• Loading stock data...
Wednesday, July 30, 2025
Tuned In returns to NYC on September 16. Hear from the biggest names in sports media. Click here to get your spot

NBA to Investigate Sixers for Joel Embiid Plan Before They Play a Game 

  • The Sixers spent millions this offseason with the goal of having Embiid healthy for the playoffs. 
  • Daryl Morey already ruled Embiid and Paul George out of back-to-backs.
Joel Embiid
Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

The Sixers’ season hasn’t even started yet and the NBA is already investigating the team. 

The NBA will look into the team’s plan for former MVP Joel Embiid, ESPN reported Wednesday, as the Sixers have ruled him out through the first three games of the season for “left knee injury management.” 

Embiid has a history of dealing with injuries going into the playoffs. Having tried several strategies with Embiid over the years, the team is trying to get him maximal rest this season. The Sixers have remained all in around Embiid, signing Paul George to a four-year, $212 million contract this summer and extending Tyrese Maxey. 

Sixers president of basketball operations Daryl Morey has already ruled out playing Embiid and George in back-to-backs this year. It seems inevitable the decision to do so will interfere with the league’s participation policies, which were voted on and approved by the league’s board of governors in September 2023 and were implemented at the start of last season. 

“We’re going to be smart about it,” Morey said Oct. 14. “Part of being smart about it is having both Paul and Joel probably not play many back-to-backs, if any.”

The NBA unveiled the policies ahead of last season as a way to combat load management and give players incentive to avoid sitting out, such as attaching games played minimums to awards such as the MVP and All-NBA, which come with massive financial incentives. 

Additionally, the league introduced rules that said teams can’t bench multiple star players at the same time if they’re healthy while mandating they must play in nationally televised games and in-season tournament games if they’re not injured. Embiid has an extensive injury history with his lower body, but technically came to training camp healthy after playing in the Olympics this summer.

The league defined a star as a player who has made an All-Star or All-NBA team in the past three seasons. Embiid has been an All-Star for the last seven seasons and was first-team All-NBA in 2022–2023. Teams can seek approval for exceptions to rest healthy stars; the league also banned the practice of shutting down a star player for an extended period without injury. 

The new policies came with fines. First-time offenders are fined $100,000, which the Nets were after resting multiple healthy players against the Bucks last December, making them the first to pay for the new policy. Brooklyn had no player fit the league’s definition of a star, but rested four rotation players, including Spencer Dinwiddie and Nic Claxton, while barely playing three more, such as Mikal Bridges, the team’s primary scorer. Second-time offenses cost $250,000. The third offense and all subsequent offenses would result in a $1 million fine.

A league spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the investigation. 

Depending on how the investigation goes, the NBA could hit the Sixers with three offenses, one for each game, if it deems appropriate, which would give the team $1.35 million in fines a week into the season.  Philadelphia has 15 back-to-backs this season and 21 games scheduled for national television, but some of those can be added or dropped depending on the course the season takes. 

The Sixers’ season opener against the Bucks is a national television game on ESPN, which both Embiid and Paul George will miss. Like Embiid, George has been an All-Star the last two years, meaning both of them missing a game—or either of them missing a national TV game—automatically triggers a league investigation.

If the Sixers were to rack up, say, $10 million in fines, it would still be a pittance to what they have invested in Embiid. The team’s roster this year will cost roughly $182 million, with Embiid earning $51 million alone. Combined with its luxury tax bill, the Sixers’ roster costs almost $200 million for this season. The league did not respond to questions about how it would treat a team that blatantly and repeatedly violated the player participation policy.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Gabby Williams: ‘Unrivaled Saved the WNBA’s Butt’

Unrivaled was co-founded by Napheesa Collier and Breanna Stewart.
Jul 27, 2025; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago Sky guard Kia Nurse (11) drives to the basket against Indiana Fever guard Sophie Cunningham (8) during the second half at United Center.

Fever-Sky Draws 1.5M Viewers Despite Clark, Reese Absences

Clark and Reese both missed the game due to injury.

How Sports Leagues Are Responding to NFL Headquarters Shooting

The building housing the NFL headquarters was barricaded and closed Tuesday.
Jul 22, 2025; Brooklyn, New York, USA; Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark (not in uniform) celebrates from the bench in the first quarter against the New York Liberty at Barclays Center.

Man Who Stalked Clark Gets 2 Years in Prison

He sent more than 800 messages and visited Indianapolis to see Clark.

Featured Today

Las Vegas sign

College Sports Embracing Vegas After Years of Cold Shoulder

The Big Ten became the latest newcomer to Sin City.
2000, Jupiter, FL, USA; FILE PHOTO; Montreal Expos pitcher Hideki Irabu in action on the mound against the New York Mets at Roger Dean Stadium during Spring Training
July 28, 2025

Dead Sports Franchises Are Alive and Well on Twitter

The Expos, Sonics, and Whalers have active social media accounts.
Limited Hype
July 27, 2025

Sneaker Reselling Was Once Easy Money. Success Is Now Complicated

Vendors need to evolve what they’re selling and how they do it.
HAPPY GILMORE 2. BTS - (L to R) Adam Sandler as Happy Gilmore and Rory McIlroy as himself on the set of Happy Gilmore2.
July 26, 2025

‘Cool As Hell’: How ‘Happy Gilmore 2’ Hooked Golf’s Top Stars

The process was “cool as hell,” Adam Sandler tells FOS.
Jul 24, 2025; Washington, D.C., USA; Venus Williams (USA) waves to the crowd after her match against Magdalena Frech (POL)(not pictured) in a women's singles match on day four of the Mubadala Citi DC Open at Rock Creek Park Tennis Center.

Venus Williams Returns to U.S. Open Ahead of New Mixed Doubles Format

The number of doubles teams at the US Open has been cut to 16 from 32.
July 28, 2025

Inter Miami Owner Calls MLS Messi Suspension ‘Draconian’

Inter Miami’s owner and coach blast the league for penalizing the superstar.
Joaquin Niemann
July 28, 2025

Scottie Scheffler’s Season Earnings Surpassed by LIV’s Niemann

Niemann has made $21.94 million on the golf course this year.
Sponsored

Game On: Portfolio Players Stories, Brought to You by E*TRADE from Morgan Stanley

Dealmaker Jeffrey Kaplan maps the evolution of sports as an asset class
July 27, 2025

Terry McLaurin Ends Commanders Holdout After Losing $800K

Commanders wide receiver Terry McLaurin is still seeking a new contract.
July 27, 2025

Lottie Woad Wins Pro Golf Debut After Forfeiting Nearly $600K As Amateur

Woad won the ISPS Handa Women’s Scottish Open and $300,000.
Christian Wilkins
July 25, 2025

Raiders Trying to Void $35 Million in Guaranteed Money They Owe 

Christian Wilkins missed most of the 2024 season with a Jones fracture.
July 25, 2025

Cattle Dermatitis Outbreak Forces Tour de France Route Change

The Tour cut two climbs and shortened the stage by 35 km.