NBA: Former Duke star now a 76er

Published 12:00 am Thursday, July 10, 2008

By Dan Gelston
Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA ó Elton Brand believed his career would end as an L.A. Story.
Forced by an ultimatum Brand would not accept, the would-be movie mogul and two-time NBA All-Star instead opted to take his production east and see his name roll on the credits of Philadelphia’s roster.
Brand and the 76ers made it official Wednesday on a five-year deal worth a reported $82 million, a shrewd move that promptly turned the emerging franchise into Eastern Conference contenders.
“I’m prepared to do some big things this year,” Brand said.
For that kind of commitment, Brand should be ready.
Last week, Brand opted out of his contract with the Clippers, but Los Angeles was expected to make a strong push to re-sign him. Instead, he spurned the Clippers once agent David Falk said he was offered a “take it or leave it” contract on June 30. The deal was nearly $20 million less than what Brand signed for in Philadelphia.
“My intention was to try and work something out with the Clippers,” Brand said.
Falk said the greater insult came when he was told that Clippers owner Donald Sterling said he would be happy with the 29-year-old Brand’s decision either way.
Messages seeking comment left with the Clippers were not immediately returned.
Falk also said the Golden State Warriors offered more total money ó about $90 million ó but Brand felt the 76ers were a better fit.
Sixers president Ed Stefanski was on the phone with Falk shortly after midnight on July 1 ó the first day teams could begin negotiating with free agents.
Philadelphia wanted to land a big man this summer and had Hawks restricted free agent forward Josh Smith in town last week for a visit, but he left without being presented with an offer sheet. Smith will look elsewhere, or possibly stay in Atlanta.
The 76ers entered the summer $11 million under the salary cap, but even that wasn’t enough to land a franchise-shifting free agent like Brand. Philadelphia was able to swing a deal with Minnesota that sent forward Rodney Carney and a future No. 1 pick to the Timberwolves as part of a trade that cleared an additional $2 million in salary cap space.
The trade allowed the Sixers to offer a starting salary in the $14-million range. Brand had $16.4 million left on deal he signed in 2003.
“All we kept saying was we needed an opportunity, and that opportunity came,” Stefanski said.
Brand’s arrival signals the Sixers are ready to become a threat to contend in the East. He should immediately bolster the frontcourt, and his career numbers of 20.3 points and 10.2 rebounds over nine seasons make him one of only four active players to average a double-double.
However, Brand played in only eight games last season because of an Achilles’ tendon injury. Brand said Wednesday night he was 100 percent and ready to go.
“I won’t let anybody down,” he said.
Brand was the No. 1 overall pick in the 1999 draft out of Duke and spent two seasons with the Bulls before he was traded to the Clippers. Brand had tried to leave Los Angeles once before as a restricted free agent. He signed an offer sheet with Miami, but returned to the Clippers once the deal was matched.
Brand also founded Gibraltar Films and served as co-producer on a movie that starred Christian Bale.
The Sixers had been pointing toward this summer since they traded 2001 NBA MVP Allen Iverson in 2006 and decided to rebuild. They started clearing contracts ó notably last season’s trade of Kyle Korver to Utah ó to have enough cash under the cap to pursue a marquee free agent. Once Brand surprisingly rejected the Clippers, the 76ers had their man.