Joel Embiid on criticism from Shaq and Barkley: ‘They’re right’

Sixers star Joel Embiid had an interesting response to recent criticism from Shaquille O’Neal and Charles Barkley.

As you probably know by now, TNT analysts Shaquille O’Neal and Charles Barkley caused a stir when they served up a harsh critique of Joel Embiid after the Philadelphia 76ers beat the Denver Nuggets 97-92 on Tuesday night.

Despite the solid win over a good Western Conference team that moved the Sixers to 18-7 on the season and a perfect 13-0 at home, the duo singled out Embiid’s performance, with Barkley going as far as saying the Sixers have “no chance” at making the finals. That prediction followed a critique of Embiid, where Barkley noted that “he’s (Embiid) the toughest player to match up with in the league” but we don’t talk about him the way we talk about other great players.

Embiid posted 22 points, 10 rebounds, and six assists in the victory, but that didn’t stop Shaq from running with Barkley’s comments, saying “22 ain’t enough to get you to the next level. You wanna be great? Or you wanna be good? If you wanna be good, keep giving 22 points, You wanna be great? Give me 28. Give me 30.” Shaq also suggested that Embiid isn’t “playing hard enough.”

The comments sparked debate across the basketball world, with some agreeing with the sentiment while others noted that the pair seemed to ignore that the Sixers won the game and hold wins over the other Eastern Conference contenders that they have played so far (Boston, Toronto, Miami.)

On Thursday, we found out which camp Embiid sits in, and it’s the former. The Inquirer’s Keith Pompey asked the big man about the criticism, and Embiid was blunt in his response.

“I do think they’re right. I think I need to, you know, be more aggressive, you know, just look to impose myself, just look to dominate. I think the whole season I haven’t done that. I guess I need to go back to having fun and just dominate, but I get what they’re saying and I think they’re right, and I gotta make a change.”

Interestingly, Shaq prefaced his comments by saying it’s not criticism but information to help Embiid get to where he can go. While the truth of that statement is up for debate, it certainly appears that Embiid took it as information rather than criticism.

Since his suspension from the scuffle with Karl-Anthony Towns, Embiid has talked a lot about maturity. He’s noted that he doesn’t want to do anything that could be a distraction for his team, but also that in trying to find that balance he hasn’t played with the same joy that is such a big part of his game.

Embiid’s response to the TNT crew’s comments indicates exactly the kind of maturity the Sixers want to see from the big man. Instead of taking it personally and lashing out or dismissing it as modern-day hot take sports talk, Embiid seems to have listened to and contemplated the comments. He then issued a mature, reasoned, and encouraging response.

Hopefully, Embiid is starting to realize what kind of maturity the team actually needs from him and is learning how to balance that with the joyful, fun-loving personality that has endeared him to Sixers fans and that helps him play his best basketball when it is allowed to show through.

Embiid is attempting a balancing act right now as he tries to find the line between being the trash-talking, dancing, animated dominant basketball player that we’ve seen him be and a mature leader that doesn’t go overboard and put his team in unnecessary difficult positions. Perhaps Thursday’s comments are an indication that he’s getting closer to finding that sweet spot. [lawrence-related id=21056,21042,21037]

 

Charles Barkley nailed Shaq right in the head with a raw egg

Got him!

Add yet another chapter in the never-ending book of Charles Barkley and Shaquille O’Neal battles — and just last month, we saw the two wrestle each other inside a ring on Inside the NBA.

This involves the entire on-air crew surrounding a camera and attempting a TikTok Challenge in which they threw stuff in the air — water balloons, basketballs, etc. — and seeing if they could hit themselves in the head. It was all very silly.

Naturally, the whole thing devolved into Shaq throwing stuff at Barkley … but it would be Barkley who would get the last laugh by nailing O’Neal squarely at the top of his head with a raw egg.

First, the segment started like this …

… and then? POW!

There’s even a GIF:

Round 3,251 goes to Chuck.

[jwplayer rfrVUksM-q2aasYxh]

Charles Barkley reportedly says ‘I don’t hit women but if I did I would hit you’ to female reporter

There is an unfortunate pattern of behavior for Barkley here, though he insists his comments were made as a joke.

On Tuesday night, Axios reporter Alexi McCammond tweeted out that former NBA star Charles Barkley told her that “I don’t hit women but if I did I would hit you.”

McCammond said Barkley’s comments came after she asked about clarification for which candidate he was supporting in the 2020 Democratic primary.

She says Barkley spoke glowingly about Deval Patrick, but then a member of Pete Buttigieg’s campaign approached the group. When Barkley then said he was a fan of Buttigieg, McCammond pointed out that he had just voiced his support for Patrick. He then made the comment to her.

McCammond also said the comments had been made off the record, an agreement she would normally respect were it not for the nature of those comments.

UPDATE: Barkley has apologized for the comment.

As many online pundits pointed out, Barkley has a troubling history of comments made about violence toward women. Most were couched as jokes, but it’s still a worrying thing that he hasn’t seemed to learn a lesson about this.

McCammond concluded by saying she didn’t like being a part of the story.

“It’s not about me or my feelings,” she tweeted. “But it’s about refusing to allow this culture to perpetuate because of silence on these issues. It’s easier and less awkward to be silent, but that helps NO ONE but the perpetrator.”

All 20 top 10 picks by the Philadelphia 76ers since 1969

Charles Barkley, Joel Embiid, Doug Collins, Ben Simmons are among the 20 players drafted in the top 10 by the Sixers in the last 50 years.

The Philadelphia 76ers have spent plenty of time around the bottom of the NBA standings. So much so that in the last 50 seasons, they have had 20 picks in the top 10 of the NBA Draft. Some players worked out while others fizzled.

1972: Freddie Boyd

NBA Photo Library/NBAE via Getty Images

Freddie Boyd was taken fifth overall out of Oregon State. He had the misfortune of playing on a team that went 9-73 in 1972-73. Boyd played three-plus seasons in Philly and averaged double digits once, going for 10.5 points per game as a rookie.

Charles Barkley weighs in on Trail Blazers signing Carmelo Anthony (Hoopshype)

The Portland Trail Blazers are signing Carmelo Anthony, according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

The Portland Trail Blazers are signing Carmelo Anthony, according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

Charles Barkley weighs in on Trail Blazers signing Carmelo Anthony

The Portland Trail Blazers are signing Carmelo Anthony, according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

The Portland Trail Blazers are signing Carmelo Anthony, according to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

Charles Barkley on Nets: ‘Brooklyn stinks’

Basketball Hall of Famer Charles Barkley doesn’t like what he’s seen from the Brooklyn Nets to start 2019-20.

The Nets have had a disappointing start to the 2019-20 season. They’re now 4-7 after Thursday’s loss to the Denver Nuggets, and have lost back-to-back games in which they led by double-digits at the half. Plus, those two letdowns came on the heels of a blowout loss to the Phoenix Suns.

To make matters worse for Brooklyn, the team is now without Caris LeVert for four to six weeks after he needed surgery to repair damaged ligaments in his right thumb.

No matter how you slice it, the Nets are not in a spot most expected them to be in following the additions of Kyrie Irving, Taurean Prince, Garrett Temple and DeAndre Jordan over the summer. Some seem to have already given up on Brooklyn, including TNT NBA analyst and Basketball Hall of Famer Charles Barkley.

Following Thursday’s loss, Barkley’s co-worker, Kenny Smith, explained how the Nuggets are in a good spot because they were able to win another contest despite the fact they didn’t put together a full game again. Barkley disagreed:

You’re not going to be able to turn it on against the elite teams. You’re gonna beat the Brooklyn Nets. I mean, come on, they stink.

Barkley doubled-down soon after his initial comment about the Nets.

They were gonna come back on Brooklyn ’cause Brooklyn stinks.

Tyson Fury insists he’s weary of fame he constantly nurtures

Tyson Fury says he most comfortable and happy in the gym, not with a microphone in his face.

The Tyson Fury road show continues, although it’s beginning to sound as though it won’t stop in the very place it started.

It’s hard to say, because, well, Fury has so much to say. He has more to say than Charles Barkley. Pick the day or the hour, and he’ll say something else in a tour that is part Kardashian, part lousy lounge act and always uproarious.

In his latest missive, he says he’s unhappy with U.K. fans. He warns that he might just leave.

“They had their chance,’’ Fury told the U.K.’s Sunday Times. “They didn’t treat me well.’’

If that’s goodbye to the U.K., then watch out America. He might be saying more than just hello. He might be moving in.

“Over here (in the United States), I get treated like a superstar,” Fury said.

Who’s that 6-foot-9 heavyweight boxer and master showman behind that mask? Ethan Miller / Getty Images

Then, of course, there were reasons – mostly words – to wonder whether Fury is serious. A heavyweight with a solid feint is pretty good at the rhetorical head fake.

He told the Sunday Times that he is weary of celebrity while also hard at work generating as much of it as he can.

As he waits on a projected rematch with Deontay Wilder in February, Fury has been selling his autobiography, “Behind the Mask”. He has had a role in a pro wrestling show in Saudi Arabia and talked about going into mixed martial arts. He’s also doing his own four-part television documentary, “Meet The Furys”.

He’s doing he documentary, he said, “so people can see the real Tyson Fury.’’

But then, he said: “I hate fame.’’

Really.

“When I got to a big city it’s just a nightmare,’’ he said. “Torture. Honestly, the only bit I enjoy is going to the gym. That’s what makes me happy. Everything else is just what I’ve got to do.”

The only thing for certain: He’s doing it just about everywhere.