Great Column - I couldn't agree more...
Stephen A. Smith Star's next absence may be permanent
By Stephen A. Smith
Philadelphia Inquirer Columnist
There's no need to waste time debating the latest transgressions of Allen Iverson and Chris Webber. To not show up on time for the last home game of the season - on Fan Appreciation Night, no less - not only delivered a slap in the face to 76ers fans, it did the same to team president Billy King and coach Maurice Cheeks.
It appears that neither Iverson nor Webber knew much about the position they put King and Cheeks in. Worse, it appears that they didn't care. If such an act of disrespect leads to King's exodus or questions about whether Cheeks is the right coach for this franchise, that's a problem King and Cheeks have to deal with. Not Iverson and Webber.
To be honest, on the surface it simply makes no sense. It can't. Not if we take into account the way Iverson has repeatedly supported King's stewardship over this franchise. And not if we recall Iverson's desire for Cheeks as a head coach over Jim O'Brien.
That is, until you consider that the Sixers entered last night's game eliminated from the playoff picture, saddled with 43 losses, mired in speculation as to whether Iverson, Webber or anyone else would be traded. And they know in all probability that's exactly what will need to be done to get this franchise pointed in the proper direction.
After all the heroics, all the highlights, all the scoring titles, and another 33-point-per-game average this season, here's the bottom-line feeling most fans have about Iverson on the Sixers right now: You can miss the playoffs without him.
You don't need Iverson to finish below .500. You don't need Iverson to finish with a worse record than the entire Central Division. You don't need Iverson to lose to Charlotte, Atlanta and New York, or fold and wither away down the stretch the way the Sixers did during the latter part of this season.
Webber's questionable athleticism will accomplish that for you. So will Andre Iguodala's passivity. Samuel Dalembert's attitude, Kyle Korver's non-defensive ways or, dare we say, Cheeks' coaching style.
Cheeks all but admitted as much during Tuesday night's fiasco at the Wachovia Center, saying, "There are things I should have done differently this season. I should have been on top of things a little bit more, should have held people more accountable. I apologize. We're going to fix this."
Somewhere, Jim O'Brien is laughing, folks.
He's laughing because his stubbornness may have been what this team needed: Some discipline. Some focus. And unwillingness to befriend anyone.
Let the coaches coach and the players play. That way, the only expectation would have been results.
I don't particularly agree with that being a long-term philosophy, but the fact is it would have worked perfectly for these underachieving Sixers, a team that now finds itself in a quandary, wondering what it is going to do about Iverson.
King is many things, but stupid isn't one of them. He knows Iverson's agent, Leon Rose, came to him before the trading deadline for a reason. He knows Iverson was relishing the thought of heading to Denver, not giving two hoots about the garbage the Sixers were going to get in return.
Now that the off-season is upon the Sixers, King also knows that unless he can get his hands on the likes of Kevin Garnett, Ray Allen or that caliber of player, Iverson is going to let Rose and Gary Moore, his No. 1 confidant, do all of his talking for him.
Iverson's not going to care about three years at $66 million remaining on Garnett's contract in Minnesota, or the four years and $67 million left on Allen's contract with Seattle, either. And, judging by his actions, Iverson's not going to be so apt to hold on to Webber, Iguodala or anyone else on this roster, either.
"I love this franchise, this city," Iverson told me a month ago. "They've been great to me. My hope is that we can win right here. But the older you get, the more you question how much time you have."
Moore added, "Allen's not about to complain about the fans or this city because he knows how great Philadelphia has been to him. But he's not getting any younger. So..."
Moore has his ideas but won't say. The same could be said for Iverson and his agent. The thing is, it's obvious.
Iverson doesn't have a desire to leave Philadelphia; he has a desire to win. Unfortunately at the moment, those two issues are mutually exclusive.
He knows it, but maybe he suspected the Sixers weren't aware of it.
Chances are, they know now. Let's see what they do about it.
Contact columnist Stephen A. Smith at 215-854-5846 or ssmith@phillynews.com.
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