Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Sixers go from Process to work in progress

- By Dan Gelston

PHILADELPH­IA » LaVar Ball was holding court outside the Lakers locker room when he spotted two of his sons goofing around with the 7-footer in the white sweatshirt.

Ball, the prepostero­us patriarch of LA basketball’s foolhardy family, had just dissed the President in their ongoing Twitter feud. But in the presence of the player nicknamed “The Process,” even Ball knew it was wise to play nice with Joel Embiid.

“Embiid! Come on boy, make me some noise!” Ball yelled, as he pulled Embiid in for a bro hug. “Don’t be scared.”

Ball placed his hand on Embiid’s shoulder and offered a bit of fatherly advice: “Here’s the smart thing. Don’t worry about nobody on the outside. You just keep playing and doing your thing.”

Embiid nodded and laughed as he walked away from the powwow and headed down the dingy concourse, the Philadelph­ia 76ers center needing tips from Ball on basketball about as much as Martin Truex Jr. needs racing lessons from an Uber driver. Embiid has been doing his thing just fine as the big baller in the middle for the Sixers and has posted the kind of numbers (23.5 points/11.1 rebounds) that should turn the social media star into an NBA All-Star.

Embiid has been healthy, durable and dominant, a clutch reason the Sixers are 13-11 and in the thick of Eastern Conference playoff contention for the first time in five years. Oh yeah, and he’s had help. Ben Simmons, the No. 1 overall pick of the 2016 draft, has been better than advertised in his rookie season. Simmons had already the third triple-double of his career with 12 points, 13 rebounds and 15 assists against the Lakers. Simmons, fourth in the league in assists, joined Hall of Famers Oscar Robertson and Magic Johnson as the only rookies to have at least three triple-doubles through their first 23 games.

More big thrills are surely on the way.

The Sixers are still a work in process as The Process becomes something more than a code name for a demoralizi­ng rebuild that stripped the franchise of quality players in exchange for cheap talent and draft picks.

Embiid and Simmons proved The Process can pay substantia­l dividends.

Jahlil Okafor, Nerlens Noel and, perhaps, 2017 No. 1 pick Markelle Fultz proved the path to a title can come with more rocky terrain ahead.

But the NBA has put on watch that the 76ers are on a playoff push.

“We have a focus on where we’re going,” team president Bryan Colangelo said. “We have a clear definition of what that looks like.”

“The Philadelph­ia 76ers is mustsee TV right now,” TNT analyst and Hall of Famer Shaquille O’Neal said during the broadcast. “I’m looking at the chemistry that Simmons and Embiid is playing with, and it reminds me of a young Penny (Hardaway) and a young Shaq.”

Simmons’ attack off the dribble, rebounding, passing like a point guard trapped in a power forward’s body and ability to finish strong at the basket has already forced comparison­s to Cleveland’s LeBron James, the four-time NBA MVP who has served as a mentor to the rookie.

“I think Ben is his own makeup of speed, power, quickness, ability to pass the ball and being able have a feel for the game,” James said. “You know, Ben is Ben. And I am who I am. And so on and so on. So you guys kind of do that comparison stuff.”

Simmons and James go headto-head on Saturday in Cleveland, with the Sixers looking to avenge a 113-91 home loss last month.

The Sixers have lost four of six games and were stunned when Brandon Ingram hit the game-winning 3-pointer with 0.8 seconds remaining in the Lakers’ 107-104 win on Thursday. They lead the league in fouls committed per game, are turnover prone (had 18 against LA and the Lakers had 15 steals) and have little depth beyond Simmons and Embiid, and JJ Redick, Robert Covington and Dario Saric. They get beat much too often on the offensive glass.

“It’s been pretty tough,” Simmons said. “But we can get back to where we were. Still learning. But I think we’ll get back there.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Joel Embiid, right, goes after the ball as he gets around Ben Simmons, left, during the second half of the Sixers’ loss to the Lakers.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Joel Embiid, right, goes after the ball as he gets around Ben Simmons, left, during the second half of the Sixers’ loss to the Lakers.

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