Dwyane Wade first met Ben Simmons a few years ago. He canât remember exactly when, but what he does remember was that it was for a summer workout, and that LeBron was there, too, and that Simmons at the time was a skilled but shy Australian kid who had just recently come over to the United States to play high level high school basketball.
And also this:
âYou could see the way he looked at guys like ourselves and how we worked, he was taking notes, mental notes,â Wade recalled prior to a recent practice in his first-round playoff series against Simmonsâ Philadelphia 76ers, a series in which Simmons carved up Wadeâs Heat and became only the fifth rookie in NBA history to record a postseason triple-double. âTo see him a few years later and see where he is in his game, itâs impressive. Heâs on a different level.â
During that same series, Simmonsâ teammate, veteran guard JJ Redick, summed up Simmonsâ game similarly, saying: âItâs almost become expected now that heâs going to go average a triple-double.â
Thatâs barely hyperbole. Simmons finished his rookie season averaging 15.8 points, 8.2 assists and 8.1 rebounds per game, all while helping lead the Sixers to a 52-win season and a first-round series victory over the Miami Heat.
As far as rookies go, what Simmons did in his first year in the League is nearly unprecedented. Thereâs the Oscar Robertson-like numbers and the All-NBA-level defense and the point guard skills and poise and feel. All that packed into a ripped 6-10 frame and you canât help but think of previous and current one-name greatsâyou know, guys like Magic and LeBron.
But most of all, thereâs that thing you see while watching Simmons play, whether in person or on TV. If you’ve watched him you’ve no doubt recognized it. The clichĂ© would be to label it the âIt Factor,â but doing so would be an oversimplification.
Simmons is both aggressive and composed, both rousing and repetitious, and he is forever effortlessly walking the tight rope that connects these two worlds. Itâs a trait rarely seen in players, let alone rookies (or, for you Donovan Mitchell-loving sticklers out there, second-year guys playing NBA games for the first time), and yet itâs the foundation of Simmonsâ basketball DNA. And itâs all because heâs chasing something different than most.
âThe thing that drives me is just me wanting to be the best and get different accolades and win championships,â Simmons tells SLAM in April. âJust push and see how far I can go in this League and make a name for myself.â
Heâs asked why thatâs important to him.
âBecause I can,â he says.
Simmons, in other words, is chasing something that only a few athletes ever find within their grasp.
Heâs chasing greatness.
Forget, for a moment, your opinion on the whole Trust The Process ordeal and whether youâre a Sam Hinkie devotee or believe that he and his acolytes have cheated the game.
All that is in the past now. The Process is complete, and the Sixers are now the team of the future, and thatâs because of their two stars of the future, Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons, who appear set to, respectively, play the roles of Philadelphiaâs Kareem and Magic.
Thatâs not to say that Simmonsâ path toward that future is a clear one. Heâll be the first to acknowledge that the NBA is hard, and that being a star at that level, and bringing your A-game every night, can deplete even the strongest of men.
âThe hardest part this season was probably staying mentally prepared all the time,â Simmons says. âItâs a long seasonâitâs draining.â
And yet, somehow, Simmons managed to get better as the season inched on. His numbers spiked, and the team won, and as the year went on he became even more sure and comfortable orchestrating the offense and getting where he wanted on the floor whenever he wanted. Talk to Sixers coaches and theyâll rave about his poise and IQ. Theyâll tell you how theyâve never seen a player his age possess not only the skills but also all the stuff that goes into the constructing of a star.
Take, for example, the way Simmons has gone about leveraging a perceived weakness into a strength.
Simmonsâ lone flaw is his lack of a jump shot. Itâs not that he doesnât make many shots from deep; itâs that he rarely shoots from beyond 15 feet. Opposing coaches have been well aware of this all year and so Simmons spent his rookie season watching defenders sag off of him, daring him to launch.
Itâs a tactic thatâs crippled a myriad of young players throughout NBA history. It can sap a playerâs confidence and aggressiveness. Even all-time greats like LeBron James have, at times, struggled navigating these types of schemes.
Yet Simmons, from his first possession of his first game, refused to give in as his opponents attempted to dictate his moves. Instead, he spent the year standing tall, like a quarterback in the pocket, and firing lasers to open teammates, or punishing defenders for providing him with a runway to take off from.
âItâs hard for guys to stop me driving down the lane. [Iâm] 6-10, 240 [pounds], fast pace,â Simmons says, before adding the key part: âI stick to what Iâm pretty good at.â
How does a 21-year-old dominate the NBA in his first season as a pro? By recognizing what it is heâs chasing, yes, but also by understanding what his strengths are and doing his best to stick with them.
Thatâs the kind of thing that might sound simple. But itâs a trait rarely seen in men Simmonsâ age.
Hereâs a fun stat you probably donât know: During the regular season only one player (Russell Westbrook, because of course) recovered more loose balls than Ben Simmons, according to player tracking data compiled by the NBA. And while Loose Balls Recovered may not be the sexiest of categories, that a player of Simmonsâ caliber, in his first NBA season, meaning exhausted from all the games and travel and more, would so willingly hit the floor so frequently is telling.
It shows that Simmons isnât just preaching what he thinks people want to hear when he professes to be chasing more than individual accoladesâthough heâs made clear that this seasonâs Rookie of the Year award is an honor he believes belongs to him. It shows why Sixers coach Brett Brown blushes whenever Simmonsâ name is mentioned, and why Simmonsâ teammates adore playing alongside him.
Says Simmons, when presented with this data: âI think it shows that every possession counts.â
And hereâs another obscure stat, another number that illustrates how little Simmons cares about racking up numbers, a trait not often seen among players who rack up numbers the way he does: Eight times this year, according to that same data compiled by the NBA, Simmons attempted a shot from beyond half court with the game clock ticking down. This might sound like nothing, but in an age when the majority of players will sneak in an extra dribble right before the buzzer so that their heave is late and, thus, not counted against their shooting percentage, habits like these are telling.
They show that heâs not just talk, and that winning is truly the most important thing to him. They illustrate why Simmons is the future.
Greatness, after all, doesnât take plays off. That Simmons already recognizes this is why heâs so likely to achieve what he seeks.
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Yaron Weitzman is a writer living in New York. Follow him on Twitter @YaronWeitzman.
Portraits by @pushnik_photo, action photo via Getty Images