The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

A GOOD MYSTERY

• Brown vows to take his shot at fixing Fultz • Sixers hold off Raptors in chippy game

- By Jack McCaffery jmccaffery@21st-centurymed­ia.com @JackMcCaff­ery on Twitter

PHILADELPH­IA » Brett Brown is 56, has coached everywhere, has won titles, has lost games, has coached Hall of Famers, has coached through a process that has been a little touchy.

Somewhere in that journey, he might have seen something, anything, like he has this season with Markelle Fultz. Guess again.

“I’m old,” Brown said Monday, before coaching the Sixers against the Raptors. “And I’ve never experience­d anything like this. I really haven’t.”

No one was arguing. For who has seen anything like a disintegra­tion of a onceprized prospect’s shooting form that has become so drastic that videos of him shooting on his own routinely go viral?

Basically, Fultz has forgotten how to shoot. And Brown was quoted the other day as saying the rookie would play only when he remembers how to shoot.

The combo guard shot well enough in his one season at the University of Washington, and then in whatever scouting opportunit­ies he had afterward, to be the consensus choice as the No. 1 overall pick in the last draft. But then he showed up to start the season, sporting an inside-out free-throw style and cockeyed form on deeper shots.

The Sixers have suggested that Fultz suffers from (their term) scapular muscle imbalance in his right shoulder. They have been trying to correct that since the fourth game of the season. More recently, though, they have sighed that Fultz essentiall­y is healthy … and that is his shot alone that belongs on the critical list.

“None of us can discount the fact that his shoulder has a story to be told in this,” Brown said. “And we’re all going to sit back and guess their percentage­s. But none of us can discount that you can go from one thing to another. It’s not fair to suggest that it can’t be connected.”

Even with Brown, however, still striving to make a connection between the crooked shoulder and the more crooked shot, he said there has been no internal discussion about surgery. Unless that changes, the only thing that will require an operation, then, is the shot itself.

“I think the first thing we have to do is get back to how he shot,” he said. “That’s home plate to me. I’m a shooting coach at heart. I am the son of a coach. I have a 13-year-old who can shoot. I lived with Chip Engelland in San Antonio, the NBA’s best shooting coach. And down deep, it interests me probably more than any part of the game.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — FILE PHOTO ?? No. 1 pick Markelle Fultz remains sidelined as he tries to figure out what ails his shooting stroke.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — FILE PHOTO No. 1 pick Markelle Fultz remains sidelined as he tries to figure out what ails his shooting stroke.

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