Wednesday, December 2, 2015

“Managing a rebuild: The Philadelphia 76ers story”

(December 1st 2015) By: Ira Barasch



The years have not been kind to the Philadelphia 76ers. This once great franchise has fallen so deep into a chaotic spiral that it seems it just has given up trying to break out of it. Claiming to continually be in a rebuilding phase, the team constantly and consistently loses to try and build up draft picks, yet for four years since their last playoff berth, has nothing to show for it. Since the 2011 – 12 season they have continually regressed in wins (34, 19, 18 respectively) and as of today they have one one game against a Laker team with a beaten down Kobe. The did not have a win this season and had lost 28 straight games dating back to last season.

What is wrong with this team? Shouldn't the draft have helped? It seems to have all started after taking part in a trade that helped Dwight Howard to the Lakers, while trading away Andre Iguodala to the Nuggets, and their acquisition of Andrew Bynum. Bynum was coming off an incredible year for the Lakers and the move was looked at in a positive light, that is until Bynum didn't play a single minute for the Sixers. He injured himself in almost comical ways (bowling....really) the team hasn't made the playoffs since. The next few years came with the same initial hope only to collapse as the season dragged on. In the 2013 – 14 season they traded Jrue Holiday, a budding star for the rights to Nerlens Noel and drafted Michael Carter–Williams themselves. Noel was coming off a tremendous year in college but tore his ACL at the end of his college career and didn't play for the Sixers the entire season after. Carter – Williams fared much better actually winning Rookie of the Year but the team still struggled. The following season they drafted yet another big man in Joel Embiid, also coming off an injury and still has yet to see an NBA court. To add to the frustration halfway through the season they traded Carter – Williams to the Bucks. This past offseason they drafted their third PF/C in a row with Jahlil Okafor who, despite playing well, has started to have numerous off the court problems. 

The rebuilding process has merit, just look to this year's Minnesota Timberwolves. The team who had been constantly bad since the departure of Kevin Garnett actually brought him back to the fold by the trade deadline last season for a strong veteran presence to mentor their young and talented group. The team is slowly building up momentum and with Andrew Wiggins, Karl-Anthony Towns, Ricky Rubio and others. This team seems to be on the right track and should be a Western Conference powerhouse in the years to come.

Want more proof? Take a look at the Undefeated Golden State Warriors. Those of you who are old enough know that the Warriors weren't always this good, they actually struggled for more than a few seasons. Yet with the right management, draft choices, and key moves during offseason and trade deadlines, the team has built a juggernaut that plays small and quick basketball. The formula continually works and has worked throughout history (I.e the Thunder and Spurs) So what exactly has gone wrong for the Sixers? Could it be the management? The lack of a veteran presence on the team? Both? Or could it all be just a string of bad luck? Bad luck seems highly unlikely at this point. Hopefully this team will improve though, as seeing such bad basketball being played by a once great franchise in a huge city is not only embarrassing to the fans, the team, and the NBA in general, but just embarrassing to the game itself.

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