NBA Team Culture
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NBA Team Culture
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Re: NBA Team Culture
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- Junior
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Re: NBA Team Culture
The 76ers culture is building a strong development program with players who going to do the work necessary to succeed. Players such as Ricky Council have great skills but are not considered the best prospects to succeed. Dedication and hard work, preparation and mental awareness are the foundations. Having or developing a good basketball IQ is imperative. Ricky Council did not prepare his mind to be better and do the extra effort that is required. Justin Edwards is a good example of exceeding and learning within the program. Although Edwards has not arrived as a very good NBA player yet he is on the journey to get it done.
Re: NBA Team Culture
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Re: NBA Team Culture
The culture thus far has been Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons, not exactly a staple of success is it...
Re: NBA Team Culture
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- RealGM
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Re: NBA Team Culture
I think if things go wrong for Embiid this year, this is his last year here. The Maxey, Edgecombe, McCain vibes are high and they prob won’t want to deal with Embiid being a downer anymore. The feeling will likely be mutual with Embiid.
Re: NBA Team Culture
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- RealGM
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Re: NBA Team Culture
Negrodamus wrote:I think if things go wrong for Embiid this year, this is his last year here. The Maxey, Edgecombe, McCain vibes are high and they prob won’t want to deal with Embiid being a downer anymore. The feeling will likely be mutual with Embiid.
I certainly hope so.
Re: NBA Team Culture
- 76ciology
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Re: NBA Team Culture
Our team culture is like growing up in a family where the parents say, “Only the kids who finish at the top of the class get to stay.” And they’re always on the lookout for that perfect straight-A kid at school child. So the kids stop seeing each other as siblings, they see each other as threats. They don’t form real bonds, because anyone could be gone next year and they got so competitive that each one wants to be alpha, the favorite child who gets all the benefits of being one. And they stop trusting the parents too, because deep down, the parents are the ones who’ll decide which child stays and which one will get discarded. So everyone ends up focusing on themselves, not for the good of the family, but to make sure they’re not the one left behind.
And even the kid who does rise to the top, the one who survives and earns the praise, ends up shaped by that same system. He’s been trained to prioritize himself, to win alone, to protect what he’s earned. So when the family finally wants to come together and build something real, he can’t flip the switch. He doesn’t know how to bond with others. The very process that helped him survive also messed up his psychology.
And even the kid who does rise to the top, the one who survives and earns the praise, ends up shaped by that same system. He’s been trained to prioritize himself, to win alone, to protect what he’s earned. So when the family finally wants to come together and build something real, he can’t flip the switch. He doesn’t know how to bond with others. The very process that helped him survive also messed up his psychology.
There’s never been a time in history when we look back and say that the people who were censoring free speech were the good guys.
Re: NBA Team Culture
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- RealGM
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Re: NBA Team Culture
Nearly twenty years later and I'm still trying to figure out how Mark Madsen had a nine year career in the league.