I also don't see any reason to think they are open to trading him.
But if they were, it would be a timing issue-- it would have to be because they think they will still be bad when Noel's rookie contract is up (that is a hell of a horizon, but whatever).
In that case, they'd want newer assets. Maybe Rozier plus the Nets pick next year.
You know what..I don't think I'd do that trade to be honest.
People will flame me for this no doubt, but I don't see Noel as a potential star prospect. I think that absolute best case scenario, he will be Tyson Chandler in his prime. Elite defender, pretty good (but not great) rebounder, extremely limited on offense.
I think Rozier has the potential to be just as good or nearly as good as Noel 5 years from now (just a different type of player, obviously), and that Nets pick has huge potential.
I like Noel and i would like to get him on this team, but I don't I think his value as an asset too far exceeds his potential as a player. The type of package I would offer is the type that Philly has about 0% likelihood of accepting...yet sadly I just don't think he's worth more than that.
As for the Noel vs Embiid comparison, I think Embiid - if he can get healthy - is much more valuable to Philly than Noel.
Noel's upside is that of a defensive specialist with practically no offensive game, and absolutely no jump shot. Okafor is a slow and immobile big man who lives around the basket. A Noel/Okafor combination looks a lot like a Drummond/Monroe combination - no court spacing at all.
Embiid has the ability to hit the outside jumper so he can stretch the floor, and he has the defensive ability and mobility to be able to make up for Okafor's limitations on that end of the floor too. At his best, he'd be the theoretically perfect for next to Okafor - but the gamble is whether he'd ever be healthy.
Noel to me looks like the odd one out here, but even if that's the case I still can see Philly asking way too much for him in an attempt to try to get something back in case the fear comes true and Embiid becomes a bust.