Home / NBA / Joel Embiid Just Made NBA History by Winning the Scoring Title, but He Has a Loftier Goal for 2023 Joel Embiid Just Made NBA History by Winning the Scoring Title, but He Has a Loftier Goal for 2023 Written by Sports EditorJack Dougherty Updated –Apr 11, 2022 We publish independently audited content meeting strict editorial standards. Ads on our site are served by Google AdSense and are not controlled or influenced by our editorial team. Joel Embiid has enjoyed a historically dominant season for the Philadelphia 76ers. By averaging 30.6 points per game and winning the 2022 scoring title, Embiid became the first center to do so since Shaquille O’Neal in 2000. He’d be a deserving league MVP if he does end up winning the award. But Embiid isn’t even close to satisfied with what he’s personally accomplished this season. The superstar big man has already set his sights on another center scoring record he hopes to break next year. Joel Embiid is making the center position great again your 2021-22 @NBA scoring champion: @JoelEmbiid. đ pic.twitter.com/mbUySlOSH0— Philadelphia 76ers (@sixers) April 11, 2022 Centers used to dominate the NBA in every way imaginable. In the 1960s and 1970s, Wilt Chamberlain, Elgin Baylor, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar took turns winning scoring titles and championships, as they were virtually unstoppable down low in a much smaller league. Players such as Moses Malone, Hakeem Olajuwon, Patrick Ewing, and Shaq continued to prove how much of a difference-maker a physically imposing center could be over the next few decades. However, the old-school center has gone out of style in recent years. The growing fascination with analytics and the three-point shot has caused NBA teams to prioritize shooting when looking for new players to add to the roster. That includes centers. Big men who make their living on the block aren’t seen as efficient offensive players nowadays. The importance of an offensive-minded center isn’t what it once was, and that’s why the last 21 scoring title winners have all been guards or forwards. In 2022, Embiid bucked that trend by becoming the first center to win the scoring title since Shaq in 2000. He’s also the first center to average more than 30 points per game over an entire season since Moses Malone scored 31.1 PPG in 1982. But next year, Embiid will be coming for Malone’s 31.1 mark. Embiid already has a scoring goal in mind for next season Joel Embiid of the Philadelphia 76ers flexes during a game against the Indiana Pacers | Dylan Buell/Getty Images It will be tough for Embiid to replicate his incredible 2021-22 season, but he plans on putting up even bigger numbers next year. Malone’s 31.1 scoring average in 1982 could be in danger. “Well, thatâs the challenge for next year,” Embiid told reporters last week after joining Malone in the record books. “So, next year, I gotta come out and average more than him, but itâs great. Obviously, heâs a legend and itâs great. Especially as a big in this era, itâs been a long time. Itâs been, what, 40 years? So it hasnât been done. Thatâs something that I think is great.” Embiid is proud of how he’s resurrected the center position, and he hopes his scoring title will pave the way for more big men to do the same. “I hope guys coming up more, especially bigs coming up, are able to do even more,” he said. “And like I said, I think the biggest thing with me is that I feel comfortable with it because I feel like I didnât force anything. I feel like I just played within the flow of the offense.” Being a trend-breaking center in this era of basketball is impressive, and Embiid has more records to break in the coming years, but he won’t be completely satisfied with any of his accomplishments until he brings a championship to Philadelphia. Like Sportscasting on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter @sportscasting19. RELATED: Joel Embiid Has Already Forgiven Ben Simmons: âI Wouldnât Mind Being Friendsâ Written by Sports EditorJack Dougherty Writing professionally since 2015, Jack Dougherty spent six years as a sportswriter with publications such as GoPSUSports.com, the Centre Daily Times, and the Associated Press before joining Sportscasting in 2020. He covers the NBA, the NFL, and the world of golf extensively and has added expertise on any team located in or around his hometown of Philadelphia. Yes, that includes the Philadelphia Eagles, the Philadelphia 76ers, and Philadelphia Phillies. When Jack isn't writing about sports, he's watching them or playing them as he regularly heads to the gym for some pickup basketball or the golf course to hit the links. He's also an avid participant in the sports betting scene who worked at a casino sportsbook for a year and learned the ins and outs of the industry before bringing his expertise to Sportscasting with one excellent gambling recommendation after another. All posts by Jack Dougherty
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