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Brackins: What you need to know

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Brackins: What you need to know

POSTED: Monday, May 16, 2011, 4:25 PM

Which coach/manager is the sharpest?
Doug Collins
Peter Laviolette
Charlie Manuel
Andy Reid

When the 76ers traded Willie Green and Jason Smith to the New Orleans Hornets for Darius Songaila and Craig Brackins, that deal was executed, in large part, because the Sixers thought they saw something in Brackins and wanted to evaluate him more closely.

In a way, that deal was similar to the one the Sixers pulled off before the 2010 trading deadline, when they acquired Jodie Meeks and Francisco Elson from the Milwaukee Bucks in exchange for Royal Ivey and Primoz Brezec. That deal was centered around Meeks, while the Hornets' deal was built around Brackins.

All of this begs the question: can Brackins burst onto the scene next season like Meeks did this season? In the last few days, we've been talking about the Sixers needs on the interior and questions have come up, repeatedly, about where Brackins stands heading into the 2011-12 season. Instead of looking for the answers outside of the current roster, is it possible that at least one player on the current roster -- Brackins -- might possess the skills to contribute on the interior and fill that gap?

I think the honest answer to this question is no. Brackins might, if he improves dramatically this off-season, earn some playing time in a reserve role, but he does not possess the skill set -- physical presence, toughness, rebounding, shotblocking, post moves -- the Sixers must acquire before the start of next season.

Just so we all have the same info, here are Brackins stats during the regular NBA season (quite limited sample size) and during his stints in the NBDL (much larger sample). Brackins is a 6-foot-10 forward from Iowa State, 240 pounds. He'll be entering his second season in the NBA. During the 2010-11 season, he appeared in three games for the Sixers, playing a total of 33 minutes. During those minutes he was 4 for 16 from the floor, 0 for 5 from three, scoring a total of 8 points, and grabbing a total of 4 rebounds. All of that spreads out to averages of 2.7 points and 1.3 rebounds a game. It's obviously a sample size so small that we can't draw any legitimate conclusions. During his 18 games in the NBDL, Brackins started 13 games and averaged 37.6 minutes a game. He averaged 20.1 points and 8.6 rebounds a game, shooting 44.4 percent form the floor, 24.7 percent from three, and 72.7 percent from the line. Listing these numbers gives you some idea of Brackins' game, but realistically we can't answer many questions looking at his NBA minutes. And we can't be too excited by his NBDL numbers because, quite simply, the competition isn't there.

The Sixers are committed to Brackins through next season, during which they will pay him $1.4 million. The following season, the 2012-13 season, the Sixers have a team option on him.

We'll try to explain the Brackins situation using gathered knowledge from during the season. And we quickly addressed this topic during last week's Live Chat (we'll be holding another this Friday at 1 p.m. after we get an idea of what's going down at the Chicago combine).

Here's what's good about Brackins: he has his head on straight. He mixed with the right crowd during his time up with the Sixers, hanging around Jrue Holiday, Meeks, Evan Turner, etc. He works hard and understood his role with the Sixers last season. He's not going to cause drama, but seemed to be a guy who would always be ready when a chance did come his way. In that regard, he reminds a lot of Meeks, who made the most of last season's early chances and parlayed that into a starting role. He easily picks up offenses and concepts, so, unlike a guy like Marreese Speights, you're not going to worry about him not knowing the play. He's a big guy who can really shoot from the outside and can get his outside shot off anytime he wants. He stretches the floor.

Here are the drawbacks with Brackins: He doesn't quite have a position as of right now. He can play both small and power forward, but he's got the same problem a lot of other guys on this roster have: he's probably too slow to guard an opposing small forward and might get out-bulked guarding an opposing power forward. He's getting stronger, but he's not strong enough and possesses no inside presence. While watching him play in 3-on-3 games toward the end of this past season, he always gets pushed off his spot. If he's trying to post on the block, he'd eventually be catching it at like the mid-post or the short corner, and then often the shot he's taking is a mid-range jumper. The Sixers already have a lot of guys (namely, Marreese Speights in a reserve role) that are playing the exact same way. He must improve on his defense because right now he's not especially good at any one thing: he can't guard the perimeter, he's still learning the pick-and-roll defense, and he's not an interior defender.

Those are the basics surrounding Brackins, which I think are important to understand as we move forward in the off season. Next season, he'll likely enter with an opportunity to pick up minutes in a reserve role. Realistically, earning reserve minutes is his ceiling. Because, unlike what Meeks did this year, the Sixers have no glaring need for a 6-10 big man with a sweet outside shot. Like we said earlier, that's pretty much what Speights brought to the table. Brackins brings better basketball IQ and, likely, a more disciplined attitude, which means he could pick up some of those minutes, but he's not the answer to the big man question. 

In addition, Brackins and Speights seem to overlap far too much. There won't be minutes for both of them, which means as the trading season nears, either one would be an easy piece to include in a trade.

As this week's Chicago combine nears, we'll just be touching on some of these smaller Sixers' issues so we all know the lay of the land as the 2011 NBA Draft approaches (June 23) and the NBA's trading season nears. If anyone has a specific topic they want addressed, shoot me an email, kfagan@phillynews.com, or post it in the comments section below (yes, I read the comments, which is occasionally a painful thing to do).

If you want to follow on Twitter, you can do that here: Deep Sixer.

--Kate


Each week, Kate will check in from the road and answer fan questions about the Sixers. Click here to ask Kate a question or e-mail her at kfagan@phillynews.com.

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Kate Fagan @ 4:25 PM  Permalink | 50 comments
50 comments
Comments  (50)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:37 PM, 05/17/2011
    @Manok: Deron is fast, that's probably the most underrated part of his game. he QUICK. You make a valid point with Kidd, but nowadays point guards are like Derrick Rose, whom even Rondo cannot defend. You gotta ask yourself, which player do you think has better upside offensively. Whoever u don't pick, should be the one being the defensive stopper.
    BlackFeet01
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:49 PM, 05/17/2011
    @Manok: lemme clarify, so I'm not contradicting myself. Once Turner gets his conditioning back, he wouldn't be half-bad @ guarding certain guards. But Holiday's better suited to guarding the Derrick Rose of pgs, and the Richard Hamilton (in his prime) of sgs, running rampant around screens all day. That's why Stephen Jackson likes playing the 3 better. Comparable speed to Turner, and a lockdown defender, he says it's easier guarding 3's, and he's better suited to doing that. He's capable, but putting a true guard next to Jackson will yield much better results.
    BlackFeet01
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:16 PM, 05/17/2011
    I understand what you are saying just wanted to point out that Turner can defend at the PG position. Holiday should be the primary person guarding that area. As the playoffs showed, Turner can defend bigger and/or faster 3's when he defended LeBron. He just needed a chance to prove himself unlike the regular season. When Turner regains his conditioning, he should be better on both ends next season.
    Manok
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:33 AM, 05/18/2011
    Manok & Blackfeet01, I think we can all agree that Turner is an NBA player and a good defender. He's a more solid addition to the team than Willie Green or Rodney Carney. Having said that I have to agree with Blackfeet01, Turner cannot and likely will not be able to guard the quicker pgs in the league. He would be an ideal sg if he could shoot & he's big enough to give you good minutes at sf. Right now he's a player w/out a true starting position. He's a jack of all trades but a master of none. Hopefully he'll work on his game and develop into a starter but he's not as quick and can't handle like Jrue, he can't shoot like Meeks or Lou, he's not as strong and can't finish like Iggy or Thad. To me that makes him a backup with no defined position, where you play him will depend on the matchup.
    mtairy1
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:13 PM, 05/20/2011
    Brackins is not any type of answer, he is strictly a perimeter shooter...if anything Speights should have garnered wasy more minutes last year
    bearsfriend


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About this blog
John Mitchell is in his second year covering the 76ers for the Inquirer after joining the paper in November 2011. He covered the Washington Wizards for the Washington Times from 1998 to 2008. He's also worked at the Philadelphia Tribune, the Wilmington News Journal, Courier-Post, Trenton Times and Elmira Star-Gazette.

Born and raised in West Philadelphia - not too far from Will Smith - he graduated from Overbrook High School the same year the 76ers won their last championship. He's a proud graduate of Howard University and the proud father of two sons, Jared and Jordan.

ABOUT MARC NARDUCCI

Marc Narducci has served in a variety of roles with the Inquirer since beginning in 1983. He has covered the 76ers as a backup and a beat writer. In addition, Narducci has covered everything from the Super Bowl to the World Series and a lot in between. Narducci also has a true passion for South Jersey scholastic sports, which he has covered for many years.

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