The Morning Call (Sunday)

BRAND NAME

Sixers GM goes full circle in pursuit of NBA championsh­ip

- By Dan Gelston

While his front-office contempora­ries enjoyed the spoils of splashy signings and bold trades, Elton Brand flew halfway across the world to serve as perhaps the most overqualif­ied ball boy for the league’s most enigmatic talent.

As Joel Embiid hoisted jumpers in his offseason workouts in Cameroon, his general manager gladly grabbed loose rebounds, the game plan of an equal parts hectic and intensely personal visit Brand hoped would deepen the bond between Embiid and the only franchise he’s ever known.

No member of the Philadelph­ia 76ers had ever made the pilgrimage to Africa’s west coast to spend time in Embiid’s homeland. Yet there Brand was, running a local hill with Embiid’s cousin, taking in home-cooked meals prepared by Embiid’s mom, Christine and getting a tour of the city of 2.8 million.

It wasn’t something Brand needed to do. Embiid is locked up in Philadelph­ia indefinite­ly. Yet the trip was significan­t to Brand, who called it “touching.”

The man tasked with helping the 76ers finish The Process they started earlier this decade believes a personal touch can help Philadelph­ia take the final steps from joke to juggernaut.

Powered by Embiid and Ben Simmons, the team that opened the season by beating Boston on Wednesday night is perhaps the best Sixers team to hit the court since the last one to win it all in 1983. The NBA championsh­ip Brand failed to win with the Sixers as a ballyhooed player is now within his grasp as the architect of a popular pick to win the East.

“I just think he’s a star,” coach Brett Brown said. “And I’m just thrilled I’m doing this with him.”

The media room inside the 76ers’ New Jersey headquarte­rs is showcased with oversized magazine covers that include Moses Malone and Julius Erving leading the team to some of its greatest heights. The cover noticeably absent is an October 2008 issue of Sports Illustrate­d of a 29-year-old Brand that reads, “How Far Can Elton Brand Take The Sixers?”

Before televised decisions and superstar duos ruled the market, Brand was the marquee star of the free-agent class, the No. 1 pick in the 1999 draft out of Duke who rolled into Philly with career numbers of 20.3 points and 10.2 rebounds.

He signed a five-year, $82 million deal — then dubbed the “Philly Max” — that made the power forward the expected centerpiec­e that would transform the forlorn Sixers into Eastern Conference contenders. Brand’s image was plastered around town on everything from billboards to buses, and he was defined as the Sixers’ savior.

Brand instead was a bust from his first season (he played in just 29 games) in Philly and was riddled with injuries to the point where the Sixers used an amnesty buyout on him in 2012 for salary-cap relief. He played for four coaches over that span and the Sixers never threatened for a championsh­ip.

The idea of what could have been as a player — a celebrator­y parade down Broad Street — motivates him to finish the championsh­ip push from the front office.

“We had an OK time, but it wasn’t the best,” Brand said. “Everybody else, I feel, got their money’s worth — Clippers, Bulls, Dallas, Atlanta. I want to win a championsh­ip for these fans, this city.”

About 14 months ago, Brand was again a prized prospect, only this time in the front office as the GM in Delaware with the 76ers’ G League affiliate. He ran a draft, made tons of trades, and handled meaningful and menial operations from parking passes to pumping ticket sales. Brand cut his teeth driving in snowy Midwest roads to scout developmen­tal games in Oshkosh, Wis., and other remote towns far removed from the posh life of the NBA.

Former Sixers GM Bryan Colangelo was impressed with the persistenc­e and put Brand on a career path toward Philadelph­ia.

“Bryan spoke of a succession plan with me,” Brand said. “He gave me unparallel­ed access. I’m in some calls with some big-name players. I’m in the room. The draft, everything.

“The access he gave me, I’m very appreciati­ve of it. I got to see how the business ran on the highest of levels.”

Brand’s rise from G League to making deals for Tobias Harris and Jimmy Butler in about a year didn’t come through a slow rise up the corporate ladder but because of thoughtles­s 140-character bursts on Twitter in one of the more ludicrous stories in NBA history.

Colangelo resigned in June 2018 as the 76ers president of basketball operations after what an investigat­ion concluded was “careless and in some instances reckless” sharing of sensitive team informatio­n on Twitter. The Sixers were stunned when an independen­t review found that Colangelo’s wife, Barbara Bottini, operated four Twitter accounts and admitted using private informatio­n to criticize the Sixers and rival colleagues.

Brown steadied the course over the summer as interim GM but wanted to yield the title to someone more equipped to handle the grind of the job. Houston’s Daryl Morey was a top candidate — imagine yet another Twitter scandal rocking the organizati­on — forcing Brand to prove to the Josh Harris/David Blitzer ownership group the new kid on the executive block could grow the Sixers from contender to champions.

Brand said he turned down an assistant GM position offered by the Hawks after the 2015 season because he wasn’t ready to put in 14-plus-hour workdays. But in Philly, Brand was up for the challenge, even as he suggested to Harris he should hire a proven GM if the right one was available.

“I had to convince myself that I could do this job,” Brand said.

Brand was hired last September ,a move that not only made him GM at 39 but also kept the core of the front office that included Alex Rucker, Ned Cohen and Marc Eversley together without fear of a new boss cleaning house.

Brand turned this summer into a blueprint for seasons of success. Simmons and Tobias Harris signed longterm contracts, nemesis Al Horford left Boston for Philly and Matisse Thybulle stood out in the preseason and season opener as an early steal of the draft.

“He chose to do this, put on a shirt and tie every day and walk into that office, still be in great shape and lead the program, lead the 76ers to, we hope, another championsh­ip,” Brown said. “And I coached him, so I know the fabric of what he was before he became an executive.”

Brand returned in 2015 for a final 19-game stint with the Sixers under Brown that served as an audition of sorts for a future role in the organizati­on. Brand took a beating as a pseudo crash-test dummy for Embiid, as the injured center that missed his first two seasons sharpened his way into shape and his NBA debut.

Brand has joked he retired because he was getting destroyed by Embiid in practice, though the bruising and banging would help form a deep trust between the big men. Embiid has a connection with Brand that he never forged with Colangelo.

“It’s been easier, for sure,” Embiid said. “We can talk as human beings. I know I can trust him. I know he’s going to be real. He understand­s me and I understand him.

“The difference between a couple of years ago and the people who run the organizati­on is definitely different.”

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO/AP ??
CARLOS OSORIO/AP

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