able to continue for a contested shot near the rim, he instead finds Thybulle for a catch-and-shoot three-pointer.

As such, it is no surprise that the rookie is averaging 5.8 three-point attempts per 36 minutes when playing alongside Simmons but just 2.6 per 36 when he has not been on the court with the point forward.

More than two-thirds (68.1 percent) of his connected three-pointers have hit while sharing the floor with Simmons — who has actually assisted on nearly half (45.5 percent) of his long-distance makes. Watch one of them during the victory over Toronto:

Thybulle is averaging 1.16 points per possession (75th percentile) as a spot-up shooter for the Sixers. The wing is shooting 18-for-36 (50.0 percent) on these looks.

During his tenure for the Washington Huskies, he was just 178-for-471 (37.8 percent) on spot-up possessions. He ranked below the 50th percentile in both his junior and senior campaigns.

You can see the progress he has made shooting off the catch and as a spot-up shooter below:

Overall, Philadelphia currently ranks fourth-best among all NBA teams in spot-up efficiency this season. Thybulle has both been a beneficiary and also played a big role in the team’s success in these opportunities.

Before the draft, that is exactly what Jonathan Wasserman projected for the wing (via Bleacher Report):

“Optimizing Thybulle means surrounding him with scorers and playmakers so he can receive open catch-and-shoot looks and play to his strengths as a spot-up threat and defensive ace.”

Thybulle has found a role and a niché in the offense for the Sixers and will have even more trust from his teammates and coaches get more used to his style.

[lawrence-related id=1276970]