Monday, February 4, 2013
Monday, February 4, 2013

Let's keep the memory of Allen Iverson as just that, a memory.

Allen Iverson was one of the most electrifying players to ever play in this city. His time has passed. That's not a bad thing.

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Let's keep the memory of Allen Iverson as just that, a memory.

POSTED: Thursday, January 31, 2013, 10:06 PM

There is no denying that on December 7th, 2009 the Wells Fargo Center had as much electricity running through the stands as it has at any time since, maybe more. That includes the Game 6 win that propelled the Sixers past the Chicago Bulls and into the second round of the playoffs last season. It also the Game 6 win over the Boston Celtics that tied the series at 3 games apiece and inched the Sixers towards an improbable chance at playing in the Eastern Conference final (they didn’t, of course, as they fell to the Celtics in Boston).

When the Sixers played their 21st game of the season that year, the next to last starter introduced was Allen Iverson, back to the team where he spent 10-plus electrifying seasons. The crowd greeted him with a hero’s welcome as the then-34 year-old returned not as a marketing ploy but as a player the organization thought could help a floundering team.

He couldn’t. And he most certainly can’t now.

Iverson was great in his time here, but the 25 games he played under Eddie Jordan in 2009-10 only proved what many still don’t want to believe – that even the greatest and most exciting players to ever run the court get beat by that common foe, time.

While he was (probably unfairly) thrust into the starting lineup by Jordan and asked to play more than 30 minutes a game, it was painfully obvious that Iverson was a shadow of the player that he used to be. Not that the Sixers were looking for him at that time in his career to be the player he was, but just having him available on a nightly basis was in doubt. He played the first 5 games of his comeback, all more than 30 minutes and averaged almost 16 points a game. But then knee troubles shelved him for a couple of weeks, and knee drainings became more common than Iverson sightings on the court.

Then, in about a month span, Iverson played in 17 games, highlighted by a 23 point effort against the visiting Los Angeles Lakers. He went head-to-head against Kobe Bryant, and both electrified the sellout crowd. Bryant scored 17 in the third quarter and scored 13 in row for the Lakers at one point spanning the third and fourth quarters. Iverson had 15 in the third, including 11 straight. As much as it was the type of exhibition the fans yearned for, it was obvious to me that Iverson’s time was coming to an end.

I remember when the quarter was over, Bryant had a look on his face like that of a boxer who had just shared punches with an opponent and hadn’t gotten hurt a little bit. Iverson, on the other hand, seemed to use every ounce of energy he had remaining in that small body, slowly walking to the Sixers bench when the horn sounded. I wrote down in my notebook how easily Bryant scored his points and how Iverson’s counter seemed to be so draining.

Two nights later, Iverson looked pedestrian on the court for 30 minutes against the Nets, taking just nine shots, missing six of them. After that game, he was out again for more than two weeks, with his knee again troubling him and rumblings of a medical problem hindering one of his children.

He played just three more games for the Sixers, making only 7 of his 28 shots, looking even slower while practically dragging his injured knee along with him. My feeling and hope at the time was that he should wave goodbye, thank the Philadelphia fans for their undying admiration and somehow accept the fact that his body would no long allow him be the player he expected himself to be.

Like many athletes, Iverson has had a hard time coming to grips with that, with a quick run in Turkey and now the latest talk of joining the Dallas Mavericks’ NBADL affiliate (Iverson has declined). That has, once again, stirred talk of Iverson coming back to the Sixers as perhaps a reserve on Doug Collins’ bench or maybe in another position with the team.

I’m not sure what type of position Adam Aron and company could give to Iverson in the front office, though many have emailed me that he could be an “after game consultant”, complete with a free shuttle to Friday’s. If the owners want to try and bring him back in the organization in some capacity, that’s their choice.

But if even a passing thought of returning him as a player has crossed anyone’s mind, it needs to be erased quickly. There is no good that could come out of it, either for Iverson or the organization. Let’s remember Iverson for what he was – one of the most electrifying players this basketball-rich city has ever seen – and leave it at that.

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Comments  (34)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:28 PM, 02/01/2013
    Maybe he needs to practice.
    lostInPhilly
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:10 PM, 02/01/2013
    Didn't we just have this conversation three years ago? He came back, and it didn't work out. Now he wants to come back AGAIN? lol
    Bradley85
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:13 PM, 02/01/2013
    I agree with taking in Julius Erving to represent the 76ers. After all, Dr J is a class act, eloquent and actually won a Championship. Iverson was talented and when he was on top of the world, he was a big a-hole. That's not the kind of guy I want associated with a 76ers organization that wants to move forward.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:13 PM, 02/01/2013
    He couldn't coach, can't speak anything other than gangsta, can't see a position with anyone that would get him the kind of funds he's used to blowing. Man probably went thru $500m in his career and just settled with Yawanna for $3m (that he probably doesn't even have). Take a pass.
    PhillySubsMac
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:22 PM, 02/01/2013
    What could he possibly teach the young guys on this team other than how to be more selfish?
    richojr
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:33 PM, 02/01/2013
    The mistake we make is placing athletes in front of microphones. At the end of the day I just want them to "shut up & play". I don't care about their politics, their personal lives, etc... AI was fun to watch, that is for sure.
    CptObvious
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:52 PM, 02/01/2013
    thug, broke, pathetic
    Zappa is God
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 7:07 AM, 02/02/2013
    When AI was at his best, he was THE BEST and nobody but nobody surpassed him in the NBA. Hawaiiphillyfan you are so correct.
    zen
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 7:39 AM, 02/02/2013
    Never liked his game. Too selfish. Extremely overrated.
    Bartleby
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:57 AM, 02/02/2013
    It's only practice. From that unselfish team player, Iverson.
    joedog
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:40 AM, 02/02/2013
    Philly has an abundance of gun carrying thugs, we don't need AI. Has he still got his posse?
    harbo
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:07 PM, 02/02/2013
    Why are most of you idiots buying into this moronic rant of an "article". Who or where has it been said Iverson wants to come back a play ball here, I haven't heard anything of the sort.

    "Bob Cooney has been at the Daily News for more than 20 years, working in the sports department for the past 15."

    So Cooney's been stealing money for 20 years 15 of those as a "sports writer". What a joke dude has most of you riled up for nothing.
    realtruth
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:21 PM, 02/02/2013
    The most of you are a bunch of goons. Were you spewing hate when he was aiding the 6ers to playoff runs and championship runs? Stop you stupidity, the guy was a heck of a player despite the lame coaching of Larry Brown and some of the lame players King kept drafting. I wish this group had the heart Iverson had maybe they'd be playing better on a consistent basis.
    realtruth
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 6:19 PM, 02/02/2013
    Keep it real, real truth. Iverson is the poster child for wasting talent and skills and taking from the man. You and ai should go work in city government as that is closest to stealing without a mask on
    Friend to All
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:08 PM, 02/02/2013
    Something that I always wondered about was Allen's future in the broadcasting booth.He always seemed to handle himself well.His husky voice ,knowledge of the game,and sense of humor might make for successful career change.
    Ernie Garman


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About this blog
Bob Cooney has been at the Daily News for more than 20 years, working in the sports department for the past 15. This is his third season on the Sixers beat. He has covered just about everything, but mostly college basketball, where he was the La Salle beat writer for six seasons. E-mail Bob at cooneyb@phillynews.com and follow him on Twitter.

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