Journal Pioneer

It’s time for No. 1 pick Fultz to turn 76ers into winners

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Markelle Fultz already has his first turnover as a member of the Philadelph­ia 76ers. It came in an Instagram post sponsored by a watch company. “Excited to head to (City) and join the (team name). TissoLus is helping

me get started with my (team name) watch,” Fultz posted, not bothering to actually fill in the blanks.

Ah, it’s a process. Or rather, The Process. And the Sixers have plenty of blanks to fill in on their roster before becoming a playoff contender.

The No. 1 overall pick in this NBA draft has become an instant fan favourite before signing his rookie contract. The 6-foot-4 guard out of Washington has gone on late-night TV and boasted of his love of Philly cheesestea­ks, made a social media connection with franchise player Joel Embiid and dazzled on draft night with a pair of orange sneakers made of the same leather used to make NBA game balls.

If that wasn’t enough, Philly fans found an open love letter from Fultz to the city on The Players’ Tribune. “What’s up, Philly? You good? I’m pretty good,” Fultz wrote . “Today is a good day. Today we take The Process to another level.”

Long the league laughingst­ock, it’s the Sixers’ turn to clap back, with Embiid and Ben Simmons poking fun on Twitter at Lonzo Ball and his father, LaVar.

Moments after LaVar Ball went on TV and declared of his son, “From the words of Zeus, Jesus, everybody said he gonna be a Laker,” Simmons simply tweeted, “Crazy pills .” Embiid quickly chimed in with, “Please dunk on him so hard that his daddy runs on the court to save him.”

But the Sixers aren’t counting on the Fultz-Simmons-Embiid core to simply entertain in 140-character bursts. They expect the trio to help lead the franchise to their first playoff appearance since 2012 and first championsh­ip since 1983. “It’s been a while,” team president Bryan Colangelo said, pointing toward championsh­ip banners hanging in the team’s New Jersey complex. Here’s a look at how they might get to 35-50 wins over the next two seasons:

STEP ON THE GAS

First, Simmons and Embiid need to be healthy. Embiid, who missed his first two seasons with foot injuries, was placed on minutes restrictio­ns in 2016-17 and was banned from playing both games of back-to-back contests.

Despite the precaution­ary steps, Embiid played in only 31 games and needed surgery on his left knee in March. Simmons missed his rookie season with a broken right foot. “I think both Ben and Joel are on course for recovery,” Colangelo said Friday. “We anticipate a full, healthy roster.” Colangelo said Embiid would have no minutes’ restrictio­ns this season, provided he stays healthy.

“He plays with reckless abandon and some of that has got to be controlled,” Colangelo said.

IT TAKES TWO

Coach Brett Brown had said all year that Simmons would open next season as the point guard. Simmons seemed excited at his shot to run the show until a confluence of events and a trade with Boston for the No. 1 pick that netted Fultz.

No worries, for now. Brown said Simmons and Fultz, who will play in the summer league, could work well together in the backcourt, no matter which player is the ballhandle­r.

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