76ers All-Stars Joel Embiid, Paul George practice, still not game-ready

Joel Embiid and Paul George are not ready to play in a regular-season game but did practice and participate in a full-court scrimmage with the 76ers on Friday in what the team framed as a sign of progress.

Embiid and George are out with left knee injuries and were ruled out for the fifth consecutive regular-season game Saturday against the Memphis Grizzlies. The 76ers play at Phoenix on Monday.

The NBA fined the 76ers $100,000 for statements that didn’t accurately convey the health status of the players.

Embiid’s next game will be No. 434 in his career out of what will be a possible 806 games for the 76ers at the end of Saturday’s game. By comparison, the player selected after former No. 3 pick Embiid in the 2014 NBA Draft, Nuggets forward Aaron Gordon, has played in 669 regular-season games and 52 playoff games.

“I wish I was as lucky as other ones,” Embiid said Friday of his history of knee injuries and surgery to repair a torn meniscus on Feb. 6. “But that doesn’t mean I’m not trying and I’m not doing whatever it takes to try to be out there, which I’m going to be here pretty soon.”

Embiid, 30, speaking at the team practice facility in New Jersey after the scrimmage, made it clear he’s riled up by the constant chatter about his desire to play.

“When I see people saying, ‘he doesn’t want to play,’ I’ve done way too much for this city, putting myself at risk for people to be saying that,” Embiid said. “I do think it’s bull—-.

“I’ve done way too much for this f—— city to be treated like this. Done way too f—— much.”

The seven-time All-Star and 2022-23 MVP played for Team USA at the Paris Olympics this summer. Embiid, who did not play for two seasons because of a foot injury after he was drafted in the first round in 2014 by Philadelphia, has averaged 27.9 points with 11.2 rebounds in his career playing only for the Sixers.

Embiid said “everybody has been on the same page” regarding his upramp to return to regular-season games.

Signed as a free agent in July, George said he was cleared for contact work earlier this week. He’s been recovering from a bone bruise.

“Getting that wind up. You can’t really simulate that level of cardio other than playing,” George said Friday. “Just being thrown in the mix again has helped kind of get my wind up, doing some sprints, going off to the side of the court doing sprints up and down. That stuff is helping me get back. That’s it. That’s the last box I’ve got to check. I’m getting there.”

George, 34, averaged 22.6 points with 5.2 rebounds in 74 games for the Clippers last season. In 14 NBA seasons, he has scored 20.8 points per game with 6.3 rebounds in 867 contests (819 starts) for the Pacers (2010-17), Oklahoma City Thunder (2017-19) and the Clippers.

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