Philadelphia 76ers Wiretap

Dikembe cut down to size

One of the many problems the Knicks are struggling through during their current five-game losing streak is a lack of defensive intensity. Dikembe Mutombo feels the problem could be linked to his recent benching.

"My own observation from the sideline is I realize after 50-something games my teammates got used to having somebody who is an intimidator in the back," Mutombo said, trying to sound diplomatic. "I think they're kinda confused defensively because we didn't practice all of this."

Adding insult to injury: Not only is Mutumbo buried on the bench, there is speculation that he may be released if the Knicks sign Vin Baker. Cutting Mutombo after tomorrow would be especially cruel since it would prohibit Mutombo from qualifying for a postseason roster.

Via New York Daily News


Iverson, Robinson not with 76ers for Pacers game

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Philadelphia 76ers guard Allen Iverson and forward Glenn Robinson did not make the trip to Indiana for Saturday night's game against the Pacers.

Iverson missed his third straight game with a bruised right shoulder. Robinson was out with a strained right elbow, which he hurt against Atlanta on Tuesday night.

Iverson is the NBA's second-leading scorer at 27.4 points per game, while Robinson is second on the 76ers with 17.1 points per game.

The Pacers were without forward Jonathan Bender, who went home to Mississippi for a funeral. He did not make the trip back with the Pacers after Friday night's 89-77 loss in New Orleans, but coach Rick Carlisle said he expected Bender to rejoin the team Sunday.

Via Associated Press


Blazers trying to keep Playoff streak alive

For the past 21 years, the Portland Trail Blazers have been part of the NBA playoffs.

Thanks to their recent surge - and general manager John Nash's remaking of the roster - the Blazers have a chance to match the league record for postseason perennials.

The mark of 22 consecutive playoff appearances was set by the Syracuse Nationals/Philadelphia 76ers franchise from 1949-40 to 1970-71.

The Utah Jazz also are closing in on that mark, but their streak of 20 straight playoff appearances is in serious jeopardy. Portland, however, has moved within striking range of the Houston Rockets and Denver Nuggets.

``We have to put pressure on these teams. It's certainly a goal,'' Nash said Thursday night in a telephone interview.

Nash has been one of the league's busiest executives this season, pulling off three major trades.

Nash's first deal _ Bonzi Wells to Memphis for Wesley Person _ was widely panned. His next two trades _ Jeff McInnis to Cleveland for Darius Miles, and Rasheed Wallace and Person to Atlanta for Shareef Abdur-Rahim, Theo Ratliff and Dan Dickau _ drew more praise.

``I wish we would have had more time to balance off the roster,'' said Nash, whose deals left the Blazers with voids in backcourt depth and outside shooting. Nonetheless, the acquisitions addressed some of the Blazers' long-standing weaknesses.

``Theo automatically makes you a good defensive team, and we were one of the worst defensive teams in the league before his arrival. He's been a major factor,'' Nash said.

Ratliff tied a franchise record with nine blocks Tuesday night against Orlando.

Abdur-Rahim had been coming off the bench behind Miles before moving into the starting lineup and playing 43 minutes against the Magic.

``He brings an attitude of doing whatever it takes to win,'' Nash said. ``Some players of his stature would have groused about not starting, but his is a classy professional attitude.''

Nash said he had been discussing separate trades with the Hawks for Abdur-Rahim and Ratliff, reaching a breakthrough two weeks ago when he and Atlanta general manager Billy Knight combined the two deals.

Since taking over as general manager last summer, Nash has vowed to change the team culture by ridding the Blazers of players with negative attitudes. His deals have gone a long way toward reaching that goal, and an unexpected benefit could be reaching the postseason.

``Most people have responded positively. They like the excitement of Darius Miles, they like the idea we have defensive presence, and they like that Shareef is a steadying influence,'' Nash said.

The Blazers have already lost the season series to the Nuggets, costing them a tiebreaker if they finish with the same record as Denver. Portland was 1-1 against Houston entering Friday night's game against the Rockets, who began the weekend in seventh place in the West _ four games ahead of Portland.

___

HOME SWEET HOME:@ Forgive the San Antonio Spurs and Los Angeles Clippers if they seem a little exhausted. A month on the road, give or take a few days, will do that.

The Spurs didn't play their first home game of February until last Tuesday, getting kicked out of their arena while it played host to the rodeo.

San Antonio played seven consecutive road games and won six, mimicking its success of a year ago when a nine-game, rodeo-forced trip jump-started San Antonio's title run. (They went 8-1).

Beginning with Saturday night's game against Denver, the Spurs will play 12 of their next 17 at home as they try to make up ground on the Minnesota Timberwolves in the Midwest Division.

The Clippers, meanwhile, played just their second home game of the month Friday night when they hosted the Knicks. Los Angeles was forced out of the Staples Center by the Grammy Awards and the All-Star game.

The Clippers' 99-93 loss at New Orleans wrapped up a string of 13 games in 13 cities, and they played the role of the exhausted vagabond well. After not committing a turnover in the first half, the Clippers had 13 in the final 24 minutes.

``It's hard,'' coach Mike Dunleavy said. ``I just keep saying, `Hey, they're young and they'll learn.' We get so close, we get so many opportunities. I'm just hoping as I keep pounding it in and keep teaching that certain things stick better.''

___

PRO-READY PREPSTERS?: Dwight Howard of Southwest Atlanta Christian Academy and Sebastian Telfair of Lincoln H.S. in Brooklyn, N.Y. made the Eastern squad for the McDonald's All-America game, while teammates Joe Crawford and Malik Hairston of Detroit Renaissance H.S. made the West team.

Howard and Telfair are widely expected to enter this June's NBA draft, as are McDonald's All-Americans Josh Smith (Oak Hill Academy) and Shaun Livingston (Peoria Central H.S.).

Slam Magazine senior editor Ryan Jones was spotted at All-Star weekend wearing Livingston's Peoria jersey, perhaps signaling a trend toward throw-forward gear instead of throwback stuff.

___

HAITIAN HOMELAND:@ Philadelphia 76ers center Samuel Dalembert is worried about his grandmother, who was his primary caregiver in Haiti after Dalembert's parents left that country and emigrated to Canada.

Hypromene Charle, 72, lives in the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince, which could be attacked by rebels if President Jean-Bertrand Aristide does not resign.

``When I talk to her after a game, I feel better,'' Dalembert told reporters in Philadelphia. ``She tells me, `Oh, don't worry about it. Everything's fine.' But the main thing I'm thinking is, I know how crazy it is (in Haiti). When I was little, I saw things happen. I saw crazy stuff going on. I can imagine how it is right now.''

Via Associated Press


Sixers Feb 2004 Archive

  • Iverson skips road trip with injured shoulder

    ATLANTA (AP) Allen Iverson did not travel to Atlanta for the Philadelphia 76ers' game Tuesday night against the Hawks.

  • Iverson out with a shoulder injury

    PHILADELPHIA (AP) Allen Iverson, tied for the NBA's scoring lead, missed the Philadelphia 76ers' game against the Detroit Pistons on Monday night because of an injured shoulder.

  • Iverson a gametime decision with shoulder injury

    PHILADELPHIA (AP) Allen Iverson will be a gametime decision for Philadelphia's game against Detroit on Monday night due to a sore right shoulder.

  • Iverson benched for missing practice

    DENVER (AP) Philadelphia 76ers guard Allen Iverson was benched for the start of Tuesday night's game against the Denver Nuggets after missing practice a day earlier, coach Chris Ford said.

  • Iverson feels for Kobe

    LOS ANGELES (AP) Allen Iverson feels for Kobe Bryant.

  • High-scoring Iverson turns playmaker

    LOS ANGELES (AP) Allen Iverson bounced the ball off the glass to set up Vince Carter's dunk, lobbed an alley-oop almost straight up for another jam and threaded a perfect pass between defenders to Ron Artest.

  • Players could be to blame for coaches getting canned

    Coack Killer?

  • Making the playoffs is 76ers' only goal

    PHILADELPHIA (AP) The Philadelphia 76ers' goal used to be reaching the NBA Finals.

  • Bulls, Sixers talking trade

    The Bulls and 76ers have discussed a trade involving Jerome Williams and Aaron McKie, according to ESPN.

  • King looking at trade options

    Sixers president/general manager Billy King is looking at trade options to help improve his team.

  • 76ers replace Ayers with assistant Ford

    PHILADELPHIA (AP) Randy Ayers was fired by the struggling Philadelphia 76ers during his first season as their coach, and assistant Chris Ford was promoted to replace him Tuesday.

  • 76ers replace Ayers with assistant Ford

    Ayers is out after half a year as head coach

  • Not so Randy: Sixers Fire Ayers

    The Philadelphia 76ers, who have lost eight of their last 10 en route to a 21-31 first-half record, fired coach Randy Ayers on Tuesday, ESPN's Stephen A.

  • Payton ejected in first quarter against Philadelphia

    PHILADELPHIA (AP) Lakers guard Gary Payton was ejected in the first quarter against Philadelphia on Thursday night.