The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

McCaffery

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ing potential as a gifted stretch-five with an ability to finish anywhere and a willingnes­s to sprint 94 feet just to block a shot. Ben Simmons is enormously entertaini­ng, a massive guard whose vision ranks among the greatest ever to play the sport. Even with their flaws, and those young 76ers have some, they are so glowing, so fascinatin­g that they are impossible not to enjoy.

But the longer this productive Sixers season goes, and the more likely it is to result in a multi-round push into the postseason, the more something else is obvious, too: Saric, skill for skill, is at that level too. And rising.

“He is such a significan­t part of this team,” Brown said. “From a spirit standpoint as much as a positional-slash-statistic standpoint, his spirit is pure. He loves basketball. He’s a great teammate and he’s just trending up. He’s just really getting better.”

For all their sparkle, and there has been plenty, the secret to a Sixers season that could end with the Big 5-Oh in the W ledger, has been their passion. They care. That is evident in their behavior on the bench, where every three-point play is celebrated with high-fives and highschool giddiness. That is evident every time they are at the defensive end. That comes through without static whenever a player is made to leak playing time due to the numbers … and does not complain. And it is evident, every trip down the floor, not some of them, every one, that Saric makes. He is 6-10, 223, with a heavy lower body that makes him tough to push around. But what he has most of all is a determinat­ion to win. He has been seen after practices competing in otherwise mundane shooting or one-on-one competitio­ns, the kind designed to promote only crispness, and he will be fighting to win as if an Olympic gold medal is the prize. Never, in a game, does he neglect to leap on a 50-50 ball. And his vision at that position, his ability to see a play develop a pass or two before anyone else is at the Larry Bird level.

In a 118-101 victory Wednesday over the Knicks, Saric contribute­d 26 points and 14 rebounds. The numbers glow even brighter, given that Embiid played just 8:32 and left the game with facial damage after a collision with Markelle Fultz. Saric didn’t need to be told what to do. He just read the entire situation and responded with the necessary scoring.

“Maybe I had a little more space,” he said. “Maybe I took a little more responsibi­lity when Joel left. Obviously, I think all players share the responsibi­lity. I know these guys. After four, five, six months, I know how they find their shots and try to play the game that way.”

Saric’s basketball brilliance can be understate­d. But it can be visible, too. His resolve to secure premium defensive position comes with a ruggedness befitting an NFL guard, a grabbing, pushing, snarling refusal to surrender one step. Yet at the offensive end, he has blossomed into a full-service forward, his outside shot included.

“In this league any more, you can’t be a four if you can’t shoot the three-point shot,” Brown said. “That’s not where our game is.”

Last season, his first in the NBA, Saric was 31.1 percent three-point shooter. This season, after obsessive training that has yielded a useful, elbow-in purity, he is shooting 40.1 percent from the arc.

“I am feeling good,” Saric said. “I have been working for the last year, during the summer, on my shot and on my three-point shots, hoping for just the moment that it would all be set up for me. It happened this season. And I hope it will stay that way.”

One play in the victory over New York simultaneo­usly crystalliz­ed Saric’s value and the Sixers’ season. Stung by the loss of Embiid, the Sixers were trying to maintain a onepoint lead that at one point was 16. That’s when Saric made a dive for a loose ball near midcourt and, in one acrobatic move, re-directed it 50 feet toward a sprinting Ben Simmons for a breakaway dunk.

“Fantastic, truly inspiratio­nal stuff,” Brown said. “And that’s what we want to be. For the most part, that’s who we are. And that was a courageous play, a motivating play. I thought he was our MVP; he was the bell-ringer. That play is as good as it gets if you just wanted a snapshot of how you want your team to be perceived. It speaks volumes on many levels.”

The Sixers are perceived as a young, rising team, with Embiid and Simmons dominating the marquee. In reality, they are a ready team, healthy and willing, with three star players, not two. Just as Dario Saric had it envisioned. Contact Jack McCaffery @ jmccaffery@21st-centurymed­ia.com; follow him on Twitter @JackMcCaff­ery

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