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Nets having trouble finding role for Ben Simmons
Brooklyn Nets guard Ben Simmons. Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

Nets having trouble finding role for Ben Simmons after trade-deadline moves

To say Brooklyn Nets point forward Ben Simmons isn't the same player he was with the Philadelphia 76ers would be an understatement. Once considered a surefire All-Star and one of the top defensive players in the NBA, the former No. 1 overall pick is now merely a reserve.

The new-look Nets find themselves with a surplus of talented wing defenders after trading away guard Kyrie Irving and forward Kevin Durant, potentially leaving Simmons as the odd man out. Since returning from a knee injury, Simmons has not started for the Nets.

In Monday's 124-106 loss to the Knicks, Simmons logged 13 minutes, the second-lowest he has played this season, finishing with two points, three rebounds and two assists. 

Simmons was relegated to the bench in the fourth quarter, the apparent new norm. Over his last five games, he has averaged 3.63 fourth-quarter minutes.  

Brooklyn's loss snapped its nine-game winning streak against New York, and it was the first time the Knicks have beaten Simmons.  

After the game, Nets head coach Jacque Vaughn acknowledged the difficulty of finding the right lineup to insert Simmons into, given his lack of ability, or interest, in scoring. Vaughn intends to keep experimenting with different lineups.

"Trying to figure out what lineup fits around Ben, what position fits for Ben, how we can make him look good at every opportunity, that's the goal, Vaughn told reporters. "I'm still trying to figure it out. That's on me."

Simmons didn't speak to the media following the game. However, at Monday's shootaround, he admitted it's been "frustrating" trying to click with the new group. 

"Guys have been in and out due to injuries, trades, so there's been a lot of different things that play factors into it," Simmons said." Hopefully, now we get a little bit of a stretch where we can find some rhythm and consistency."

Finding a rhythm when attempting 5.7 shots per game is also difficult. Simmons has always been a pass-and-defense-first type of player, just not to this degree. 

The three-time All-Star’s previous career low in field-goal attempts came in 2020-21, almost double the amount he's taking now. 

On the year, Simmons is averaging seven points, 6.3 rebounds, and 6.1 assists per game, all career worsts. Whether it's a mental block or poor effort, his Nets tenure seems doomed to the same fate as the team's failed Big Three experiment.

According to Jake Fischer of Yahoo Sports, Brooklyn will likely try to trade Simmons in the offseason, but his contract won't make it easier to swing a deal. After this season, Simmons has two years and $78.2 million remaining on his contract. 

Could attaching a few of the first-round draft picks acquired in the Irving and Durant deals to Simmons entice a team to trade for him? Unfortunately for Brooklyn, his stock may have fallen too low for that to happen. 

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