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Sixers Approach Trade Deadline

Philadelphia Inquirer Sports Columnist Bob Ford writes about the Eagles, the Phillies, the Sixers and the Flyers.

64 comments

Sixers Approach Trade Deadline

POSTED: Monday, January 26, 2009, 12:45 PM
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A few random thoughts about the Sixers as they play two games on the road this week before coming back to meet Washington and New Jersey at the Wachovia Center on the weekend to begin a stretch of seven straight home games.

As the week began, the Sixers were a .500 team, headed for seventh or eighth in the conference seedings and another early playoff exit. Maybe that isn't the way it will work out, but that's the way it looks. In other words a repeat of last season, but with Elton Brand struggling to keep up this time.

So, make yourself Ed Stefanski. Assuming your goal is to win the NBA championship in your lifetime, how do you get from here to there?

The next month is going to be crucial and very interesting, as the Feb. 22 trade deadline approaches. Despite the favorable home schedule, it's going to be a tough stretch against some good teams. At the trade deadline, the Sixers could well be under .500 again and still trying to fit the pieces together.

As you look at this team -- assuming Brand doesn't enjoy a return to his pre-Achilles surgery mobility -- the future is going to hinge on the play of guys like Thaddeus Young, Marreese Speights, Lou Williams, Andre Iguodala and, perhaps, Jason Smith, if he can recover fully from his ACL surgery.

Together, they present exciting possibilities, but that's a group that won't fully mature for at least another season or two. Now, is it better to ride along with an even record while that takes place, or does the record now not matter? Would that group be even better if augmented by a high draft pick?

Depending on how you answer that question will also answer what you think about the idea of trading Andre Miller before the deadline. Miller is a wonderful point guard and the Sixers won't win as many games without him, but maybe that would be a good thing in the long run. He turns 33 in March and is in the last year of his contract. Will he still be as effective, and as deserving of the deal he will no doubt get, when Young, Speights and the others are ready to compete for a long run in the postseason? I'm not so sure.

Brand is another problem entirely, and he might not be tradeable right now, given his shaky physical status and his new contract. But Miller could bring you a valuable piece in trade and the Sixers' future wouldn't be hurt if they drifted home with something less than a .500 record.

I'm not advocating tanking games. That's bad for business, bad for morale. But tanking the roster is another thing. It might be what Stefanski was doing in part last season when he traded Kyle Korver. If so, it didn't work. The team played at a higher level that could have reasonably been expected. Losing Miller would have a greater effect.

And your opinion?

64 comments
Comments  (64)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:27 PM, 01/27/2009
    The Sixers screwed themselves by signing Brand. A great player in a half court game but a real stretch in their only successful style, a running game. It just like they screwed themselves by trying to feature Iverson all those years and not matching him with guys that could play his game (and, so far, no other team can do it either). Now they spent a lot of money and, even worse, they lost Josh Smith of Atlanta, who would have run and run for years to come. Maybe going to Penn maeans you were once smart. So far, I think we are in for another 5-6 years of futility. Prove me wrong.
    freyday17
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:28 PM, 01/27/2009
    We have to either trade him or re-up him now, because he could walk at the end of the year leaving us with nothing (and not even enough space to get under the salary cap). If we can get a young PG, and or a shooter, you have to do it. Even though I like his game a whole lot...
    FKD215
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:34 PM, 01/27/2009
    The Sixers screwed themselves by signing Brand. A great player in a half court game but a real stretch in their only successful style, a running game. It just like they screwed themselves by trying to feature Iverson all those years and not matching him with guys that could play his game (and, so far, no other team can do it either). Now they spent a lot of money and, even worse, they lost Josh Smith of Atlanta, who would have run and run for years to come. How do they get rid of that big Elton brand contract now ? Maybe going to Penn means you were once smart. But so far, I don't see the team jelling or improving. I think we are in for yet another 5-6 years of futility. Stefanski prove me wrong.
    freyday17
  • Comment removed.


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About this blog
Bob Ford has been writing about Philadelphia sports since 1981, and is still trying to figure it all out. A former beat writer covering the Phillies and the 76ers, Ford became a general sports columnist for the Inquirer in 2003, following in and occasionally falling in the deep footsteps of Bill Lyon, Frank Dolson and many distinguished others. He comes to the Philly.com blogosphere after award-winning success as designer/editor of the fabulous Pen & Pencil Club softball blog. Likes: Palestra, inside-the-park home runs, sunny days. Dislikes: phony people, cloudy days, rewrites. Reach Bob at bford@phillynews.com.

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