As they try to spur the Philadelphia 76ers to their first championship in 40 years, Joel Embiid and James Harden are on pace to accomplish a feat the NBA has not seen since a year before the last Sixers title in 1983 – teammates leading the league in both scoring and assists in the same season.
The last time the NBA’s annual scoring and assist leader came from the same team was in 1981-82 when San Antonio’s George Gervin won his fourth and final scoring title with an average of 32.3 points per game while his teammate Johnny Moore led the NBA in assists for the first and only time at 9.7 assists per game.
Teammates leading NBA in both points in assists in same season
SEASON | SCORING LEADER | ASSIST LEADER | TEAM |
2022-23 | Joel Embiid (33.4 ppg) | James Harden (10.8 apg) | Philadelphia 76ers |
1981-82 | George Gervin (32.3 ppg) | Johnny Moore (9.7 apg) | San Antonio Spurs |
1973-74 | Bob McAdoo (30.6 ppg) | Ernie DiGregorio (8.2 apg) | Buffalo Braves |
1972-73* | Tiny Archibald (34.0 ppg) | Tiny Archibald (11.4 apg) | Kansas City-Omaha Kings |
1962-63^ | Wilt Chamberlain (44.8 ppg) | Guy Rodgers (10.4 apg) | San Francisco Warriors |
1951-52^ | Paul Arizin (25.4 ppg) | Andy Phillip (8.2 apg) | Philadelphia Warriors |
* technically not teammates as the same player led both categories (only time in NBA history) | |||
^ annual leaders determined by totals rather than per game averages through 1968-69 season |
Following Moore’s assist title, Magic Johnson led the NBA in four of the next five seasons. But his teammates didn’t come close to leading the league in scoring. In fact, Magic was the only Laker to finish in the top 10 in scoring during any of his assist title seasons (10th in 1986-87).
Following Magic’s run, John Stockton led the NBA in assists for nine consecutive seasons (1987-88 to 1995-96), but his scoring partner Karl Malone never reached the top of the points leaderboard, thwarted by Michael Jordan.
Jordan won seven of his record 10 scoring titles during that stretch; Malone came in just behind, earning four consecutive runner-up finishes (1988-89 to 1991-92).
Over this stretch, Jordan only left his place atop the scoring leaderboard while retired and playing baseball. But those scoring titles were won by David Robinson (1993-94) and Shaquille O’Neal (1994-95), not Malone.
Since Stockton’s record run, the NBA has seen three players lead the league in assists five times – Jason Kidd, Steve Nash and Chris Paul – but the story remains the same, as their teams never had a scoring leader coincide with their league-leading playmaker.
But that could all change this season. Embiid’s looking for his second consecutive scoring title; Harden’s in search of the second assist title of his career in his first full season as a Sixer.
Entering Wednesday’s game against Cleveland (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN), Embiid leads the NBA in scoring at 33.4 points per game, while Harden leads the league in assists at 10.8 per game.
In a season that has seen scoring levels rival that of the famous 1961-62 season, Embiid leads a crowded field of six scorers averaging at least 30 points per game, which is on pace to be the most ever in a single season.
Scoring Leaders
(through games played March 13)
RANK | PLAYER | TEAM | PPG |
1 | Joel Embiid | PHI | 33.4 |
2 | Luka Doncic | DAL | 33.0 |
3 | Damian Lillard | POR | 32.1 |
4 | Giannis Antetokounmpo | MIL | 31.5 |
5 | Shai Gilgeous-Alexander | OKC | 31.2 |
6 | Jayson Tatum | BOS | 30.3 |
Embiid’s primary competitor for his second consecutive scoring title is Dallas’ Luka Doncic, who is averaging 33 points per game, but has missed the Mavericks’ last two games with a calf strain. Embiid and Doncic have traded the scoring lead multiple times this season. Portland’s Damian Lillard has emerged as a challenger in recent weeks as his scoring average has climbed to 32.1 points per game, but Lillard was held to 22 points in a loss to Philadelphia on March 10, a game that saw Embiid score 39 points and hit the game-winning fadeaway jumper in the closing seconds.
Assist Leaders
(through games played March 13)
RANK | PLAYER | TEAM | APG |
1 | James Harden | PHI | 10.8 |
2 | Tyrese Haliburton | IND | 10.4 |
3 | Trae Young | ATL | 10.1 |
4 | Nikola Jokic | DEN | 10.0 |
5 | Ja Morant | MEM | 8.2 |
6 | Luka Doncic | DAL | 8.0 |
The biggest challenger to Harden for the assist title for much of the season was human frailty. He missed 14 games from Nov. 2 – Dec. 4 with a right foot injury that kept him below the minimum games played requirement to qualify as a league leader. But he’s catching up. Harden has playing 50 games so far this season and is on pace to reach the 58-game threshold (70% of team games) needed to qualify; he needs to appear in eight of Philadelphia’s final 14 games.
There are three other players averaging double-digit assists, with Indiana’s Tyrese Haliburton, just 0.4 assists per game behind, as the top threat to Harden’s assist title. These two squared off last week in a dime-fest as Harden posted a game-high 20 assists to best Haliburton’s 16 in Philadelphia’s 147-143 win.
Harden is the only player to reach 20 assists this season – he’s done so twice – and he also leads the league with seven games with at least 15 assists on the season. Haliburton and Jokic are tied for second with five such games each.
If Harden is able to hold his position and lead the league in assists, he would join former teammate Russell Westbrook as the only players in NBA history with multiple scoring and assist titles.
That ability to vacillate between elite scorer and elite playmaker depending on what his team needs is what makes Harden special. When he needed to carry the Rockets offense as an isolation scorer, he posted the seventh-highest scoring average in league history in 2018-19. When surrounded by scorers in Brooklyn and Philadelphia the past three seasons, he’s averaged double-digit assists every year.
While we’ve looked at Embiid’s pursuit of the scoring title and Harden’s pursuit of the assist title separately, the key to all of this is their synergy together on the court. Harden’s playmaking and Embiid’s scoring have meshed together seamlessly for the Sixers.
Top assist connections this season (all with 100+ assists)
(through games played March 13)
ASSISTS | PASSER | RECIPIENT | TEAM |
210 | James Harden | Joel Embiid | PHI |
135 | Tyrese Haliburton | Buddy Hield | IND |
133 | Nikola Jokic | Aaron Gordon | DEN |
129 | Darius Garland | Evan Mobley | CLE |
126 | Jamal Murray | Nikola Jokic | DEN |
125 | Trae Young | Clint Capela | ATL |
124 | Tyrese Haliburton | Myles Turner | IND |
120 | Chris Paul | Deandre Ayton | PHX |
119 | Domantas Sabonis | Kevin Huerter | SAC |
116 | Jalen Brunson | Julius Randle | NYK |
115 | Jrue Holiday | Brook Lopez | MIL |
109 | Trae Young | John Collins | ATL |
107 | Trae Young | Deandre Hunter | ATL |
104 | Nikola Jokic | Kentavious Caldwell-Pope | DEN |
103 | Nikola Jokic | Michael Porter Jr | DEN |
102 | Marcus Smart | Jaylen Brown | BOS |
100 | Darius Garland | Jarrett Allen | CLE |
100 | Marcus Smart | Jayson Tatum | BOS |
The Harden/Embiid lead in assists over every other duo in the league is massive – and they’ve played just 43 games on the court together this season.
By comparison, the second-ranked duo of Haliburton and Buddy Hield of Indiana has 75 fewer assists in 11 more games played than the Harden/Embiid duo.
If we counted only Harden’s assists to Embiid this season, Harden would still rank 36th in the NBA in assists at 4.9 per game.
The heartbeat of this dynamic scoring/playmaking duo is perhaps the most unstoppable pick-and-roll combination in the league today. Over their 43 games on court together this season, Harden (ball handler) and Embiid (screener) have operated through the second-most screens this season and generated the most points — 1,242 total points scored over 888 possessions, good for 1.4 points per possession – of any screener-ballhandler duo in the league.
BALL HANDLER | SCREENER | TEAM PTS SCORED ON PICK-AND-ROLL POSS | TEAM |
James Harden | Joel Embiid | 1242 | PHI |
Chris Paul | Deandre Ayton | 1119 | PHX |
Tyrese Haliburton | Miles Turner | 1042 | IND |
Trae Young | Clint Capela | 894 | ATL |
De’Aaron Fox | Domantas Sabonis | 881 | SAC |
Embiid leads all players in points scored as the roll man in pick-and-roll possessions with 448 on the season, building a commanding lead over second-ranked Deandre Ayton of Phoenix. The 108-point gap between Embiid and Ayton is the equivalent of the gap between second place and eighth place (Dallas’ Christian Wood at 232 points scored).
Nearly a third of Harden’s 210 assists to Embiid have come on pick-and-roll sets. Harden’s 67 pick-and-roll assists to Embiid leads the NBA, with Chris Paul’s 55 pick-and-roll assists to Ayton ranked second.
Part of what makes the Harden/Embiid pick-and-roll combo so difficult to defend is that it features two elite scorers, similar to those lethal Stephen Curry/Kevin Durant pick-and-rolls during their run together in Golden State. How is a defense supposed to slow down both scoring options? You can’t go under the screen or Harden can destroy you with the 3-point shot (he’s shooting a career-best 39.8% from deep this season). If the big drops to cut off the Harden driving lane, that leave Embiid open on either the roll or the pop out for a mid-range or 3-point shot of his own.
The versatility of Embiid’s scoring also can be seen when we drill down into these pick-and-roll numbers. Of Harden’s 67 pick-and-roll assists to Embiid, 19 have come on baskets within five feet of the basket (the full roll); another six have come on 3-point shots (the full pop), and another 40 have come from outside six feet but inside the 3-point line as Embiid ranks fourth in the NBA with 141 mid-range field goals on 47.8% shooting.
The on-court chemistry between Embiid and Harden has been impressive, especially considering they have still only played 74 games together as teammates – 21 last regular season following the trade, 10 in the playoffs before their exit in the conference semifinals, and 43 so far this season.
Acquiring Harden and pairing him with Embiid was about getting the Sixers over the hump – they have four playoff exists in the conference semifinals and one in the first round over the past five seasons – and getting Philadelphia back to the Finals for the first time since the Allen Iverson era in 2001. Can the league’s top scorer and top playmaker make that goal a reality?