Paul George carried the 76ers in a game Embiid struggled with efficiency.LaMelo Ball’s shot selection in the clutch was atrocious.The Hornets showed fight, but their late-game execution was non-existent.
The Philadelphia 76ers, despite a nail-biting 118-114 victory over the Charlotte Hornets, narrowly avoided an absolute catastrophe! This wasn’t a win; it was a heist, pulled off by the unsung heroics of Paul George and the Hornets’ own self-inflicted wounds. The final score flatters Philly, masking a performance that should send shivers down their playoff-bound spines.
The Philadelphia 76ers just dodged a bullet the size of a basketball at the Spectrum Center. They “beat” the Charlotte Hornets 118-114, pushing their record to a shaky 41-33. The Hornets, now 39-35, proved once again they’re stuck in that purgatory of “almost good enough” – a place where promising talent goes to die without proper guidance.
George: The Unsung Savior in Embiid’s Shadow
Joel Embiid, the supposed MVP frontrunner, posted 29 points and 6 rebounds. Sounds solid, right? WRONG. He shot a dismal 8-19 from the field! That’s not MVP-caliber; that’s pedestrian for a player of his stature. While he did hit 3-6 from deep, his overall impact was nowhere near the dominant force the 76ers desperately needed him to be. Where was the reigning MVP when the game was on the line? Hiding in plain sight!
Thank the basketball gods for Paul George. The man, a paragon of quiet consistency, dropped a crucial 26 points and hauled in a massive 13 rebounds. He shot a respectable 9-19 from the field, including a clutch 4-11 from three. George wasn’t just picking up the slack; he was the silent assassin, keeping Philly’s flickering hopes alive while Embiid struggled to find his rhythm. This is precisely why you shell out superstar money – for the nights your supposed franchise player goes missing in action.
And then there’s Tyrese Maxey, who played an absolutely insane 43 minutes, racking up 26 points, 7 rebounds, and 8 assists. The kid was everywhere, battling, creating, and trying to carry a team that looked utterly lost without its primary offensive weapon firing on all cylinders. But even Maxey’s relentless hustle couldn’t mask the Sixers’ glaring vulnerabilities.
Hornets’ Heart vs. Ball’s Head-Scratching Blunders
The Charlotte Hornets, bless their hearts, fought like a cornered animal. Brandon Miller, the rookie sensation, absolutely exploded for 29 points on 8-17 shooting, including a scorching 5-11 from beyond the arc. This kid is a bona fide future star, showing up and delivering when the pressure was at its peak. He’s the real deal, no doubt.
But then, there’s LaMelo Ball. He finished with 20 points and 8 assists, which on paper looks decent. But dig deeper, and you see the ugly truth: his shooting was nothing short of abysmal. A horrific 7-26 from the field and a soul-crushing 5-18 from three? That’s not just bad; that’s unacceptable for a primary ball-handler, a supposed franchise cornerstone, in a game decided by mere possessions. He was chucking up shots that actively killed their momentum, time and time again. This isn’t just a bad shooting night; it’s a pattern of egregious decision-making when the game hangs in the balance.
Lesser-known players like Kon Knueppel added 11 points and 11 rebounds, showcasing some serious grit, while Moussa Diabate also chipped in with 10 points and 11 rebounds. The Hornets dominated the boards and played with undeniable heart. They just couldn’t overcome the self-sabotage brought on by Ball’s disastrous night.
The Money Ball Misses & Philly’s Fragile Foundation
This game was a textbook example of why Charlotte remains stuck in the NBA’s basement. They possess raw talent, they show flashes of brilliance, but their star player consistently makes boneheaded choices in crunch time. LaMelo Ball’s contract is gargantuan, and he needs to start performing like a franchise player every single night. Missing 11 threes is not just a statistical anomaly; it’s a betrayal of his team’s trust and potential.
The 76ers, on the other hand, are teetering on the edge, relying far too heavily on Embiid’s individual brilliance. When he’s not an unstoppable force, they look utterly lost. Paul George is an incredible addition, a true savior in this contest, but the team desperately needs more consistent secondary scoring. Case in point: Kelly Oubre Jr. managed only 9 points on 3-5 shooting. That’s simply not enough from a starting wing with his scoring capabilities. Where was the offensive spark beyond the big three?
The Hornets actually out-rebounded Philadelphia 41-39 and committed only one more turnover. They played a fundamentally sound game, yet Ball’s horrifying shooting percentages were the ultimate dagger. How many more winnable games will Charlotte throw away because their highly-paid point guard insists on taking ill-advised, momentum-killing shots?
Playoff Peril and Coaching Catastrophes
For the Sixers, this win is a temporary reprieve, allowing them to cling to their playoff seeding in the Eastern Conference. But it also brutally exposes their absolute reliance on individual heroics. If Embiid or George have an off night, this team is in serious, serious trouble. Coach Nick Nurse needs to conjure more consistent offensive sets and stop relying on his stars to bail him out every single time. This isn’t sustainable playoff basketball.
The Hornets showed they can hang with the league’s contenders, but “hanging” doesn’t win championships. Coach Steve Clifford has an unenviable task ahead of him. He absolutely must rein in Ball’s atrocious shot selection and demand better execution in the clutch. If Charlotte continues to squander close contests due to superstar inefficiency, Clifford’s seat will get hotter than a summer sidewalk in Phoenix. The clock is ticking, and the pressure is mounting.
This game was a perfect microcosm of both teams’ seasons: Philadelphia finding a way to win, but often unconvincingly and with far too much drama. Charlotte, meanwhile, continues to flash tantalizing potential, only to ultimately fall short due to star player inefficiency and a baffling lack of late-game composure. This league demands winners, not just participants. When will these teams learn?
Source: Google News













