By Annie Ross
Jahlil Okafor played in last night’s Rising Stars game during NBA All-Star weekend, and there are no Sixers on the roster for tomorrow night’s main event.
But CEO Jerry Colangelo (above) is in Toronto, and he is looking to add experience and voices, Colangelo while not saying specifically what that would mean for analytics-driven GM Sam Hinkie’s role.
“I think that any time you have an opportunity to enhance your organization, and you bring people in to accomplish that, you consider it. Big time. You really do,” Colangelo said. “And I think in our case we have a very bright young guy in Sam Hinkie, who holds the title of president and GM, and in his space he’s really strong. One could build a case for saying you’d like to have more people added who have experience in other aspects of those jobs. That’s the kind of conversation that’s going on.
“The first step was me being asked to come in, because of my experience, to maybe help and add to the mix. And the question you’re asking is, ‘is there a need or requirement for someone else?’ Maybe. Probably. That’s all being discussed….
“I’m just saying adding people to the front office. And that’s not demeaning who we have. You want to be strong. If your goal is you want to be in the Finals… you have to take all the steps required to become that. I’d like to hear people say ‘they’ve got the strongest front office in the league.’ That’s a goal. That’s an objective. So it’s going to require more people to make that happen. That’s all.”
This doesn’t mean the Sixers will completely abandon Hinkie’s draft-for-the-future plan — they likely will have three, maybe four, first round picks this season, and multiple ones next season as well. The Sixers aren’t going to just trade those away to become average. That’s not smart. But they have already shown how some experienced, veteran players on the court — Ish Smith, in particular – can lead to significant improvement.
The goal is to do the same with their front office.
That style of management — listening to a diversity of opinions and voices — can certainly work, not just in basketball but in any business. However, at the end of the day, someone has coalesced those voices and have the hammer to make a decision based on those debates.
“If there’s a pecking order, it’s going to start with ownership and it’s going to funnel down,” Colangelo said.
The question is who Sixers owner Joshua Harris gives the hammer to? Colangelo seems to have it now.
Bottom line is expect more changes in the Sixers front office.
“I don’t think we’re where we might be six months from now. I don’t know,” Colangelo said.