VJ Edgecombe’s first postseason run has already produced a stat that says a lot about the 76ers: 0-for-16 in their three losses, 15-of-43 in their wins.
That split showed up as one of the clearest swing points in Philadelphia’s first-round series against Boston, and it helps explain why the Sixers looked like two different teams depending on whether their rookie guard was making shots.
He then backed up the point in Game 7 with 23 points, including five 3-pointers, in Philadelphia’s 109-100 closeout win.
That was not the only big night Edgecombe put on tape. In Game 2 against Boston, he went for 30 points and 10 rebounds, becoming the first rookie in NBA playoff history to post that combination since Tim Duncan in 1998.
He was also the first rookie ever to finish a playoff game with five 3-pointers and 10 rebounds. That kind of ceiling is why the Sixers keep leaning on him, even when the shot comes and goes.
The numbers point to a simple idea: when Edgecombe is aggressive and efficient, Philadelphia’s offense gets a different shape.
The floor opens more cleanly around Joel Embiid and Tyrese Maxey, and the Sixers have another guard who can punish the defense when it overcommits elsewhere.
When the jumper disappears, the spacing tightens fast and the offense starts to look easier to crowd. That has been the biggest lesson of the series so far.
Philadelphia’s path now gets harder, not easier. The 76ers entered the second round as the No. 7 seed, and the Knicks have already opened the series with a blowout win in Game 1.
Why the Sixers need the rookie version, not the disappear-in-the-losses version
Edgecombe’s production has not just been random from game to game. He opened the playoff run with 13 points on 6-of-16 shooting in Game 1 against Boston, then followed it with the explosive Game 2, before the series settled into the kind of back-and-forth pattern that tends to expose young scorers.
In the losses that followed, his shooting line fell sharply, and the 0-for-16 mark in those defeats became the stat that defined the series split.
That matters because Philadelphia does not have much margin for error in a postseason series built around stars and short recovery windows.
The Sixers went from a Game 7 win in Boston to a 137-98 blowout loss to the Knicks in Game 1 of the East semifinals, a reminder that playoff momentum can vanish quickly when a team is tired and the opponent is fresh.
Edgecombe had 12 points in that loss, and the Sixers had to absorb another long night almost immediately after surviving the first round.
That is where the rookie’s role becomes bigger than the box score. Edgecombe averaged 16.0 points in the regular season across 75 games, and his year has already included moments that suggest he can be more than a secondary scorer.
He put up 38 points and 11 assists against Sacramento in March, and earlier in the season he flashed the kind of shot-making that can swing a game before defenses have time to adjust.
The challenge now is turning that kind of output into something stable enough to survive a seven-game series.
For Philadelphia, the formula is not complicated. When Edgecombe hits shots, the offense has another lane and another release valve.
When he does not, the Sixers become easier to load up against, especially against a defense that can crowd Embiid and rotate to Maxey.
