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HAMPTON

Iverson traded by 76ers to Nuggets

06:00 PM EST on Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- A day after losing one superstar for a month, the Denver Nuggets got an even bigger one -- Allen Iverson.

The four-time scoring champion was traded by the Philadelphia 76ers to the Nuggets, a person in the NBA with knowledge of the deal told The Associated Press.

The trade would send Andre Miller, Joe Smith and two 2007 first-round picks to the 76ers for Iverson and Ivan McFarlin, two people familiar with the trade told the AP, speaking on condition of anonymity because the deal was not announced.

A news conference was scheduled for Tuesday evening in Philadelphia.

NBA scoring leader Carmelo Anthony was suspended for 15 games because of a weekend brawl between the Nuggets and New York Knicks. Iverson now takes his 31.2 scoring average to Denver and ends 10 turbulent seasons with the franchise that made him the No. 1 overall pick in 1996.

Iverson, a seven-time All-Star and four-time scoring champion, transformed the 76ers from lottery losers to contenders, though he couldn't bring home an NBA title to this championship-starved city. He came close in 2001, when the 76ers lost to the Los Angeles Lakers in the NBA finals, but since then the team has fallen from the elite, missing the playoffs twice in the last three seasons.

This year is worse, with the 76ers on an 11-game losing streak. Only Memphis (5-19) has a worse record than the 76ers (5-18), who are winless since Nov. 24.

Now the 31-year-old Iverson's chase for a coveted championship will continue in the Western Conference.

Iverson's relationship with the only team he's ever played for was irreversibly broken once he asked for a trade two weeks ago. Iverson had just been fined for missing a team function and his relationship with coach Maurice Cheeks had deteriorated to where the cornrowed point guard didn't want to play for him anymore.

The 76ers sent Iverson home for good after holding him out of a morning shootaround. Chairman Ed Snider said then the All-Star guard had "probably" played his last game in Philly. His nameplate was removed, his locker was cleaned out, and his dazzling highlights were edited out of a pregame video package.

No matter the drama in Iverson's life, it rarely affected his performance on the court. Even this season, with Iverson unhappy and the 76ers stuck in last place, he still is second in the league in scoring (behind Anthony) and averaged 42.7 minutes and 2.2 steals.

He's averaging 28.1 points, 6.1 assists and 2.3 steals in 697 career games. Iverson scored a career-high 60 points against Orlando on Feb. 12, 2005.

But as dynamic Iverson has been, and as thrilling as it can be to watch the 6-foot tattooed bundle of energy play, only twice did he lead the Sixers out of the second round of the playoffs. And Philadelphia was only a modest 355-342 (.509 winning percentage) with Iverson in the lineup for regular-season games.

At his best, he has been the ultimate gamer; a hustling, hard-charging MVP who became one of the most popular players in the league. His No. 3 jersey was always one of the top sellers.

Only Minnesota's Kevin Garnett has been with one team longer than Iverson among active players.

For as much as he thrilled the 76ers on the court, he gave them nearly as many headaches off it.

With his rants about practice, his run-ins with former coach Larry Brown, his arrests and failed rap career, Iverson was often a magnet for trouble away from the court.

Iverson and Brown were a volcanic combination during the six seasons they spent together in Philly. Brown criticized Iverson for taking too many shots and accused him of being selfish at times.

Iverson often arrived late for practice or missed practices for various reasons. In one infamous blowup at the end of the 2002 season he repeated "talking about practice" nearly 20 times during a rambling monologue. He now pokes fun at the memorable meltdown.

Brown and Iverson eventually reconciled and Brown named his former guard co-captain of the 2004 Olympic men's basketball team.

While some have predicted his all-out style means he'll wear out sooner rather than later, Iverson still ricochets around the court like a pinball and slamming to the court after seemingly every basket. He had 15 40-plus point games in 2005-06, including his 10th-career 50-point game.

Iverson's name was always in trade rumors, but the guard out of Georgetown nicknamed "The Answer," has always publicly stated he wanted to end his career in Philadelphia. He's due the rest of his $18 million this season, and a combined $40 million through the 2008-09 season.

I truly wanted to retire a 76er," Iverson said after he was banished by the 76ers on Dec. 8. "I appreciate that in my 11 years in Philadelphia, the fans have always stood by me, supported me, and gone to bat for me."

Iverson's years in Philadelphia were marred by arrests in 1997 for carrying a concealed weapon and for possession of marijuana and in 2002 over a domestic dispute with his wife. He was sentenced to community service in 1997 and all charges dropped against him five years later.

Iverson also never released his rap album, which drew criticism from civil rights groups and earned him a reprimand from NBA commissioner David Stern because of its offensive lyrics.

While Iverson's maybe a half-step slower than he was 10 years ago, that's still a step quicker than most players in the league. He still was too quick to guard 1-on-1 and beat teams with the same killer crossover he once used in his rookie season that dusted Michael Jordan.

Perhaps in Denver, he won't have to shoulder the scoring load like he always did in Philadelphia. He had little success playing with a legitimate No. 2 scorer, with Glen Robinson, Jerry Stackhouse, and Tim Thomas among a slew of players brought in that underachieved or never fit in while trying to find consistent shots with Iverson still running the show.

The 76ers can only hope trading this superstar doesn't end up as lopsided as their last two franchise-shifting deals. No one in Philly can forget the 76ers only getting Jeff Hornacek, Andrew Lang and Tim Perry for Charles Barkley in 1992. And the 76ers traded Wilt Chamberlain to the Lakers in 1968 for Jerry Chambers, Archie Clark and Darrall Imhoff.

(Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press.  All Rights Reserved.)

 

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