“I just let him know I’m that pit bull in his yard, and if anybody
tries to intrude, I’m going to be the one that’s going to bite and protect
his home,’’ Iverson said.
But Iverson was also upset (“No question’’) with Brown’s going public
with his comments.
“When you lose, there’s a whole bunch of room for negativity,’’ he
said. “I don’t feed into all this stuff. I don’t do no talking. I don’t
run my mouth. If coach has any issues with me, I believe they are issues I
can control, things I can get a grip on.’’
Q. How important was it that Iverson was the only Sixer to skip
Saturday’s exit meeting with Brown?
A. Brown said he was “crushed.’’ But Brown also said that he and
Iverson had not met individually immediately after any of the four
previous seasons. Sometimes, a player feels a meeting the day after a
disappointing conclusion to a season is the wrong time to meet with the
coach. Getting together yesterday might well have been a good idea for
both parties.
Q. Iverson professed his love for Brown, but what exactly is it
that Iverson loves about him?
A. “Him,’’ Iverson said. “As a man. That’s what I care about
Larry Brown. The man. The coach, that’s totally different.’’ Iverson
called Brown “the best coach in the world I ain’t never met a coach better
than Larry Brown. Never in my life. That doesn’t have nothing to do with
why I’m in here right now (meeting with reporters).’’
That could have been a reference to Brown’s old-school ways, demanding
that everyone practice, that everyone be on time. Beyond that, Iverson
thinks he is being singled out, not being treated as a franchise player.
That is why he shrugs off that mantle.
Q. What was really troubling Iverson?
A. He was furious that his 7-year-old daughter, Tiaura, had been
bombarded by friends at school, asking whether her daddy was going to be
traded or why people didn’t like her daddy or why people were saying nasty
things about her daddy.
Above all else, he holds dear the privacy and happiness of his wife and
two children. Any controversy that swirls around him and somehow affects
them, he considers a huge infringement.
Q. Beyond that, what was eating at Iverson’s soul?
A. He explained that, in the course of the season, he had lost
his best friend, his team had been eliminated in the first round of the
playoffs after going all the way to the Finals the previous season, and
rather than being able to go home and cope with all of that, he had to
face another round of questions from prying reporters.
Rahsaan Langeford, his closest friend, was shot to death outside his
home in Newport News, Va., last October. Iverson was a pallbearer at the
funeral. During the season, Iverson wore a pad on his left elbow inscribed
“Ra,’’ for Langeford. He would touch that pad with his right hand before
every free throw he attempted.
Iverson has maintained a close relationship with many of his friends
from his early days growing up in Virginia, but dislikes them being
referred to as “a posse.’’ Several of his friends attended the news
conference.
Q. How did he feel about the speculation that, because he had
not followed Brown’s precepts of practicing and being on time, he could be
traded?
A. Iverson openly challenged the concept, saying that, “If you
trade somebody, you trade him to make the team better.’’ But to even
entertain the possibility of trading him because he didn’t practice
enough, or missed practices, or wasn’t on time, he found ludicrous.
After completing exit meetings Saturday with every player other than
Iverson, Brown said that anyone who didn’t follow the rules wasn’t going
to be here.
That immediately spawned media and Internet speculation about whether
the Sixers could ever receive equal value for their star. None of this
speculation ever came from the Sixers. Still, Iverson seemed hurt and
angry that any of this was even being discussed.
Q. And wasn’t there also the issue of being termed a “franchise
player’’?
A. “I don’t feel like I’m the franchise player, because — look
at this press conference, look at what we’re talking about,’’ Iverson
said. “I’m the best player; I feel I’m the best player. I believe that. I
feel like I’m the best player in the world. But franchise players don’t go
through this. Franchise players’ daughters don’t have to go to school and
hear, ‘Is your daddy coming back?’; ‘What’s going on with your daddy and
coach Brown?’She’s 7 years old and that’s what she’s got to deal with. It
hurt, because I know I’m better than that.’’
Iverson believes that he plays harder than anyone and that whether he
practices should not be an issue. He laughed at the suggestion that he
could make his teammates better by practicing.
“How the hell can I make my teammates better by practicing?’’ he asked.
“They’re supposed to be used to playing with me anyway. So my game is
going to deteriorate if I don’t practice with those guys? Is my game going
to get worse?’’
He scoffed at the suggestion that additional conditioning and training
could help him shoot a better percentage and, in so doing, help his team
win more games. He insisted he “might have missed one practice this
year.’’
Q. Even though Iverson, over and over, has said he wants to be a
Sixer, there was a published report that had him telling friends in the
last few days, “I’m gone.’’ What about that?
A. “You think I want to leave here?’’ he said sharply. “It ain’t
a whole bunch to that. You ain’t hearing it from nobody else, you’re
hearing it from me.’’ He followed that, in response to another question,
by saying, “Hell, yeah, I’m coming back.’’ But he laughed derisively when
he was asked whether he had asked Brown whether he would be back with the
Sixers.
“I ain’t goin’ nowhere, and Larry Brown ain’t goin’ nowhere,’’ he said.
“Yeah, he told me that. Both (things).’’
Q. Was Iverson on time for the news conference?
A. By my watch, he walked in 5 minutes early, disappeared
briefly into the locker room to speak with Sixers officials, then came
right back out.
Until someone shows me different, I’ll take that as a good
sign.
END