PHILADELPHIA - Allen Iverson's slashing and crashing has earned him a
collection of individual awards that mean little each empty offseason. The 76ers
guard is known as one of the best active NBA players without a championship.
At 31 and entering his 11th season, there is little reason to think this is
the year he'll get that coveted ring. But the former MVP hasn't surrendered hope
that he can bring a title back to Philadelphia.
"For 11 years, you know whatever squad I'm out there with, I have to believe
in them and believe we can accomplish something," Iverson said after Thursday's
practice. "The team is better than it was last year."
That is the voice of an optimist, not a realist, especially after the Sixers
went 38-44 last season and missed the playoffs for the second time in three
seasons. They made no significant roster moves and are picked by many to finish
at the bottom of the Eastern Conference.
This season might be like the last few for Iverson ¡ª an All-Star berth, a run
at the scoring title and no meaningful games to play in April, May and beyond.
While the Sixers failed to upgrade their roster, they hope something as
simple as liking each other a little more will add up to a few more wins, maybe
enough to sneak into the playoffs. Last season, some players took advantage of
coach Maurice Cheeks' easygoing personality, others grumbled about their roles
and the locker room discord affected their play.
"(It was) enough to get us off track, honestly," Iverson said. "I definitely
won't get into it and the players involved in some of the things last year, but
it wasn't together like it had been in the past and like we are right now."
Now they believe two weeks of training camp in Europe where the Sixers had no
one else to see the sights or grab some food with but themselves has led to a
tighter bunch of teammates. Some have talked about a team paintball excursion or
maybe watching NFL games together. Others have stayed late in the gym for
physical games of 1-on-1.
"For a while last year, I think with the losses and negativity, guys got down
a little bit," forward Kyle Korver said. "When you have that mentality, it's
harder to play basketball, it's harder to play good basketball."
With Iverson and Chris Webber pacing the offense, Philadelphia won't have
much trouble scoring. But the Sixers were one of the worst defensive teams in
the league last season and their frequent fourth-quarter collapses all but
knocked them out of the postseason. Cheeks has already worked them harder and
with more attention to detail on defense than he did in last year's training
camp.
Not since Larry Brown led the Sixers to the NBA finals in 2001 have the
Sixers stressed defensive accountability like this. Even Iverson is on board
with the plan.
"It's going to take me sacrificing a lot of things on the defensive end as
far as not gambling as much as I usually gamble and just always try and be in
the right spots on defense," Iverson said. "The whole thing's going to start
with me."
The whole thing in Philly always starts ¡ª and usually ends ¡ª with Iverson.
Even though he heard his name in endless trade rumors in the offseason, Iverson
says there's nowhere else he wants to be, no matter how far away the Sixers are
from a championship.
"I always wanted to stay here because of the loyalty, but it's all I know,"
he said. "For me to go try and win a championship somewhere, if I ever did it,
it would probably feel good if I was to contribute to it ... but it wouldn't
feel the same as winning one here."