Philadelphia 76ers list Matisse Thybulle as 'ineligible to play' Thursday in Toronto

ByTim Bontemps ESPN logo
Wednesday, April 6, 2022

The Philadelphia 76ers listed guard Matisse Thybulle as "ineligible to play" in Thursday's game in Toronto against the Raptors, a sign Thybulle could also be unable to play in the three road games of a potential playoff series between the two franchises.



Last week, ESPN asked the four teams atop the conference -- Philadelphia, the Miami Heat, Milwaukee Bucks and Boston Celtics -- whether their rosters were fully vaccinated, and thus eligible to play in games in Toronto, where players have to be vaccinated in order to enter the country.




Miami and Milwaukee confirmed to ESPN that their teams are fully vaccinated, whereas Boston and Philadelphia declined to comment. Thybulle has not publicly commented on whether he is vaccinated against COVID-19.



As of Wednesday evening, the 76ers and Raptors would meet in the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs as the Nos. 4 and 5 seeds.



Thybulle, who turned 25 last month, has become one of the NBA's best wing defenders, averaging 1.1 steals and 1.8 blocks in 25.4 minutes per game. Only seven players in the league are averaging at least one steal and block per game, and all of them are playing more minutes than Thybulle.



Thybulle's absence would be particularly felt on a Philadelphia roster that is devoid of much defensive talent outside of him and MVP candidate Joel Embiid, who is also a potential All-Defensive Team candidate.



If Toronto beats Philadelphia on Thursday, it would go a long way toward locking in that matchup in the first round for both teams. However, if the Sixers win that game and their final two, against Indiana on Saturday and Detroit on Sunday, they would be guaranteed of finishing no lower than third, thanks to the Celtics and Bucks, who are currently tied with Philadelphia with matching 49-30 records, playing Thursday night in Milwaukee.




The playoffs are set to begin April 16 and 17, with Games 3 and 4 of the first round -- which would take place in Toronto -- likely to be played beginning two weeks from Wednesday.



On Wednesday, NBA commissioner Adam Silver said that there would not be any changes to the situation involving unvaccinated players being unable to play in Toronto, saying that the league has "no choice" but to operate under Canada's laws on the matter.



"I mean, we have no choice but to operate under the laws of the jurisdictions in which we play," Silver said at his news conference after this week's Board of Governors meetings in New York. "In some cases, as we saw here in New York City, those are city ordinances. In other cases, they're state. And in the case of Toronto, there are Canadian issues that we have to comply with. Those rules are well known to all players, and for any player who chooses not to get vaccinated, they know they are at risk of not being allowed to play in Toronto. That's the facts that we're all going to have to operate under."



To be considered fully vaccinated in Canada, one must be two weeks past a single shot of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, or two weeks past the second shot of the two-dose vaccines. That would mean unvaccinated players would need to have received the one-dose vaccine in order to be fully vaccinated in time to play in every game of a first-round playoff series.



The most prominent example of a player missing games due to being unvaccinated is Brooklyn Nets star Kyrie Irving, who was unable to play games in New York, either at Barclays Center or Madison Square Garden, before the city changed its vaccination regulations recently to allow unvaccinated athletes to play in home games.



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