
Philadelphia 76ers center Joel Embiid helped orchestrate one of the more stunning Game 7 wins in recent playoff memory, but the celebration in the visiting locker room at TD Garden was quickly overshadowed by a familiar and unsettling sight — Embiid limping.
With seconds left in the Sixers’ 109-100 win over the Celtics, Tyrese Maxey’s fallen body rolled directly into Embiid’s left knee, and the big man was visibly hobbled for the final moments of the game.
For the New York Knicks, who had just closed out the Atlanta Hawks and were waiting to see who would emerge from the East, the subplot shifted instantly from Philadelphia’s triumph to Embiid’s knee.
Per The Athletic’s Tony Jones, Embiid “looked to have hyperextended a knee” and was “walking gingerly around the locker room” after the win. The injury had no official diagnosis attached to it, and Embiid himself told reporters after treatment that he “felt amazing,” even claiming he was “faking it.”
But anyone who has followed this franchise knows that waiting on an Embiid injury update and actually believing the first one are two very different things.
There is no confirmed timeline, no MRI result in the public domain, and no official status for the second round.
Joel Embiid Injury Cloud Changes the Knicks’ Outlook

GettyJoel Embiid injury scare moving into next round against knicks.
The numbers make the case plainly. According to StatMuse, the 76ers went 24-14 when Embiid played this season, averaging 119.4 points per game while shooting 47.1% from the field.
Without him, they were 21-23, scoring 6.5 fewer points per game, shooting nearly two percentage points worse from the field, and turning the ball over more frequently.
What makes this scare feel heavier than a routine playoff knock is the context layered underneath it. Embiid underwent emergency appendectomy surgery on April 9, returned just 16 days later, and has been playing through what he himself described as post-surgical complications.
He played only 38 games in the regular season, and before the appendix issue hit, he had already missed significant stretches due to a strained oblique, a shin stress fracture, and lingering issues with both knees. Now there is a new left knee scare stacked on top of all of it.
This is also not the first time Embiid has sent Philadelphia into a postseason holding its breath. In the 2024 playoffs, he played through a torn meniscus against the Knicks while also managing Bell’s Palsy.
If we look at 2023, a knee sprain cost him the end of the Nets series. In 2022, he played through an orbital fracture. Former Sixers coach Doc Rivers once said plainly: “I still believe if we had one healthy year, probably more the first year, and the last year, we would have advanced.”
That history is why this scare resonates louder than the postgame quote would suggest.
New York Knicks Can Target a Shorter Series if Joel Embiid Is Limited

GettyJoel Embiid #21 of the Philadelphia 76ers
Philadelphia was down 3-1 when Embiid truly found his footing, winning the final three games in the biggest comeback in franchise history. From Games 5 through 7, he was the difference — averaging over 28 points and 9 rebounds per game, capping it with a 34-point, 12-rebound masterpiece in Game 7. That is the version of the Sixers New York has to worry about.
If Embiid is slowed, the Knicks’ advantages in depth and defensive versatility become magnified instantly. The offensive burden falls entirely on Tyrese Maxey, but never the sole engine of a playoff series win.
Every possession Embiid needs rest is a possession New York can exploit. The East is wide open. Whether the Knicks walk through that door may come down entirely to one man’s knee.
Joel Embiid’s New Injury Scare Could Open Door for Knicks to Reach Finals