Andrew Wiggins has been in Philadelphia for the last three days, meeting with the 76ers.

We know this because he has been seen walking to and from a black SUV to the team’s practice facility at the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, so he is either working out for the team with the No. 3 pick in next week’s NBA draft or he has decided to leave basketball to pursue classes in the medical field.

This is pretty much all we know, however, because the Sixers under general manager Sam Hinkie continue to employ a draconian media relations policy. It’s not the Sixers’ refusal to make players who come in for workouts available to reporters, as they have since Hinkie arrived last year, that is absurd. It’s the measures the organization is willing to employ to enforce it.

The last couple of days have gone something like this, according to people who were there: Hearing that Wiggins would be in town, beat writers showed up at PCOM on Monday hoping the team might make an exception for the highest-profile prospect to be on the Sixers’ radar during Hinkie’s tenure. Not only were the reporters denied access to Wiggins, they were effectively quarantined in a parking garage, then across the street, after they were informed by security that the public sidewalk outside the facility was off limits.

A day later, a team representative apologized to reporters, offering them doughnuts and water as a peace offering. Yet Wiggins still would not be made available to the media. After his workout, he was whisked away in the black SUV once again.

To all this, there is really only one thing to say to the Sixers: Grow up.