Grainy cell phone footage turned prized rookie Jahlil Okafor into a Twitter trending topic for the wrong reasons on Thanksgiving, but it should also encourage the Philadelphia 76ers to revise at least one aspect of their controversial, build-from-the-bottom and hope-for-lottery-luck strategy.
Whether you believe the 76ers have been making a mockery of the NBA with their blatant quest for losses, or you trust the process, there is no denying the downside of the plan for the experiment's guinea pigs – leaving youngsters to fend for themselves with little guidance or direction could stunt any perceived progress.
On Thursday, TMZ Sports released footage of Okafor in an apparent altercation Wednesday night with a heckler outside of a club in Boston, where his team lost its 16th straight game to start the season. Okafor, the third pick of last June's draft, is apparently spotted shouting an obscenity ("We got money, you broke [expletives]"), shoving the man into a car and eventually punching him to the ground while holding back another man.
The reason Okafor lost his cool? According to TMZ Sports, the unidentified man yelled, "The 76ers suck!"
Okafor hasn't won a game since helping Duke win a national championship April 5. That was back when winning was a formality for Okafor and the weight of being the best, most highly scrutinized player in his class was met with a nonchalance that suggested maturity beyond his teenage years. But Okafor needed only one month of losing with an organization participating in a questionable rebuilding plan to make a mistake that he won't be able to easily escape in a social media era in which errors caught on cell phone cameras get played out in endless loops.
The 76ers' last win occured before Okafor's – March 25 – as they dropped their final 10 games last season and are attempting to avoid an NBA record for consecutive defeats with 27 Friday in Houston. If Philadelphia keeps losing through Saturday in Memphis, it will then have a chance to set a new mark with 19 consecutive losses to start a season Tuesday at home against the Los Angeles Lakers. Okafor is having an otherwise fine rookie campaign, leading all first-year players with 18.4 points per game while grabbing a respectable 8.1 rebounds. But the failures of the mess surrounding Okafor prompted a Duke fan to create a #SaveJahlil video that went viral this week. The video showed several black-and-white lowlights of the 76ers' ineptitude with depressing Sarah McLachlan music playing in the background. In the last scene, a frustrated Okafor waddled down a hallway and leaned against a wall, seemingly unable to handle all of the losing.
While the #SaveJahlil video could elicit laughter or sadness, depending on your vantage point, the episode captured on TMZ is much more troubling – and not just for Okafor, still three weeks shy of his 20th birthday.
The 76ers haven't had a player older than 25 step on the court this season. Luc Mbah a Moute, now with the Los Angeles Clippers, is the only player older than 27 to appear in at least 20 games the past two seasons. Nearly three dozen NBA players have appeared in more career games than the combined total of the 12 players who have played for Philadelphia this season. Carl Landry is the team's oldest player at 32 but he has yet to make his season debut, putting too much pressure on Brett Brown and his coaching staff to teach the kids what it takes to be professional.
Philadelphia hasn't hidden its desire to lose big now to win big later, but it shouldn't just view veterans as salary-cap holds or a means to acquire more second-round picks. The Minnesota Timberwolves finished with the league's worst record last season but invested in expediting the development of No. 1 overall pick Karl-Anthony Towns, reigning Rookie of the Year Andrew Wiggins and fellow first-round pick Zach LaVine by bringing in aging vets Kevin Garnett, Tayshaun Prince and Andre Miller to help serve as examples on and off the court.
Some of Okafor's peers from the past draft have landed in situations with ready-made, veteran, all-star assistance. D'Angelo Russell is in Los Angeles with Kobe Bryant. Kristaps Porzingis has Carmelo Anthony in New York. Okafor's Duke former teammate, Justise Winslow, has Dwyane Wade in Miami. Okafor has … Robert Covington? Isaiah Canaan? Kendall Marshall?
Earlier this week, Winslow was asked how Okafor was dealing with defeat and he replied, "It's tough. Obviously, their organization is going through something different than us, but he's a winner. I'm sure he'll figure it out. He'll find a way to stay positive. Obviously, it's not the record he wants, but I'm sure in the coming years or this season, they'll figure some things out and get going in a positive direction."
Through his one notable misstep thus far, Okafor might inspire the necessary change in Philadelphia. Having seasoned players around won't prevent kids from making mistakes altogether, but the TMZ video should serve as a reminder that the long-term development of the 76ers might be enhanced if a chaperone or two were around to help the youngsters deal with getting their heads beat in.
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