Philadelphia 76ers Wiretap

McAllister: Iverson tops Jordan - for best Web site

Michael Jordan's return obviously adds fuel to the debate about which player will be the most electrifying in the NBA this season.

Can Jordan regain his crown from the top contenders during his retirement – namely Kobe Bryant, Vince Carter and Allen Iverson? Only the one-on-one battles will help answer that.

But before the foursome takes to the court, we can at least decide which player has the most electrifying Web site.

Unfortunately, only Jordan has an official site, meaning Bryant, Carter and Iverson must rely on their best available fan sites. But don't let the difference fool you – a player's official site doesn't necessarily mean a better one.

With that in mind, here's how they rank:

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McKie looking forward to return to action

Aaron McKie is as aware as anyone that his country is at war. The basketball court, his place of employment, is his crucible, the area where he feels the most comfortable, "where I can block everything out and play a game.''

Only he can't yet do that. McKie still is recovering from arthroscopic surgery on his right shoulder, still doing strengthening drills and non-contact basketball work. He and teammate Allen Iverson (arthroscopic surgery, right shoulder) could only sit and watch last night's season-opening, 83-74 loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves.

"That's where the big child comes out, where you can go out and play a game,'' McKie said, "where you can forget everything else that's going on. It's human nature to be concerned [about world events], but you've got a job to do.''

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Sixers' new look flops

After holding a 21-11 first-quarter lead, the Sixers were beaten by the Timberwolves, 83-74, and except for a late rally, looked like an NBA wannabe rather than the defending Eastern Conference champions.

It was not all that surprising, given the preceding tumultuous four weeks of teaching and building by coach Larry Brown, then tearing down and starting over by Brown and the organization. These Sixers have coexisted for five days now, and as Brown is quick to point out, that is not nearly enough time to produce a winner.

"Our execution is not there," Brown said. "We've got guys, I'm explaining things every time-out, and obviously we haven't handled it well right now."

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Sixers Oct 2001 Archive