<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'></p> Tomorrow is the 1-year anniversary of one of the biggest and most controversial trades in Sixers history. Whether it is a time to celebrate, vent or merely reminisce is in the eyes of the beholder. The partnership between the franchise and the barely 6-foot, four-time NBA scoring champion wasn't just frayed. It was broken. Billy King, then the Sixers president/general manager, finalized a deal to send Allen Iverson and forward Ivan McFarlin to the Denver Nuggets for point guard Andre Miller, forward Joe Smith and his expiring contract, and two first-round draft choices. -- Philadelphia Daily News</p> </p> <div class="txt-mod"> [*]"I know they didn't get enough," Iverson, 32, said. "In my heart, they know they didn't get enough. The fans in Philadelphia know they didn't get enough. ... (The 76ers) just wanted me out of there." "If I was still in Philadelphia, I don't think they would be in the predicament that they're in right now," Iverson said. "The way the East is, I would think that we would be right there in the hunt. . . . I look at (Philadelphia's) games right now, and it looks like a rec league game or an AAU game when you see the attendance there. It just looks dull." -- Rocky Mountain News</p> </p> [*]Question: How do you look back on the trade now that it's been one year? Iverson: "I'm so comfortable and set in with where I'm at. My family is comfortable. My (four) kids are in school. My wife is going through her everyday rituals, things she has to do to take care of her family I'm on a certain schedule. It's just like being in Philadelphia, but I'm here. I have a routine ... and I'm used to that. I'm used to being a Nugget. That's what I am." -- Rocky Mountain News</p> </div></div></p>