Thu Aug 22, 2013 10:39 pm
Allen Iverson is going to announce his retirement from the NBA soon. First reported, appropriately, by SLAM Magazine, the 2001 NBA MVP and 11-time All-Star will call it quits after a star-crossed NBA career and short stint playing in Turkey. Iverson has not played an NBA game since Feb. 2010, and it’s fair to say that his time away from the game has brought more bad news than good.
Iverson leaves the NBA after being shunned by NBA squads to start the 2010-11, 2011-12, 2012-13, and presumably 2013-14 seasons. Though Allen wasn’t exactly a greybeard when he walked away from the Philadelphia 76ers in 2010 at the age of 34, it was probably that walk away that prematurely ended his NBA career.
NBA general managers were more than aware that Iverson also walked away from Philadelphia in December of 2006 (before being dealt to Denver), from the Detroit Pistons in the spring of 2009, from the Memphis Grizzlies later that year, and finally from the Sixers later that season. All were not amicable partings, with the teams in question thinking it best if Iverson stayed away from the arena than stick with the team.
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Spree#8 wrote:It doesn't really matter too much, cause he's been gone for a while.
All in all, a fantastic player, warrior, competitor and the reason I started watching the NBA or even took an interest in basketball in general. It is a shame that he couldn't win a championship, but that's what happens when you spend your prime in a horribly managed organization. I feel like something's been missing from the NBA since his departure. Players don't seem as electrifying and charismatic to me these days. Iverson was always himself, for better or for worse and we probably won't ever see anybody quite like him. Definitely made a nice change from all the image-conscious bullshit.
In hindsight, what ultimately destroyed his career was the shitstorm that were the '09 Pistons and the media making him the scapegoat for everything that went on there. And for all the mistakes he made, for all the flaws he had as both a player and a person, he deserved better. His career should not have ended the way it did.
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Sat Aug 24, 2013 2:27 am
Andrew wrote:Doesn't he also have to share in the responsibility for that, though? As you said, he was himself for better or worse and sometimes, it definitely was for the worse. It's a shame the way his career ended and he should've gone out on a better note, but he played a part in that by burning some bridges.
NovU wrote:He definitely could have had a better ending to his awesome career if he kept his ego in check. I think it's possible things with Pistons and Grizzlies could have turned out much better going forward in career transition if he accepted the fact that he aged and took on a lessor role through adjustment.
Sat Aug 24, 2013 4:05 am
Spree#8 wrote:His problem was being shoved way behind clearly inferior players in the rotation. Bynum and Stuckey, I probably don't even need to comment on. Conley didn't start being an impactful player until 10-11. We still don't know
Sat Aug 24, 2013 4:31 am
Sat Aug 24, 2013 11:06 am
Spree#8 wrote:Imagine LeBron gets traded to Philadelphia shortly after the start of the new season and they ask him to become Evan Turner's backup for 15 minutes off the bench. Would LeBron opposing to that be "not keeping his ego in check" (no, Iverson '08 wasn't as good as James '13, this is just meant to be an example)?
Sun Aug 25, 2013 12:14 am
Andrew wrote:Iverson may have had a point, but I'd suggest he went about it the wrong way, burning bridges and scaring off teams who might've given him a shot otherwise.
NovU wrote:What we know though for sure is he played just as bad or even worse than those inferior players.
The bottomline is that AI could not fit in. If teams really sabotaged his game, I am one of those people who thinks they had pretty good reasons to. The teams clearly struggled to work him into their system and to their strength, which lead to ultimate discontent(thus off bench, less role, etc). It is only valid to criticize his flaws whether it be ego, attitude, age, selfishness, or whatever. No teams suffered a setback for losing him.
NovU wrote:Do you not agree he could have had a better end to his career if he made a better adjustment(in attitude/game w/e that may apply)?
Sun Aug 25, 2013 12:52 am
Sun Aug 25, 2013 12:27 pm
Spree#8 wrote:He did go about it the wrong way. Leaving the team after getting benched did him no favors, he probably should have grinded it out and played out the season, especially since there were like 7 games left (and a 1st round sweep from the Cavs). I can't blame him for openly saying he's unhappy with playing 15 minutes a game though.
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NovU wrote:He was the source of the problem. He was the superstar that was supposed to make a difference positively. He couldn't, mostly because he didn't have young legs anymore and couldn't find ways to contribute differently from how he's used to playing.
Detroit was fucked with/without AI because loss of Billups was too much.
NovU wrote:Memphis's Conley wasn't better at the time but he didn't require much ball in his hand unlike AI. The team had developing Gay, Randolph, and Mayo as well, enough shot jackers already. AI was a burden because he was too old and wasn't significantly better than any of them.
NovU wrote:In his last year with 76ers, he was a non factor player whatsoever, way under average player in nearly all categories. I don't even understand how that's included in your argument.
Andrew wrote:If it's his last run with the Sixers you're talking about, he started all but one of his 25 games and was playing around 32 minutes per game. There was also a couple of months left when he took his leave of absence. That had to be the final straw, leading other teams to believe that he was done or at the very least, they couldn't rely on him.
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