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76ers C Bynum set for season-ending knee surgery PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- The 76ers' Andrew Bynum gamble was a bust. At least, for this season. Philadelphia now has to decide if it will offer the former All-Star center any kind of long-term deal without him ever playing a second for the franchise. Bynum's season is officially over, and he's set for season-ending arthroscopic surgery on both knees Tuesday. He has not played this season because of bone bruises in both of his knees. The 25-year-old is an unrestricted free agent and may never play a game for the Sixers. ''After many months of rehabilitation and consulting with numerous doctors, Andrew and the doctors treating him determined that this is the best course of action at this point,'' general manager Tony DiLeo said Monday night. ''We will continue to monitor and evaluate his status moving forward.'' The arthroscopic surgery will be performed by Dr. David Altchek of the Hospital of Special Surgery in New York. The procedure will clean out loose bodies from within the knees in an attempt to alleviate pain and swelling. Bynum was shut down in training camp as a precaution and the Sixers originally hoped he'd be ready by opening night Oct. 31. Bynum said since training camp he would play this season. But after he experienced swelling in his right knee after a 5-on-5 scrimmage late last month, he acknowledged a return might not be possible. Bynum was acquired from the Los Angeles Lakers as part of a four-team trade and was expected to make the 76ers contenders in the East. Without Bynum, the Sixers have slumped to 26-40 a year after reaching the Eastern Conference semifinals. ''I feel like everybody's been worried about Andrew the whole season,'' All-Star guard Jrue Holiday said. ''It's like, all right, let my man breathe. I guess right now he's going through a tough time. I'm just praying for him and hoping everything's OK.'' He won two NBA titles in seven seasons with the Lakers. Bynum was coming off his best NBA season after averaging career highs with 18.7 points and 11.8 rebounds while making his first All-Star team, starting for the West. He was the NBA's third-leading rebounder and 20th-leading scorer, while also ranking sixth in the league with 1.93 blocked shots per game. Bynum last talked to the media on March 1 and said he would not play in pain or be pressured into playing and risking a potential nine-figure payday. ''I think being healthy is more important than everything else,'' Bynum said. ''If I am healthy, I'll get a deal. I have to be able to play and I need to get to the point with my body where I'm able to play, however long that takes.'' The Sixers can offer Bynum more years and more money than any other team. Bynum was acquired as part of a four-team trade that also saw the Sixers land Jason Richardson. Richardson was shut down after 33 games with knee injuries. The Sixers sent Andre Iguodala to Denver and Nik Vucevic to Orlando as part of the trade. Both players are having solid seasons. Bynum will earn $16.5 million this season without ever playing to the potential the organization expected when they made him the centerpiece of team. The Sixers welcomed Bynum with a public press conference that whipped hundreds of fans into a frenzy. Without playing a game for the Sixers, he said he wanted to make Philadelphia his home - and the team was ready to commit. ''Where do I sign?'' owner Joshua Harris said. ''Show me the contract.'' The Sixers are now left wondering if he'll ever play for them. Rest of the story: Y! SPORTS |
so no more Wii Bowling Wii Tennis? |
"Without Bynum, the Sixers have slumped to 26-40 a year after reaching the Eastern Conference semifinals." I still contend that it was giving up Iguodala that put them here. He was their Mojo. We'll never know for certain now as Bynum never got off the launch pad but I think they would have been in trouble even with a healthy Bynum. |
and the Lakers made out like a bandit as usual.:richb |
The Sixers are still in a pickle as the last line of the article eludes to: "The Sixers are now left wondering if he'll ever play for them." After wining, dining and nursing Bynum this whole year, do they go after him as a free agent and probably have to go max salary even though he hasn't played a game for Philadelphia and both of his knees are on the rebound as well after surgery? I say drop him like a hot rock, cut your losses and look for someone else to bail you out. Bynum is a deadbeat; don't give him any more money and find out the hard way. |
I thought at the time of the trade it made zero sense for the Sixers. The Nuggets I thought made out good because they got Iggy and dumped a horrible contract in Al Harrington all in one. Lakers of course on paper did well because they got Howard. I think I blasted the Magic at the time too. But it was because a lot of those draft picks have too many conditions to them. Looking back now...........The Magic did pretty well because they got back young talent and got I think 3 first and 2 second rounders for a guy who didn't want to be there with only one year left on his deal which they lucked out because he opted in when he didn't have to. Moving Iggy was not really a bad move in my view but they needed to blow up that team. Being in the middle of the pack is the worst place to be with a sports team. It's better to be great or suck bad. I'd rather be the Charlotte Bobcats or New Orleans Hornets this summer versus the 76ers franchise right now to be honest. |
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In other words, play the young guys, and find out who's the future. No real tanking, but minimal old(er) guy playing. They've got ~15 games to see what the under-25 crowd can do. |
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