The Oakland Press

Ben Simmons all in on 76ers’ new buzzword: accountabi­lity

- By Dan Gelston

PHILADELPH­IA » The idea of Ben Simmons and Joel Embiid as a modern-day odd couple bunking together in a Center City condominiu­m trash-talking during games of “FIFA 21” after playing taxing real NBA games momentaril­y got a rise out of 76ers fans.

Alas, Simmons was just joking when he said he moved in with Embiid — who welcomed his first son with his girlfriend in September — so the Philadelph­ia 76ers’ All-Stars could tighten their bond.

Simmons is good with Embiid, the max-contract cornerston­es of a franchise that has not yet reached the championsh­ip heights so many expected when they were drafted two years apart.

As for the rest of the team, the Sixers are ready to hit the reset button in coach Doc Rivers’ first season running a team that netted them just the sixth seed in the Eastern Conference and a first-round exit. Former Sixers guard Josh Richardson, traded to Dallas in the offseason, lamented in August the underachie­ving season could be pinned on a lack of accountabi­lity from management to the roster.

Simmons said Richardson was right and the Sixers were not ready to compete for a title when the NBA restarted the season in the Disney bubble.

“We weren’t in a position to go into the bubble and win,” Simmons said. “I think our mindset was off. Accountabi­lity is a huge part of winning. I think he’s definitely right. Bringing Doc and all of these guys in, Doc’s team, with all of these coaches around, the maturity has definitely risen with the team. It’s been great to see that and see guys be accountabl­e for certain things, and come here ready with a different mindset.”

Boston swept the 76ers in the postseason and ended former coach Brett Brown’s reign after seven seasons that put him in charge of the lose-first Process era to consecutiv­e 50-win seasons and berths in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

So what was the problem in the bubble?

“I mean, you can’t just come into a situation like the bubble if you guys aren’t ready and don’t have that chemistry and accountabi­lity already,” Simmons said Friday. “Doc and I have spoken about it already. You can tell the teams that were doing well in the bubble were tight-knit and held accountabl­e for certain things going on. You kind of see it with the Clippers now, things that are coming out.”

Whoa, wait a minute. The Clippers? The same team Rivers coached last season that blew a 3-1 playoff series lead in the Western Conference semis and led him to leaving Los Angeles?

The Clippers were painted in a story this week on The Athletic as an organizati­on without any, well, accountabi­lity where star players called the shots and Rivers did little to reign them in.

Clippers star Paul George even said in a separate interview Rivers failed to make the necessary adjustment­s to stop the losing and lead the Clippers into the next round.

Simmons said accountabi­lity — the new buzzword in Philly — starts with the players.

“There’s only so much that can happen with players and coaches and that’s on the players to make sure they’re held accountabl­e, and if they’re not gonna listen and do certain things, they’re not gonna win,” Simmons said. “But I think it’s a great opportunit­y for us, being younger guys, to have somebody like Doc come in. We gotta get it done.”

The Sixers also hired former Houston executive Daryl Morey to run basketball operations and gave the franchise a draft-night overhaul with deals that rid them of Al Horford and Richardson and brought in sharpshoot­er Seth Curry and drafted Kentucky guard Tyrese Maxey.

Simmons says he’s 100% healthy following surgery on his left knee in August that kept him from playing in the postseason. He averaged 16.4 points, 8.0 assists and 7.8 rebounds in his third full season.

Simmons expressed excitement about being coached by Rivers, who led the Celtics to the 2008 NBA championsh­ip. Rivers threw his support this week behind Simmons and noted, “I don’t care about Ben’s shooting as much as so many other people seem to care about it.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Philadelph­ia 76ers’ Ben Simmons (25) goes up for a shot between Chicago Bulls’ Luke Kornet (2) and Tomas Satoransky (31) during the second half of a Feb. 9 game in Philadelph­ia.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Philadelph­ia 76ers’ Ben Simmons (25) goes up for a shot between Chicago Bulls’ Luke Kornet (2) and Tomas Satoransky (31) during the second half of a Feb. 9 game in Philadelph­ia.

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