Los Angeles Times

Redick part of 76ers rebirth

With talented young core and free-agent signees, Philadelph­ia is a playoff contender.

- DAN WOIKE ON THE NBA

The word “process” means different things to different people, and no one knew that better than the Philadelph­ia 76ers.

On one hand, it represente­d hope — the hope that the team had a direction, a plan to transform not only into winners but into champions. And on the other, it represente­d losses — a whole bunch of them.

Philadelph­ia lost 199 basketball games from 2013 to 2016 before breaking through — and this is in the most relative sense — for a 28-win season in 2017. The losing, largely, was intentiona­l, with the front office putting young, inexpensiv­e players on the court while improving their odds to get the top draft choices — hoping that it would all lead to something special.

And if the picks they made didn’t work, they pushed the timetable back.

They dealt rookie of the year Michael Carter-Williams when it became clear he wasn’t the star they were searching for. When Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons suffered injuries, they sat them out for seasons instead of weeks, using as much caution as possible. And when a young player, like Jahlil Okafor, wasn’t working out, they quickly

moved on, jettisonin­g him to the second unit.

The architect of the process, Sam Hinkie, isn’t with the team today — the burden of losing covering any light at the end of the process’ tunnel. But his vision has been kept alive by Embiid and the city, and now, the plan seems ready to work.

Saturday, the team came to terms with veterans J.J. Redick and Amir Johnson, moves that heavily bolster what’s become one of the top young cores in the Eastern Conference, if not the league.

Earlier this summer, the team traded up to select Washington’s Markelle Fultz with the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft. Dario Saric and Embiid finished second and third, respective­ly, in last season’s rookie of the year voting. And the top pick in the 2016 NBA draft, Simmons, has yet to even play in a profession­al game.

Hope is suddenly abundant.

Philadelph­ia agreed to sign Redick to a one-year, $23-million deal that gives the 33-year-old former Clipper a massive payday while allowing him to re-enter free agency next season. It gives him the chance to play near his newly constructe­d home in Brooklyn. And, it gives Philadelph­ia a deadeye shooter who can school a young roster on the work required to be a profession­al.

To celebrate the deal, Redick tweeted his new team’s credo. “Trust the process,” he wrote.

The one-year deals given to Redick and Johnson, a hard-nosed reserve who’ll earn $11 million, could be a clue into what the Lakers, who would likely admit to being slightly behind Philadelph­ia in their rebuild, could do with their summer.

Both Redick and Johnson bring credibilit­y to the locker room and both players’ deals don’t hamper the teams’ long-term ability to re-sign their own stars or big-name free agents down the line.

Redick, in particular, is an excellent fit in Philadelph­ia.

He’ll provide excellent spacing for Fultz, Simmons and Embiid with his endless movement off the ball — something former coach Doc Rivers liked to call “an offense to itself.”

Redick averaged 15.8 points per game in his four seasons with the Clippers, but re-signing with the team never seemed like a possibilit­y.

And by moving east, the opposite of players like Paul George and Jimmy Butler who just got traded into the highly competitiv­e Western Conference, Redick and the 76ers have an excellent chance to end a five-year playoff drought — the second longest in the franchise’s rich history.

With the power balance shifted hard to the West, Redick’s signing actually made the 76ers favorites to make the playoffs at the Westgate Las Vegas SuperBook.

The process isn’t complete — Redick won’t push them past the Cleveland Cavaliers or Boston Celtics and he sure won’t get them past the Golden State Warriors — but the signing signals a significan­t culture change.

Philadelph­ia is ready to press the accelerato­r pedal on their process.

Around the league

New Orleans and point guard Jrue Holiday agreed on a deal that would reportedly pay the former UCLA Bruin $126 million over five years. According to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowsk­i, the deal could end up being worth as much as $150 million if certain incentives are reached. The Pelicans needed to retain Holiday, especially after the team acquired center DeMarcus Cousins last season at the All-Sstar break. … Forward Andre Iguodala reportedly met with the Houston Rockets on Saturday, canceling his other meetings afterward, before reportedly signing a three-year, $48-million deal with Golden State, where he won two NBA championsh­ips as their top reserve.. … The Lakers waived big man Tarik Black three days prior to his $6.655-million contract became guaranteed. The move leaves the Lakers with 14 contracts on their books with about $26 million in salary cap space. Black spent 21⁄2 seasons with the Lakers, averaging 5.5 points and 5.1 rebounds. … According to Wojnarowsk­i, Jazz and Clippers target Joe Ingles agreed on a four-year, $52-million contract to keep the playmaking forward in Utah. Ingles shot 44.1% from three-point range last season and helped the Jazz advance to the second round of the playoffs. … Former Lakers shooting guard Nick Young has received interest from Golden State, Oklahoma City and New Orleans, and former Laker Thomas Robinson has drawn interest from Minnesota, The Times has confirmed. Robinson could still return to Los Angeles, though a deal with the Lakers probably wouldn’t come until much later in free agency.

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