Posts Tagged ‘Allen Iverson’

 Lou Williams vs Martell Webster

Lou Williams vs Martell Webster

PORTLAND, Ore.  Elton Brand had a season-high 25 points and nine rebounds in a reserve role, leading the Philadelphia 76ers to a 104-93 victory over the Portland Trail Blazers on Monday night.Brand, a 6-foot-9 former All Star, made 9 of 20 shots in 30 minutes to help Philadelphia (8-22) rally from a 10-point second half deficit.Allen Iverson, who missed the past four games with a knee injury, returned to the lineup as a starter and scored 19 points. Andre Iguodala, Samuel Dalembert and Marreese Speights scored 14 points each for the Sixers. Iguodala also had seven rebounds and nine assists.Brandon Roy led Portland (20-13) with 24 points, while LaMarcus Aldridge had 17 points and 12 rebounds.

Portland, which had won four consecutive games, all against teams with winning records, shot just 42.2 percent (35 of 83) against Philadelphia. The Sixers shot 57.7 percent from the field, hitting 45 of 78 shots.Portland controlled the second quarter to take a 49-43 halftime lead. The key stretch came midway through the quarter when, with the game tied 36-all, Roy and Dante Cunningham combined to score nine unanswered points to give the Blazers a 45-36 lead.

Portland stretched its lead to 61-51 midway during the third quarter before Philadelphia made its move. The Sixers went on a 13-4 run, then capped the quarter when Royal Ivey hit a buzzer-beating 22-footer to give Philadelphia a 77-73 lead heading into the fourth quarter.The Sixers continued their surge into the final period, outscoring Portland 40-17 over a 13-minute stretch spanning the third and fourth quarters to take a 91-78 lead with 6:05 left in the game.

NOTES: Philadelphia has won three straight and five of six over the Blazers. Iverson, acquired by Philadelphia on Dec. 5, is averaging 16.1 points in six games with the Sixers. Since Nov. 11, Philadelphia is 4-18. Roy has scored at least 23 points in 13 consecutive games. It is the longest active streak of 20-point plus games in the NBA. Portland shot just 5 of 15 from 3-point range against Philadelphia after hitting 16 of 32 3-pointer its past two games.

Allen Iverson

Allen Iverson

PHILADELPHIA — Ann Iverson, his mother, wasn’t there and Tawanna Iverson, his wife, had a doctor’s appointment, and the 11-year-old son preferred waiting for him at home, ready to tell him how lousy he’d played. His longtime personal manager/football coach/father figure/friend of friends, Gary Moore, was sitting courtside, next to Ed Snider, the man who’d sent him into exile three years ago — mutually assured destruction achieved, as the player drifted in and out of towns like a carny working by the docks, and the team floundered into utter, utter irrelevance. But otherwise, Allen Iverson was pretty much alone when he came onto the Wachovia Center court Monday, knelt and kissed the hardwood, just as he had when he’d worn the uniform of the Denver Nuggets in 2008 and come back to town.Closure.Real closure.He was back in the home white of the Philadelphia 76ers, 34 years old and not sure if this is going to be his last year or not in the NBA. If it is, he can live with it, because the ending, now, makes sense.

Allen Iverson in Memphis Grizzlies Blue didn’t make sense.
“Words can’t describe it,” Iverson said after the 76ers ran out of gas in the fourth quarter Monday and dropped a 93-83 game to the Nuggets, Philadelphia’s 10th straight loss. “I’ve been to other cities, played in Denver, and the people embraced me. I had fans there. I had a good life there. But it will never be, for me and my career, like this place.”

This is not about basketball — well, not just about basketball. Iverson will no more will the 76ers to the playoffs than elephants will tap dance, because he isn’t a kid anymore and he can’t summon those kinds of nights anymore, when he shot and shot and shot the ball until his team won, and there were four other guys on the court that were perfectly willing to watch him while they played defense and rebounded. These Sixers have an All-Star worthy player in Andre Iguodala, and an $80 million investment in Elton Brand, and whatever Philadelphia does this season will be determined by those two more than anyone. (Iguodala is also dressing in Iverson’s old locker, the biggest one, nearest the hallway by the coach’s office. “He hasn’t offered anything yet,” Iguodala said before tipoff, “but everything is up for negotation. Shoot, it’s Christmas.”)
But Iverson has never been just about basketball.This is the part I want to get right. I hope I do.Allen Iverson is just as important to the history of this league as Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson, Larry Bird and Bill Russell, Oscar Robertson and Wilt Chamberlain.

He was the symbol of this league for almost a decade, the engine that drove it after Jordan retired for good (we thought) in Chicago. That wasn’t always positive, and it wasn’t always aesthetically pleasing to the hoops purist, because there were a lot of 9 for 31s in the deal. But it was real, and that deserves your respect. A whole generation of new jacks, from Brandon Jennings to Ty Lawson — the Nuggets rookie that blew by Iverson at will in the second half (“me, stay in front of him?,” Iverson said afterward. “That kid is the fastest guy in the league”) — idolized number 3 growing up. The guy with the tats and the braids and the crossover, who got this league from the Jordan Era to the LeBron Era, all 160 pounds of him.

That’s the guy whose jersey was consistently the biggest seller of them all, whose trips abroad were scenes of chaos, the person for whom everyone would wait when he was, again, late for something (as he was Monday night, not arriving for the 7 p.m. tipoff until just before 6). No one of this generation — not LeBron, not Kobe, not D Wade — put butts in seats like Allen Iverson. Twenty thousand came out to see him Monday, the first sellout of the season — not the 5-15 team whose uniform he wore, not Iguodala, not Brand, not Eddie Jordan, not Carmelo Anthony or Chauncey Billups. Him.

They wore their T-shirts and held up their homemade signs (and they were mostly white, the not-so-secret secret of Iverson’s appeal; you don’t move as many shoes and jerseys as he has over the last 15 years by just selling in the ‘hood), and Snider was sick as a dog, but damned if he wasn’t going to be on hand for this, a night in the dead of winter when his team mattered in town again. The Flyers stink this year and the Phillies are beloved (but looking for still more starting pitching), and the Eagles are rounding into playoff shape, but there’s no way that Donovan McNabb –one of a half-dozen or so Eagles in attendance Monday — has the impact in this town that Iverson does, even now.

There’s a reason Patti LaBelle offered to sing the anthem in exchange for two tickets — although she ultimately passed, unable to get out of a prior engagement. There’s a reason Cuttino Mobley materialized on the front row. There’s a reason you couldn’t hear the PA guy after he said, “a six-foot guard, from Georgetown, number 3,” as the crowd roared and loosed itself, Iverson introduced next to last, leaving poor Iguodala to pick up the crumbs of dying applause.

David Letterman has this great saying about his own late father: when he came into a room, the lamps would rattle. That’s Iverson.

“He represents the city of Philadelphia to a T — hard working, chip on his shoulder,” said Iverson’s once and current teammate, Willie Green.

Green was here when Iverson was at the top of his game, when the hotels would swell as the team’s bus pulled up, as the restaurants would make way and clear tables out of the air for the team to eat. Rock star treatment, Green said, and not enviously, because he knew, and knows, what Iverson has meant and done, both locally and nationally, for the game.

“I always say, there are superstars, and there are megastars,” Green said. “He’s a megastar.”

Of course Iverson made mistakes by the carload. He was an individual performer in a team sport — not selfish, but very hard to play with. Only a few NBA players could swallow their own ambitions that long. He didn’t make many of his teammates that much better with his presence. His practice habits…well, you know. He stayed out too late too many nights, and he could be loud and profane — to management, to coaches — who didn’t give him his way. I’m not saying he was the best player. I’m saying he was the show, the reason you tuned in, the reason you stayed and watched.
But in recent years, he’s gone out of his way to acknowledge that he had rough patches. The best I’ve ever seen him was that first time back, when he was with Denver, when he spoke the media before the game and said he was to blame for him not being in Philly any more. He wasn’t mad that night; he was wistful, like an adult looking back on his life, aware of the mistakes he made, and saddened by them. If he hadn’t given the Sixers reasons galore to get rid of him, he said then, he could have finished his career here.Now, he just might.

“These people here, they watched me become who I am,” Iverson said Monday. “They watched me go through my ups and downs. They watched me go through my trendsetting stage. People don’t forget that. Just like I wouldn’t forget the impact that Michael Jordan had on me. I would never forget that. It would never go nowhere. I know who made me want to play basketball. Just like the song, ‘I want to be like Mike’? I was one of those guys that wanted to be like Mike. It never goes away. When Mike came back, I was ecstatic about it.”

I was overjoyed last year, at All-Star, when Iverson showed up without braids, his hair cut like it was when he was a teenager playing for John Thompson at Georgetown. This isn’t a hair argument; I know the symbolism of braids and why people wore their hair in braids, I know, I know. But my daddy used to always tell me you don’t see any old junkies for a reason, and I think you don’t see men closer to their 40s than their 20s wearing braids for a reason. Time requires all of us to make accomodations with life.But that’s my worldview. Not his.

He was back in braids Monday night, and wearing the home white, and the Wachovia Center was packed to bursting, and the crowd was roaring, and if it wasn’t because the fans believed the Sixers were going to win, or going anywhere, for that matter, or that Allen Iverson has a lot left in the tank, and even if they knew this was the beginning of the end, the end of his era, it would still do.

allen iverson

allen iverson

PHILADELPHIA  Chauncey Billups and Denver ruined Allen Iverson’s homecoming.Billups scored 31 points and Carmelo Anthony had 14 to help the Nuggets spoil Iverson’s return to Philadelphia with a 93-83 win over the 76ers on Monday night.The Nuggets went on a 22-3 run over the third and fourth quarters to rally for their fourth straight win.

Iverson’s rousing return did little to mask the fact that the Sixers are a lousy team. They’ve lost 10 straight, and only one-win New Jersey has a worse record in the Eastern Conference.Iverson received a standing ovation when he left in the fourth quarter. He scored 11 points on 4-for-11 shooting and had six assists in 37 minutes.

Iverson bowed and kissed the logo at midcourt when he was introduced as the sellout crowd of 20,664 stood and roared in approval.Andre Iguodala led the Sixers with 31 points, Thaddeus Young had 21 and Samuel Dalembert grabbed 15 rebounds.But this night for the Sixers was all about Iverson in his first game with the team since he was traded in 2006.

Iverson missed his first shot, a makable layup early in the first quarter. His first points came off a 4-footer he tossed up off a Dalembert miss.Energized by the emotional pregame show, the 76ers played one of their strongest quarters of the season. Iguodala, who bristled at the end of Iverson’s first tenure at being labeled “AI2,” scored 14 points to show this was still his team.
It’s still Iverson’s crowd.The building hummed every time Iverson touched the ball, and each basket was cheered as if it were a playoff winner.

Iverson played sparingly in his three-game stint with Memphis and feared he’d be out of game shape for his debut. He played all but 1 second of the first quarter and sat out in the second half mostly because of three fouls by the middle of the third quarter.

Backed by 18 points from Iguodala and 10 from Thaddeus Young, the Sixers led 44-41 at the break.They stretched that lead to nine when Iverson tossed a floater toward the basket that Dalembert slammed in for the alley-oop and had the Sixers feeling like their losing streak would be history.Instead, only their lead evaporated.

Billups, traded from Detroit in last year’s Iverson deal, showed why Denver was so eager to make the move. He sank a pair of 3s and worked his way to the free-throw line to score 13 points in the quarter and whittle the deficit to three.

Iverson was helpless in the fourth. Smith sank a pair of free throws to give Denver its first lead of the game, 67-65.Billups and Smith each hit a 3 during a staggering 22-3 run that let the Nuggets take control of the game.Billups nailed a late 3 for an 89-77 lead that sent the fans heading toward the exits.The pregame show was worth the price of admission.Iverson pulled in to the player’s parking lot at 5:55 p.m., waving to fans who waited in the cold for a glimpse of one of the most polarizing athletes in Philadelphia’s deep sports history.

He hit the court for warmups to the sound of fans screaming his name and holding “Welcome Home” signs. He took passes from his former 76ers backcourt teammate Aaron McKie, now an assistant coachHe hit shot after shot to the delight of the crowd and broke out in a wide smile as they erupted in cheers.Iverson always considered Philly home and dreamed of a return to the team he led to the 2001 NBA finals.He just pictured a different outcome.

NOTES: Iguodala buried a 90-footer just after the buzzer to end the first half. It didn’t count. … The Sixers have lost 14 of 16. … The Sixers had not sold out a game this season. … Anthony was whistled for a technical in the third.

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Allen Iverson is set to retire from the NBA, according to an online report.Commentator Stephen A. Smith published a statement on his Web site on Wednesday attributed to Iverson. It said Iverson plans to retire but also that “I feel strongly that I can still compete at the highest level.”The statement also said Iverson has tremendous love for the game and the desire to play.The 10-time All-Star played three games this season with the Memphis Grizzlies before taking a leave of absence to attend to personal matters. He was waived after the two sides agreed to part ways.It was the second straight ugly ending for Iverson, who was unhappy last season playing for the Detroit Pistons. He was upset that Detroit coach Michael Curry and Memphis’ Lionel Hollins used the former league MVP as a reserve.The New York Knicks considered signing Iverson last week after he cleared waivers, before deciding he would take too much playing time away from younger players they are trying to develop.The Knicks seemed to be the only team who would consider bringing in Iverson, so there was no guarantee he would play in the NBA this season, anyway. Still, the announcement on Wednesday came as a surprise to George Karl, who coached Iverson in Denver.”I think he still has something left to give some team out there. If that’s his decision, he’ll go down in history, I think, as the greatest little guard ever to play the game of basketball,” Karl said.

“I was happy to have him for a couple of years and hopefully our paths will cross. But I have a sneaky feeling that somewhere along the way an injury or a circumstance with a team will open that window ba