For our homies withering outside of the great ESPN paywall, here’s Zach Lowe’s newest 10 things part that covers Maxey.

This is my favorite part:

He worked and watched film in the offseason with Embiid and Drew Hanlen, Embiid’s longtime trainer. When Hanlen visits Embiid in Philadelphia for what are intended to be individual workouts, Maxey volunteers to help as the passer feeding Embiid – leading to jokes that Maxey is an “intern.”

Maxey getting free Hanlen coaching while volunteering to help Embiid is the most Maxey thing ever.

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  1. Tyrese Maxey and the Sixers are … fine?

Every few weeks, one security guard at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia reminds Maxey of the unlikely series of events that led Maxey to the 76ers – a rare stroke of strange luck for a franchise that has suffered some of the weirdest NBA melodramas: “Shout out Mike Muscala!” the guard chants, according to Maxey.

It is an inside joke, Sixers lore – code that identifies a hardcore fan. The Sixers selected Maxey with the 21st pick in the 2020 NBA draft – a pick that belonged to the Oklahoma City Thunder. The Sixers acquired it in 2016, traded it away, and then got it back in the deal that sent Markelle Fultz to the Orlando Magic. It contained a twist: Philadelphia would receive it only if it fell 21st or later; otherwise, the Thunder would send two second-rounders.

It came down to the wire in the Orlando, Florida, bubble. Muscala hit two 3s in the final 35 seconds of the Thunder’s second-to-last game to help their deep reserves complete a comeback that meant nothing to that specific Thunder team and everything to these current Sixers. With that win, the Thunder pick was capped at No. 21.

Four years later, Maxey’s ascension toward his first All-Star nod has the Sixers well positioned to pivot away from a spasm of deals that saw Ben Simmons and then James Harden come and go as would-be co-stars for Joel Embiid. Maxey is that guy now, averaging 25 points and 7 assists on nearly 50/40/90 shooting splits – taking care of the ball and developing deeper pick-and-roll chemistry with Embiid every game. Maxey being this good is the most important positive thing to happen to the Sixers since drafting Embiid. If the rumblings around Embiid quiet – if he chooses to ride out his career with the franchise that drafted him – Maxey will be a big reason.

Philly is 6-1 after edging the Boston Celtics on Wednesday, with the league’s second-best net rating. The Sixers’ passing numbers are almost identical to last season’s. Harden’s assists and touches have been redistributed across the roster in a faster and more democratic offense under new coach Nick Nurse.

The Sixers appear much closer to title contention without Harden than perhaps even they projected during the Harden stalemate. If that sustains – if their championship-level No. 2 option is already in-house – the pool of players the Sixers can target with the draft picks they received for Harden becomes much wider. Their play may also afford patience: Do they have to burn assets now if they are confident the same player – or someone better – might be available later, or even sign into their cap space in July?

Two players the Sixers nabbed in the Harden deal – Nicolas Batum and “Process” favorite Robert Covington – are contributing already. The Sixers can slot three switchable wing shooters between Maxey and Embiid in combinations involving Batum, Covington, Tobias Harris, Kelly Oubre Jr. and De’Anthony Melton. Patrick Beverley and Paul Reed round out the core rotation.

The formula is working, but the Sixers need one more ball handler to fortify them. They will spend the months before the trade deadline looking, with one eye on the maximum cap space they can carve out this summer.

They have extricated themselves from the Harden morass as cleanly as possible, if not with quite the asset haul they craved. This outcome is better than either losing Harden for nothing or re-signing him to a massive multiyear contract. They have optionality and hope.

“I was prepared for one role if James came back, and if he didn’t, I was prepared to be a lead guard,” Maxey told ESPN.

He worked and watched film in the offseason with Embiid and Drew Hanlen, Embiid’s longtime trainer. When Hanlen visits Embiid in Philadelphia for what are intended to be individual workouts, Maxey volunteers to help as the passer feeding Embiid – leading to jokes that Maxey is an “intern.”

“Joel is the most important player on our team, and I need to know how he likes to catch the ball,” Maxey said. “That means post entries, when he’s the trail man, everything.” (Maxey is a very good entry passer, and he and Embiid love a little pitch-back action when Embiid trails Maxey in transition.)

It means lots of pick-and-roll, and Maxey is a much different sort of partner there than Harden. He has worked on slowing down, giving Embiid time to find pockets in the lane. In the opening two games of this season, Maxey was passing early – with Embiid catching 20-plus feet from the rim. With every game, Maxey hits Embiid more in his sweet spots near the foul line.

The two are honing a mean empty-side pick-and-roll game on the left wing. Maxey loves to reject picks – zooming away from them – and does so much more often than Harden. It is a way for him to occupy Embiid’s defender, maybe force a switch, and give Embiid daylight for pick-and-pop actions. Maxey is learning to stay in touch with Embiid on those actions – to not outrun him. Embiid is learning how to make himself available – when to cut, when to fade for 3s.

Maxey can punish switches with step-back 3s, but he has made a concerted effort to roast bigs off the dribble – to reorient Philly’s offense toward the rim and open up drive-and-kick chances:

https://media.video-cdn.espn.com/gifs/mp4/dm_20231107_maxey_1_2gif.mp4

Maxey is happy to make the first simple play – the easy kickout or swing pass that keeps the machine moving. (The Sixers could stand to shoot more 3s.)

He is shooting 54% from floater range on a dizzying variety of runners – bank shots, high-arching moon balls, hot-potato floaters Maxey flicks even before jumping. That is an important weapon against defenses that sell out to take away any pass to Embiid – something Boston did in last season’s conference semifinals.

“They say the midrange game is a lost art, but it’s big for small guards – especially in fourth quarters,” Maxey said.

He has helped stabilize the Sixers when Embiid rests; Philly has outscored opponents by nine points per 100 possessions when Maxey plays without Embiid, per Cleaning The Glass.

Challenges await – blitzes, complex help schemes, offenses that hunt Maxey. But Maxey seems up to it. He has given the Sixers a chance at stability – something this franchise has not known for far too long.

“I work so hard every summer to get 1% better,” Maxey said. “I’m ready.”

  • xXTheRacerXxB
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    1 year ago

    I so badly want a “Mike Muscala” chant in WFC, at least once.

  • IhaveaHardenB
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    1 year ago

    Morey dug himself out of this hole better than I could have ever imagined.

    Been a Morey stan since the start, was all for taking the risk on Harden, but after it didn’t work out I wasn’t sure where we could go.

    He managed to sign Kelly Oubre and add Batum, Roco, Morris, and KJ to the mix to give us more wing depth than we’ve ever had. I’d argue that having competent wings is the most important component to having a contending team in the modern NBA.

    Not to mention the picks! Crazy how quickly he retooled the roster with an incredible amount of flexibility while Joel is still in his prime.

    I’ll say it again, if you think Morey is a bad GM, you’re a dumbass. Take a look around the league and tell me how many GMs take the risks Morey makes while being able to instantly turn things around if they don’t pay off. I’ll wait…

  • mac_rmmB
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    1 year ago

    Morey has been pretty good in the draft - Maxey obviously a huge hit but Joe, Paul Reed, Bassey - all contributing NBA players as second round picks. Springer TBD but was very young when drafted. Part of my thinks they should hold onto all of the picks they now have or maybe trade some future picks for picks next year or 2025 to fortify the core with rookie contracts and young players, but I know with Jo’s timeline that is not going to happen.