Embiid puts up 50, reveals Bell’s palsy diagnosis

NBA

PHILADELPHIA — Not only did Joel Embiid set a playoff career high with 50 points to drag the Philadelphia 76ers back into their first-round series against the New York Knicks with a 125-114 victory in Game 3 on Thursday night, but he did it while playing through Bell’s palsy, a condition that has affected the left side of his face.

“I think it started a day or two before the Miami game [in the play-in tournament], and I had bad migraines and thought it was nothing,” Embiid said after Thursday’s win. “It’s pretty annoying, you know, with, the left side of my face, my mouth and my eye. So yeah, it’s been tough.

“But I’m not a quitter, so gotta keep fighting. But yeah, it’s unfortunate. That’s the way I look at it. But it’s not an excuse. Gotta keep pushing.”

Embiid said the condition has affected his vision at times, causing it to be blurry, and said he constantly has to put eye drops in his eye to keep it from getting too dry. He also said it’s unclear how long the condition could last, but that it could be weeks, or even months, until it clears up.

“I just hope that it could stay like this,” Embiid said before adding with a smile, “I got a beautiful face. I don’t like when my mouth is looking the other way.

“Like I said, unfortunate situation, but everything happens for a reason. Like I said, I gotta take care of myself mentally.”

Despite dealing with this condition, Embiid was able to put up a historic performance in Game 3, one that backed up Embiid’s emphatic declaration in the visitors locker room at Madison Square Garden on Monday night after Philadelphia’s collapse in the closing seconds of Game 2 that the 76ers would go on to win the series.

After a foul-filled first half that saw two fouls be reviewed by the officials, including one being upgraded to a flagrant one, Embiid responded after the break — which saw the Knicks hold a three-point lead — by having arguably the best quarter of his playoff career, scoring 18 points on 7-for-8 shooting, including going 4-for-4 from 3-point range.

Embiid had never made more than three triples in a playoff game before Thursday night.

“Just playing basketball,” Embiid said of his third quarter. “Like I said, I got lucky I made a few shots. But, you know, gotta keep taking them, pressure or not. Gotta keep trusting myself, especially because the physical abilities are somewhat limited. Gotta keep trusting myself since I made some, but I can’t rely on those. I gotta keep pushing myself to put myself in better situations to succeed.”

The physical limitations for Embiid aren’t just the Bell’s palsy, but also his continuing recovery from the knee injury that caused him to have surgery back in February and miss two months. Embiid is still wearing a bulky knee brace, though he was moving quite well throughout Thursday’s game — and certainly better than for large chunks of the first two games of the series.

Asked whether he was able to trust his knee, though, Embiid said he is not.

“No,” he said. “I’m just trying to keep pushing. Like I said, I’m not going to quit. Even if it’s on one leg, I’m still going to go out there and try. But no, that’s not an excuse. Gotta keep playing better and better and better. Tonight I got lucky. I made a few shots. Gotta find a way to rebound, and I don’t even care about rebounds. I just gotta make sure that my man doesn’t get it, and then box out my man and take him out of the play.

“Whatever it takes to win.”

What it took Thursday night was the best playoff game yet of Embiid’s career, one that saw him set career highs in points, 3s made (5) and free throws made (19). Embiid became the first player to score at least 50 points in the playoffs on fewer than 20 shots and tied for the second-fewest shots in a 50-point game in the history of the NBA, behind Adrian Dantley doing it on 17 shots in 1980.

And while Embiid admitted he sometimes gets frustrated by the litany of injuries and ailments he has had to deal with throughout his career, and particularly in the playoffs, he said he’s trying not to let it get him down.

“I say it every day,” Embiid said, when asked whether he ever says, “Why me?” to himself. “It is unfortunate. Every single year, you start asking yourself questions like, ‘Why?’ Every single year it’s … very annoying. Yeah. Maybe it’s just meant to be. Just gotta take it as it is. But the one thing I’m not going to do is give up no matter what happens. Gotta keep pushing, gotta keep fighting, gotta keep putting my body on the line, for my family, for this city, for this team.

“I can’t sit back and be like, every single time feel bad about myself. Why me? Yeah, it goes through your mind, you can ask yourself those questions. But what are you going to do about it? Are you going to quit or are you going to keep going? And if you’re going to keep going, what are you going to do about it?

“The best thing you can do is do the best job possible to prepare yourself every single day, which I’ve done. And sometimes you get the results, sometimes you don’t. But if there’s one thing I say about myself, I’m not going to quit. And no matter what happens, if I win, if I don’t, I just know that at the end of when I’m done, I’m going be proud of myself and my people are going be proud of me.”

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