Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH

  

TEXT SIZE: A A A A
email this
print this
reprint or license this
PARTNER OFFER
Sixers game tickets
ComcastTix
ONGOING
Tickets: Check availability
Buy tickets online
RELATED STORIES
 
Buy 76ers jerseys, t-shirts, hats, and more
SAVE AND SHARE


Smith shows aggressiveness during summer league for Sixers

Jason Smith has committed a whopping 35 personal fouls in the 76ers' five games in the Las Vegas summer league.

Can that, in the no-foul-out world of summer pro ball, be a good thing?

"I've stayed nicely aggressive, I haven't been tentative at all in any of the games," the Sixers' second-year big man said yesterday during a conference call with reporters. "I think that's just from my aggressiveness, not being afraid to go after rebounds or screen somebody hard and strong.

"I think I can control it [during the season]. It just lets people know that I'm not going to just lay down and not be physical with anybody."

Smith averaged 15.6 points and 8.0 rebounds after last night's finale against the Toronto Raptors, an 87-85 win in which he had 12 points and 12 boards. He dropped in 24 of 27 free throws, a benefit of recent sessions he spent with teammates Thaddeus Young and Lou Williams working with shooting instructor Mark Price in Atlanta.

"It all has to do with confidence, just going out there and playing like I know how to play . . . not second-guessing, doing what feels right to me," Smith said. "It's not really preparation, it's a comfort level. I know what to expect. Last year, I had no idea what to expect. I had to go out there and play and just really lay it all out on the line."

Smith touched on several other subjects, including:

* The value of summer league. "Summer league has been good for our team," he said. "We got a lot accomplished. Me and [Young] and Marreese [Speights, the first-round draft choice] have all come together with each other, and we've been playing really hard as a team . . . We've done nothing but get better each day."

* The addition of power forward Elton Brand to the roster. "He's a very strong, well-known presence in the NBA and he obviously showed it [with] the Clippers. I'm thrilled that we have him on our team now. I think it makes us that much better; it adds one more piece to the puzzle. He's a very good player on offense, he's a great presence on defense, and he's going to be a leader on both [ends] of the court."

* Speights, who averaged 18.2 points and 10.2 rebounds, including 15 and 11, respectively, last night. "He hasn't been tentative at all. He's playing really aggressively; he's really just playing really, really well."

A little quirkiness

Through a quirk in the collective bargaining agreement, the Sixers were able to add slightly more salary-cap space for the signing of Elton Brand by renouncing a group of former players who last played for them, but had not filed retirement paperwork. A source said the list included Rick Mahorn (who was last with the Sixers in 1999), former Villanova star Michael Bradley, Derrick McKey, Rodney Rogers and Alan Henderson. *

  • Jobs
  • Cars
  • Real Estate
  • Rentals
 
SEARCH JOBS
Find a Car | Sell a Car | Research | Loans
Spotlight Deal

Glanzmann Subaru
(888) 488-8652
'06 Kia Spectra Spectra5
$12,995
'06 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 Silverado 1500 Hybrid
$19,995
'05 Mazda Mazda6 i
$12,995
'05 Subaru Forester
$15,995
SEARCH CARS Used  New 
Spotlight Deal
Voorhees 08043
Spotlight Deal
Old City/Society Hill 19106
SEARCH REAL ESTATE
Spotlight Deal
Wilmington 19801
Spotlight Deal
Old City/Society Hill 19106
SEARCH RENTALS
REGIONAL SCOREBOARD
TOP STORIES
John L. Jackson, Jr., an associate professor of anthropology and communications at Penn, says African Americans live with a constant suspicion about racism in their daily lives.

But while politically correct talk once ensured that African Americans would be free of verbal intimidation, Jackson says that mentality has stifled "any honest discussions about race."