| Boys’ Basketball Defensive-minded Ivey shows growth with Sixers
By PHIL JASNER
Philadelphia Daily News
The voice is soft. The profile
is low. The work ethic is loud and strong. That's the way it
has always been for Royal Ivey, who left the Milwaukee Bucks
as a free agent to sign a 2-year contract with the 76ers.
“Nothing was ever given to me,
I was always the fifth option, the last man to get picked,” Ivey
said after the Sixers completed preparations for tonight's
preseason opener against the defending NBA champion Boston
Celtics at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, Mass.
“I
just had to work to get better, year to year, day to day,
little by little. It's a work in progress, and I'm still working.”
The
Sixers like the 6-4 Ivey's ability to play both backcourt
positions at both ends of the court, giving them some off-the-bench
versatility they had been lacking.
“Other guys get a reputation
because they're stars,” said
Keith Glass, Ivey's agent. “But I'd say if you canvassed
guards around the league, he'd be at the top of a list of
guys they don't want to guard them.”
Coming into his
fifth NBA season, Ivey holds a modest scoring average of
four points. But the statistic that jumps off the page
is a minuscule 187 turnovers in 3,762 minutes over 263 games;
he committed only 23 turnovers in 73 games with the Hawks
in 2005-06.
Ivey is a defense-oriented guard whose
offensive ability began to emerge last season, when he drained
35 three-pointers after hitting 12 in his first three seasons.
One of last season's triples was a game-decider with 6 seconds
left in a victory over the Washington Wizards.
“Just a
matter of confidence, working on my shot, getting stronger,
staying in the gym, getting the opportunity to play some
2 [shooting guard], which gave me a chance to spot up,” he
said matter-of-factly.
He spent a prep school season at Blair
Academy in New Jersey, but when a plan to attend Northwestern
fell through, he landed at Texas.
He became a 4-year starter,
set a school record for starts with 126, went to four NCAA
Tournaments, making three appearances in the Sweet 16 and
one visit to the Final Four. He was twice named to the Big
12 Conference all-defensive team.
“I was a real late recruit,
sort of a fill-in,” he
said. “They didn't expect much, but I went out there
with my competitive nature and tried to turn it around.”
He
offers some of the key elements president/general manager
Ed Stefanski wanted to inject into the refurbished roster.
In a game against the Houston Rockets last season, Ivey bounced
from defending the 6-8 Tracy McGrady to defending 6-foot
guard Aaron Brooks.
“I like Ivey, [because] he's an
aggressive on-the-ball defender; he takes passing lanes away,
which I like, and, of course, he can make a shot,” Sixers
coach Maurice Cheeks said. “I like kids who are attentive
to the defensive end of the floor. That's his forté.”
Six
shots
Maurice Cheeks said he will be “looking for our
cohesiveness to get on track” when they face the Celtics
tonight. “We've
been changing lineups [in practice], putting guys here, putting
guys there, and that's what I'm looking for, different guys
that are going to be in the lineup. Everyone's not going to
play, but I want to see Elton [Brand] and those guys on the
floor playing in a game situation” . . . Kareem Rush,
who suffered a sprained ankle Monday, did some light shooting
but did not practice yesterday. Cheeks termed him a game-time
decision . . . Comcast-Spectacor president Peter Luukko, a
UMass alumnus and a member of the board for the school's sports
management program, will be in the Mullins Center tonight.
He donated tickets for 100 students and has invited the other
members of the board as guests. *
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