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To: Eric L who wrote (96)4/17/2022 12:04:33 PM
From: Eric L  Respond to of 122
 
Stats from the Sixers Round 1, Game 1 Playoff Game





nbcsports.com

Tyrese Maxey has been a human stat machine the entire second half of the season, and Saturday night was no different. He was better than ever.

Maxey, the 76ers’ high-flying 21-year-old guard, put on a historic performance in the 76ers’ 131-111 win over the Raptors in Game 1 of their Eastern Conference first-round series at the Wells Fargo Center.

Maxey scored more points in 12 minutes of the third quarter (21) than his predecessor, Ben Simmons, scored in a combined 100 minutes in the last three full games of last year’s conference semifinal series against the Hawks (19), the last games Simmons played.

Here’s our 10 crazy, ridiculous and unreal Maxey and 76ers stats from Game 1.

ONE OF THE YOUNGEST EVER: At 21 years, 163 days, Tyrese is the 3rd-youngest player in NBA postseason history with a 38-point game. Magic Johnson scored 42 for the Lakers vs. the 76ers in the 1980 Finals at 20 years, 276 years old, and LeBron James had consecutive games of 41, 38 and 45 points, all against the Wizards in the Cavs’ 2006 first-round series against Washington, all between 21 years and 119 days and 21 years 124 days. Maxey is the 13th player in 76ers history with 38 points in a playoff game and the first other than Joel Embiid since Allen Iverson did it 11 times between 2000 and 2003.

21 YEARS OLD, 21 POINTS: Maxey’s 21-point third quarter makes him the youngest player with a 21-point postseason quarter in the last 26 seasons, which is as far back as the Stathead quarter scoring database goes. The youngest player previously since the start of the 1996-97 playoffs with a 21-point quarter in the playoffs was Donovan Mitchell of the Jazz, who scored 22 points in the third quarter against the Thunder in the 2018 Western Conference first round at 21 years, 232 days, or about two months older than Maxey is now. The only other 76er ever with a 21-point quarter is Iverson, who scored 26 in the fourth quarter at Milwaukee in the 2001 Eastern Conference Finals. He scored 46 in the game. Maxey scored more points in the third quarter than his previous career postseason scoring high (16).

CRAZY SHOOTING: Despite missing his last two shots as he made a bid for a 40-point game, Maxey shot 67 percent on 14-for-21 from the field. He’s the youngest player in NBA history to score 38 points in a postseason game where he shot 67 percent from the field. The only player in 76ers history to score at least 38 points in a playoff game and shoot 67 percent from the field is Charles Barkley, who had 39 points in a first-round game in 1987 and shot 68 percent from the field on 13-for-19.

AND THAT’S NOT ALL: Maxey also became the first 76er ever with 38 points and no turnovers in a playoff game. Only three 76ers have ever done that in the regular season – Jeff Hornacek in 1992, Iverson three times from 2000 through 2005 and Jimmy Butler in 2018. Here’s what Maxey’s third quarter looked like: 7-for-8 from the field, 2-for-2 from 3, 5-for-5 from the foul line and one rebound.

WHY DOES A.I.’S NAME KEEP COMING UP? One last Maxey stat: He’s only the fourth 76er since 1997 with 23 points in the second half of a playoff game. Iverson did it seven times – his most was 33 against the Bucks in 2001 – and Seth Curry (25), Embiid (24) and J.J. Redick (23) each did it once.

YOU CAN’T STOP US: The 76ers’ 131 points are their 11th-most in franchise history in the postseason and their most in a Game 1 of any series since they beat the San Francisco Warriors 141-135 in overtime in April of 1967 – just five years after the Warriors left Philly for the Bay Area. Wilt Chamberlain scored just 16 points that night, but Hal Greer had 32, Wali Jones 30 and Billy Cunningham 26.

RIDICULOUS LONG-RANGE SHOOTING: Even with Danny Green going 0-for-5 from 3, the 76ers as a team shot 50 percent from the stripe on 16-for-32. That’s the 3rd-highest in franchise postseason history on 30 or more attempts. The 76ers shot 53 percent on 18-for-34 in a win over the Heat in a 2018 first-round game at American Airlines Arena, and they shot 52 percent in a win over Washington last year in the first round on 17-for-33.

THIS OUGHTA BE IMPOSSIBLE: The 76ers committed three total turnovers, and one of them came with 3.9 seconds left when Isaiah Joe intentionally let the shot clock expire. That’s the fewest turnovers the 76ers have committed in a playoff game going back to 1984, as far as Stathead tracks team turnover totals. The previous low was five in their win over the Bucks in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals in 2001. The last time the 76ers committed just three turnovers in any game was in a win over the Clippers in 2010. The last team to commit just three turnovers in a playoff game was the 2018 Cavs, who had three in a win in Toronto in 2018.

HARDEN IS AN ASSIST MACHINE: James Harden’s 14 assists are 8th-most in 76ers postseason history and it was the first performance with 14 assists in a 20-point game since Iverson had 37 and 15 in a 2005 first-round win over the Pistons. Harden has only played in 22 games with the 76ers this year, but his six games with at least 14 assists are third-most by any 76er in a season. Wilt had nine in 1968 and Mo Cheeks had seven in 1988. Incredibly, Harden has the 7th-most CAREER games in 76ers history with 14 or more assists with Johnny Dawkins (7) and Eric Snow (8) within reach.

GREAT START FOR TOBIAS: Tobias Harris became the first 76er in 31 years with 26 points, 6 rebounds, 6 assists and 64 percent shooting in a playoff game. The last to do that was Barkley in a loss to the Bulls in the 1991 Eastern Conference semifinals (25 points, 14 rebounds, 6 assists, 73 percent shooting).

THIS WAS HUGE: One quick bonus stat: The Raptors were second in the NBA this year with 13.4 offensive rebounds per game, trailing only the Grizzlies (14.1). They had only seven offensive rebounds Saturday, their 3rd-fewest this year. <<

# # #

- Eric L



To: Eric L who wrote (96)4/19/2022 12:12:52 PM
From: Eric L  Respond to of 122
 
Sixers 2022 Playoffs: Round 1 v Raptors; Game 2 Sixers 2nd Win on April 18, 2022



Sixers Postgame Live (17:59 Video)



#5 Raptors at #4 76ers Full Game Highlights (9:36 Video)



Led by Joel Embiid’s 31 PTS and 11 REB, the Philadelphia 76ers defeated the Toronto Raptors in Game 2, 112-97. Tyrese Maxey added 23 PTS, 9 REB and 8 AST for the 76ers in the victory, while Pascal Siakam tallied 20 PTS, 10 REB and 5 AST for the Raptors. Next Game: Toronto Raptors vs. Philadelphia 76ers - April 20 at 8pm/et on NBA TV





# # #

- Eric L -



To: Eric L who wrote (96)4/20/2022 11:20:13 AM
From: Eric L  Respond to of 122
 
Takeaways from playoff Game 2 win vs. Raptors (The Sixer Sense and Section 215 at Fansided)

Embiid, Harris, Harden, Maxey, Green and Reed at playoff time:

>> Sixers: 3 takeaways from commanding Game 2 win vs. Raptors

Christopher Kline
Fansided | The Sixer Sense
April 19, 2020

thesixersense.com



The Sixers began Game 2 of the Raptors series on the wrong end of an 11-2 run. Toronto punched them in the mouth, playing their unique brand of physical basketball, forcing turnovers, and making Joel Embiid mad. They should not have made Joel Embiid mad. The Sixers ended the first quarter down just one point, with Embiid putting 19 points on the board in his first 11 minutes.

From there on out, it was (save for a brief nap in the fourth quarter) all Sixers. Philadelphia ran ahead to a 2-0 series lead, with the Raptors’ halfcourt offense never really looking up to snuff. The Sixers continue to match Toronto blow-for-blow in the physicality battle, and the Raptors’ over-aggressive help schemes on defense continue to yield favorable results for Joel Embiid, who is more than willing to pass out of doubles and let his teammates finish plays.

With the series now moving north to Canada, what have we learned about the Sixers and their chances of closing out this series?

Sixers-Raptors game two takeaways: Joel Embiid is a warrior

After hearing Nick Nurse complain about officiating all weekend, the Raptors entered this game with one goal: be physical and contend with Joel Embiid’s dominance “within the confines of the rules,” or however Nurse phrased it. Very quickly, it was apparent the Raptors were willing to foul Embiid quite hard, much to the enjoyment of the Toronto faithful.

It did not work. Embiid is difficult to start when he’s in a normal mood, but the version of Embiid Toronto awoke in the first quarter was another entity all together. He eviscerated Toronto in the painted area, dropped 19 first-quarter points, and took charge for the Sixers as they began to run away with the game.

Embiid also battled several bumps and bruises along the way — hard falls, a hyper-extended elbow, a tweaked ankle. He took a beating all game and kept on swinging, which speaks volumes about Embiid’s commitment to winning and desire to help his teammates.

We all know the injury history with Embiid, and when you’re a 7-footer who moves the way Embiid does, and who invites contact to the extent Embiid does, the risk of injury or pain is always higher. Despite feeling quite a bit of pain in this game, Embiid battled his way to 31 points and 11 rebounds, which is practically par for the course these days.

Sixers-Raptors game two takeaways: Tobias Harris is impacting winning

For much of this season, Tobias Harris was playing the worst basketball of his Sixers career. When James Harden was initially traded, it got even worse — Harris’ shot attempts were down, his percentages were in the gutter, and he just wasn’t playing smart, decisive basketball. The Sixers have always needed smart, decisive basketball from Harris, but with Harden onboard, that transformation (or lack thereof) became paramount.

Thankfully, Harris has made the transformation. Once dragged down by slow decision-making and an over-inflated view of his role in the offense, Harris has made the necessary sacrifices and emerged as possibly the perfect No. 4 option for a title-contending team. He’s pulling the trigger on his 3s quicker than he ever has before, he’s making decisive moves off the catch, he’s blossoming as a passer off drives to the rim. It’s all happening. Harris is playing the brand of basketball fans have begged him to play ever since he arrived with the team.

Right now, this very version of Harris, is the best version of Tobias Harris we’ve ever seen. He’s better than last season’s failed All-Star campaign, he’s better than Clippers Tobias. This is Tobias Harris at his absolute peak. He’s just clicking on all cylinders, and blending his trademark efficiency with snappy decisions and a real shooter’s mentality.

To make matters even better, Harris is supplying some pretty critical defense for the Sixers, who lack size and athleticism on the perimeter. He’s practically the team’s best answer for Pascal Siakam at this point. His effort on defense and his effort on the glass have been key to Philly’s 2-0 series lead. We will see how the postseason progresses, but Harris deserves his flowers right now.

Sixers-Raptors game two takeaway: James Harden is just fine



James Harden posted 14 points on 3-of-9 shooting (1-of-4 from deep) and supplied six rebounds and six assists. Those are not the numbers fans expected when the Simmons-for-Harden trade was announced, and you can bet the morning talk shows will bring up Harden’s stat line as some manner of “concerning trend.”

And look, in some ways, it is. Harden is clearly on the downswing of his career, and he’s no longer the MVP-caliber player who once graced the court in Houston. Now, it’s time to stop comparing him to his prime self. That will get you nowhere, and there’s no real benefit to bemoaning what could have been in some alternative, healthy-hamstring timeline. Instead, let’s appreciate Harden for what he is right now: a damn good basketball player who contributes well beyond the “points” section of the box score.

Harden is still, right now at this very moment, one of the best passers in the game of basketball. Not because he fills up the assists column like Russell Westbrook, or because he has LaMelo Ball’s flare and zest, but because Harden is a bona fide genius, and one of the absolute savviest veterans in the league. Even in his slower state, even when he’s not beating guys off the dribble straight up. Harden can’t overpower his defender anymore, but he can certainly out-think his defender.

If what the Sixers get from James Harden is elite-level playmaking and halfcourt manipulation of the defense, they will be extremely difficult to stop. Even if his points per game average falls in the 15-25 range, rather than the 25-35 range, the Sixers have a shot at the NBA championship due to Harden’s elite floor game and his ability to elevate teammates. Tyrese Maxey and Tobias Harris deserve a ton of credit for improving and adjusting over time, and Joel Embiid is an undisputed top-3 MVP candidate, but Harris and Maxey aren’t playing at this level without Harden’s impact. Harden is getting the ball to Maxey and Harris in prime positions to score, while Embiid’s gravity in the post makes Philadelphia’s halfcourt offense an absolute handful even for Toronto’s switchy, lengthy defense.

The Sixers have built a contender around Joel Embiid, and more broadly, around a four-player core. Does James Harden not having his scoring legs make it harder to beat the Milwaukees or Bostons of the world? Absolutely. Would it be better if Harden was still Houston Harden? Absolutely. But that’s not the Harden Philadelphia traded for at the deadline, and the Harden Philadelphia currently has is still plenty impactful. With Embiid commanding the middle more effectively than ever, and with both Maxey and Harris playing prime basketball, Harden can afford to take a backseat every now and then and direct traffic. He still poses a threat from 3-point range, defenses can never comfortably ignore him, and the basketball I.Q. is sky-high. Do not panic over James Harden. Instead, try to accept him for who he is now. <<

Related from Fansided ...

• James Harden doesn’t look the same. That’s a good thing -- section215.com

• 76ers: The legend of Tyrese Maxey continues to grow -- section215.com

• 76ers: Paul Reed has saved the Joel Embiid-less minutes -- section215.com

• 76ers: Danny Green has found new life under brighter lights -- section215.com

# # #

- Eric L -



To: Eric L who wrote (96)4/20/2022 5:37:36 PM
From: Eric L  Respond to of 122
 
Sixers 2022 Playoffs, Round 1 v Raptors: The Harden Maxey Combo

>> Tyrese Maxey and James Harden are building strong pick-and-roll chemistry vs. Raptors
The action has yielded wildly successful results for Tyrese Maxey through two games.

Tom West
SBNation | Liberty Bulletin
Apr 20, 2022

libertyballers.com

[See 4 videos of the plays described at the link above]

Tyrese Maxey has been electric in the first two playoff starts of his career. As the Sixers have surged to a 2-0 lead in their first-round series against the Raptors, Maxey has been doing all his team could ask of him. And then some.

Through two games, he’s averaged a team-high 30.5 points, 6.5 rebounds, and five assists to only 0.5 turnovers. He’s shooting 68.8 percent from the floor while burying threes off the catch and off tough step-backs for a 57.1 percent stroke from deep. With a perfect 9-of-9 mark from the free throw line as well, Maxey has an absurd 84.8 true shooting percentage to open the series.

All the moves in his constantly expanding bag of tricks are working. From flying past Toronto’s defenders to the rim, to his trusty floater, to a flurry of threes off the bounce, he’s had counters to beat the Raptors’ defense at all three levels. And with the Raptors being so aggressive with their help in the paint and double teams onto James Harden’s drives and Joel Embiid’s work inside, Maxey has exploded with his speedy drives and attacks into open lanes off the catch when his star teammates move the ball.

The sophomore guard has also been developing more synergy in pick-and-roll actions with Harden, something that the Sixers have found success with against the Raptors so far.

We saw some regular season flashes of how useful Maxey and Harden screening for each other could be, but the Sixers have started using it more in the playoffs. In their week preparing for the postseason, the Sixers worked on it far more in their extra practice sessions — to both reiterate its effectiveness, and give Maxey and Harden a chance to polish their chemistry.

“Honestly, I’ve been saying it literally for three weeks, but they never do it,” Doc Rivers said after Game 2. “... And we never had any practice time to work on it. So I thought this week, we literally did it every day to show them how effective it can be. And what we’re trying to show them is they both can be in it. Like one can have the ball on one possession and the other possession the other one can have the ball and they can just play off of each other. You know, it’s funny, you learn stuff coaching — like you tell them stuff, and you think they see it, and then you realize they don’t run it so clearly they don’t see it. Once we got got it in practice, they saw it and it was good.”

One of the best outcomes for a Harden-Maxey pick-and-roll is Maxey either slipping away from screens into space, or simply setting his screen and being in position to receive a pass before his defender recovers or a switch is completed. On the play below, Maxey sets a solid pick on Harden’s defender (Scottie Barnes) as his own man (Fred VanVleet) quickly switches onto Harden. Before Barnes can recover in front of Maxey, Harden rifles a pass to his partner, Maxey turns on the jets, and shoots down the cleared lane for a layup:

Give Maxey a clear lane against recovering defenders, and he only needs a split second to hit a speed that opponents can’t catch and reach the basket.

A Harden-Maxey pick-and-roll is a simple action, but it’s tricky to guard. If you miss a switch or execute it too late, Maxey can be left with a clear lane to drive. If you let Harden or Maxey dribble off a screen into space, they can fire from three. If you hard hedge or trap, one of the duo will be left in space at the arc to either catch and shoot or drive — and Harden in particular can pick apart that kind of pressure with ease as a passer.

A well-timed switch can slow things down, but the Sixers can still find counters to this. Maxey and Harden both require different kinds of defenders, and not every team will have the right personnel to always switch everything. A smaller, quicker guard is preferable on Maxey, while a wing or bigger, heftier guard is better suited to handle Harden’s strength. If defenses don’t switch with ideal personnel, Maxey’s speed or Harden’s size can be used to attack the other’s original defender.

“It’s tough. You’ve got two guards,” Maxey said after Game 2 when talking about his two-man chemistry with Harden. “Either I’m coming off or he’s coming off. You’ve got to make a decision. Do you want to switch? Most of the time they don’t want to get off James’ body and give him any space. If they don’t, I’m getting downhill. If they switch, then he has a matchup or I have a matchup. We just try to get downhill and make plays for ourselves and make plays for others as well.”

Even if a ball screen doesn’t lead anywhere immediately, like the play below where Gary Trent Jr. switches in front of Maxey, then the Sixers can still flow into other options. Here, Harden retakes control of the ball against VanVleet and goes into a pick-and-roll with Embiid. The Raptors can’t switch VanVleet onto Embiid, so they have to stick in drop coverage. With Precious Achiuwa dropping back to try and cut off a potential pass to Embiid, VanVleet trailing, and Pascal Siakam helping too far off Georges Niang in the strong-side corner, it’s easy for Harden to beat the collapsing defense and set up Niang for three:

The next play doesn’t immediately create anything off the initial screen either, but still forces a more favorable matchup for Harden. Maxey’s screen forces OG Anunoby to switch off from Harden, leaving the latter facing the more slender, 6-foot-1 Malachi Flynn. Anunoby has more concern that Harden is going to bully his way through Flynn and stays fairly close to help if need be, so when Harden sends a sudden pass to Maxey, Anunoby has to hurry to recover. Maxey takes full advantage. As Anunoby closes out, Maxey side steps back in the opposite direction, Anunoby stumbles, and the Sixers’ young star buries a clean triple:

Harden can also serve as the screener to throw defenders off for Maxey. On the next play, Harden slips the screen out to the three-point line and Maxey doesn’t ease up for a second, soaring straight down the lane in a flash. As the play develops in a hurry, the Raptors fail to communicate the switch, leaving both VanVleet and Thaddeus Young helplessly watching Maxey take off to the rim. All that Maxey needs to do next is beat a small rim protector left at the basket (in this case Achiuwa), which he does with a nifty adjustment in mid-air to drop in a lefty scoop finish:

Harden and Maxey have been using a lot their two-man game when they’re leading the offense without Embiid. The Sixers’ MVP candidate has highlighted the way they’re attacking different matchups as one of the positives of their play when he’s off the floor.

“They’ve just been doing a great job of playing with pace and looking for matchups, favorable matchups,” Embiid said after Game 2. “... Whether it’s Tyrese attacking or James going one-on-one with a favorable matchup and finding guys that way, I think it’s been great. That’s what we’re gonna need all series and for the future, too.”

Maxey, at just 21 years old as a playoff starter for the first time in his career, has been a driving force in the Sixers taking such a convincing 2-0 lead against the Raptors. And moving forward, in both this series and beyond, it looks like the Sixers have a new offensive wrinkle at their disposal with the growing partnership of the Harden-Maxey pick-and-roll.

>> Sixers love Tyrese Maxey-James Harden combo with Joel Embiid on the bench
Ky Carlin
Sixers Wire
April 19, 2022

sixerswire.usatoday.com

The Philadelphia 76ers have been successful when Joel Embiid goes to the bench in the first two games of their first-round series with the Toronto Raptors, and that has been a massive difference for them, especially in a Game 2 win.

In the past, whenever Embiid had gone to the bench, the Sixers faltered and looked very discombobulated on the floor.

However, the Sixers have turned their focus to pairing Tyrese Maxey and James Harden when Embiid goes to the bench and they have had a great deal of offensive success.

“It’s tough,” said Maxey. “Either I’m coming off or he’s coming off. You gotta make a decision. Do you wanna switch? Most of the time, they don’t wanna get off James’ body and give him any space so they don’t, and I’m getting downhill. If they switch, then he has a matchup or I have a matchup so we just try to get downhill and make plays for ourselves or make plays for others as well.”

Maxey has averaged 30.5 points and shot 68.8% from the floor and 57.1% from deep. Those numbers are absurd. Harden is averaging 10 assists through the first two games, showing off his elite playmaking.

“I’ve been saying it literally for three weeks, but they never do it,” said coach Doc Rivers. “We never had any practice time to work on it, so I thought this week, we literally did it every day, and showed them how effective it can be. What we were trying to show them is that they both can be in it. One can have the ball on one possession and on the other possession, the other one can have the ball, and they can just play off each other.”

The chemistry between Maxey and Harden has been terrific of late after a tough start to the Harden era. Philadelphia did not have many practices after it acquired Harden at the deadline, and he did not play with the team until after the All-Star break.

“The schedule was unfavorable for our practice schedule, so we really didn’t get any practices in to where we could figure out spacing and continuity with James. So that week that we just had before the playoffs started was huge for us,” Maxey added. “I think we got to do a lot of different lineups, figure out a lot of different spacing, and get the plays in. The chemistry went up.”

It is funny to see 6-foot-3 Maxey set screens for Harden, Embiid or even Tobias Harris.

“I honestly don’t remember setting screens, but I came here and I was setting step ups for Joel Embiid earlier in the year, and I was like ‘This is crazy’,” laughed Maxey. “Whatever they need me to do, that’s what I’m gonna go out there and do. Step up for Joel, step up for Tobias, step up for James, and it just creates matchup problems.” <<

# # #

- Eric L -



To: Eric L who wrote (96)4/21/2022 9:23:08 AM
From: Eric L  Respond to of 122
 
Sixers 2022 Playoffs: Round 1 v Raptors; Game 3 OT Win to go up 3-0 on April 20, 2022



Joel Embiid's last-second 3-pointer lifts Philadelphia 76ers to OT win, 3-0 series lead against Toronto Raptors | espn.com

The Game Winning Shot! (1:16 Video)



Sixers Postgame Live (9:50 video)



76ers at Raptors Full Game Highlights 9:45 video)



# # #

- Eric L -



To: Eric L who wrote (96)4/21/2022 10:17:19 AM
From: Eric L  Respond to of 122
 
Inside Game 3 of the Raptors v 76ers Game ...

... by one of my favorite Philly sports writers following the Sixers and some stats from thhe game(s):

>> Inside Joel Embiid's second-half classic in Game 3 vs. Raptors

Behind two stars, the Sixers managed to win a game they always lose.

Kyle Neubeck
Philly Voice
APRIL 21, 2022

phillyvoice.com

If Joel Embiid was excited to lay Toronto-based demons to rest, he let out all of those emotions in the locker room and the moments immediately following his heroic, game-saving shot in overtime. When he strolled to the podium to talk to reporters roughly two hours after he gave the Sixers a commanding 3-0 lead over the Raptors, the trash-talking with Drake and jubilant leaps into the arms of teammates had faded from view.

"Obviously, we know what happened a couple of years ago, it felt great. I just knew that coming in here tonight it was going be, obviously it's always a tough place to play at," Embiid said. "I knew coming into Toronto I was definitely going to be the bad guy for quite some time. I just wanted to come out and just let the game come to me."

"But the job is not done. We got one more."

These are the type of games the Sixers never win. If you would have laid out the conditions to a Sixers fan prior to the game — 22 turnovers, James Harden fouls out, DeAndre Jordan is in the game on the final play of the night — most of them would have wondered how many points they lost by, not whether they lost at all.

The Sixers spent roughly half of this game playing as if they wanted to give it away. They would each credit the Raptors for their physicality and their determination to create chaos, but kept circling back to their own miscues. Even Embiid, owner of a 33-point, 13-rebound performance, wouldn't distance himself from his six turnovers, lamenting his approach to start the game.

"That first half was as bad of a half as I could have played," Embiid said. "Just throwing reckless passes, not taking care of the ball, not really being involved in the offense and not being aggressive enough."

There to keep Philadelphia within striking distance was James Harden, who would ultimately finish the game with a 19-6-10 line in 38 minutes that felt a bit louder than that. With Embiid in a funk to start the game, the Sixers ended up leaning on Harden for much of the first half, relying on him to beat favorable matchups and score against a Raptors team offering less help toward the paint.

What followed were some of Harden's cleanest finishes at the rim since he joined the Sixers in mid-February. When the Sixers were able to get him lined up with Fred Van Vleet and Gary Trent Jr., Harden was able to win quite a few one-on-one battles. Putting pressure on the interior, as we have seen time and time again, can lead to great things for everybody else.

"James kept it together for a long while for us with his attacks, his decision making," Doc Rivers said after the game.

That long while took the Sixers into the second half, when saying that Embiid carried the offense is not descriptive enough. Embiid managed to score 23 of their 49 points in the second half, and five out of nine in the overtime session, he and Tyrese Maxey the only Sixers players to register a point in the extra session.

Each buried jumper and each second-half trip to the free-throw line seemed to fray the nerves of the Toronto crowd. There are few experiences like watching a road player rip the hearts of an entire arena out on a possession-by-possession basis. Jubilation melts into anxiousness, a hush falling over the crowd. When you hear the sound of 20,000 people murmuring all at once, you never forget it.

Pace was perhaps the biggest difference between the Embiid of the first 24 minutes and Embiid of the final 29 minutes, the big man wasting far less time before going at whoever was in front of him. That meant a variety of different things depending on the possession. It was a one-dribble blow-by of Precious Achiuwa, a kick-out pass for a Georges Niang three out of the middle of the floor, or a ferocious dunk on Pascal Siakam, Embiid slipping a screen with nothing but runway in front of him.

"Every single time I put the ball on the floor, they were coming," Embiid said after the game. "In the first half, they did it, in the second half, they tried to do it...Really, I knew that all I had was one dribble and I had to make a play, whether it was for myself or for my teammates or to get the shot off. That was really my mindset coming out of halftime. Be aggressive, but at the same time be decisive about what I'm doing on the floor."

"I thought we had him deep four or five times in the first half and he was trying to get into his move, and when you get the ball in the paint, there's no more move, there's just go be aggressive and big. Quick decision, quick moves for him," Doc Rivers added. "I thought he made the adjustment."

Philadelphia's worst offensive possessions late in the game were when Embiid and his teammates didn't abide by that approach. Harden fouling out of the game on a controversial whistle in the final 30 seconds robbed them of one of their best decision-makers. That was apparent, Rivers said after the game, in the attacking windows missed by the players left on the floor, Maxey included, despite Maxey being one of the only guys who had anything left by the time the overtime session started.

Even Philadelphia's game-winning possession was nearly derailed by that decision-making paralysis. They were saved by a Doc Rivers timeout with the shot clock winding down and Embiid on the verge of turning the ball over near the sideline, giving everyone a chance to catch their breath and regroup. Less than a second left to get it done, Philadelphia nonetheless drew it up to have multiple options. The only one that mattered ended up in a spot that he'd been in with the game on the line in regulation, redeeming himself for the first miss.

"I'm thinking about, there's a reason why I went to that spot to end the game before overtime," Embiid said of his mindset in that moment. "I like that spot, we worked on it a lot, that stepback going left. Going back to that spot, I was just confident enough to, first of all, get the shot off and try to make it."

A good decision, I think it's fair to say.

The man who ultimately gets the credit for the game-winning bucket, well, that was a subject of some debate. According to Maxey, Tobias Harris strolled into the locker room postgame and puffed his chest out in celebration of the screen he set to get Embiid free. And for the third straight game, let it be said that Harris had no small part in their victory — his defensive toughness was a huge part of slowing down Siakam, and he ripped the ball from Trent Jr. in a critical spot during overtime, ultimately taking the turnover and opting to wait for his buddies to catch up instead of trying to succeed in scramble mode.

"No. 1 screen [I've set] for sure," Harris joked about the game-winning play," because I don't set too many."

At the end of the day, playoff basketball is often decided by the binary system. Either you have the best guy on the floor or you don't. If you don't, you're often hoping and praying the opposing star falters.

On a few levels, you might consider this a theft for the Sixers. But for this writer, that would minimize so much of the work it took to get it over the line, stripping away the collective poise they showed to hold it together with rubber bands, glue, and a healthy portion of ball screens.

It was that fact, not the game-winner, that seemed to stick in the minds of Sixers players after the game. At the podium and in the bowels of Scotiabank Arena, they pointed out everything that went wrong, including a wrist/hand issue for Joel Embiid that warranted a soft brace on his shooting hand after the game. Problem after problem, many self-inflicted, kept popping up. They managed to overcome them all.

It is the sort of character win a team with this little time together isn't supposed to have in the arsenal, one only available to a contender after a lengthy period of building up sweat equity. The Sixers didn't need that.

"That's what the playoffs [are] about," Harden said. "I kept talking about it in the regular season. It might not have been the prettiest game, but we found ways. Defensively, we were really good down the stretch...we gave ourselves a chance to win on the road. That's all you can ask for."

"These types of games matter a lot," Embiid added. "You don't have anything going on for you, but you still find ways to win the basketball game. This is good for us." <<

... and Philly's 'Stat guy' adds his comments:

>> 10 heart-stopping stats from a wild 76ers win over the Raptors

Reuben Frank
NBC Sports Philadelphia
April 21, 2020

nbcsports.com
t’s not very often something happens in sports that’s never happened before.I

That’s exactly what happened Wednesday night in the 76ers' 104-101 win over the Raptors in Game 3 of their Eastern Conference first-round series at Scotiabank Arena in Toronto.

Joel Embiid did something nobody in the history of a 76ers franchise founded in 1950 as the Syracuse Nationals has ever done. And because of it, the 76ers are up 3-0 in the series.

That’s our starting point in today’s edition of Roob’s 76ers stats!

NEVER HAPPENED BEFORE: Joel Embiid’s game-winning 27-foot 3-pointer with 0.8 seconds on the game clock was the first overtime last-second game-winner in 76ers postseason history. The win was only the 76ers’ 13th playoff overtime win ever, and only the seventh decided by three or fewer points (or two or fewer points before the inception of the 3-point shot in 1979). In the first six, the closest the 76ers had to a last-second game-winner came in 1951, when 5-10 point guard Freddie Scolari scored with 10 seconds left to give the Syracuse Nationals a 91-89 win over the Philadelphia Warriors in Game 1 of their Best-of-3 Eastern Division semifinal series at the old Philadelphia Arena at 46th and Market; so it was actually a road game in Philadelphia for the team that became the 76ers in 1963. In a 119-117 win over the Royals at Cincinnati Gardens in the 1965 Eastern Division semifinals, point guard Al Bianchi hit the game-winner with 11 seconds left.

ANOTHER UNFORGETTABLE NIGHT: The 76ers had lost four straight postseason overtime games, and this was their first road overtime postseason win since the 107-101 win over the Lakers in Game 1 of the 2001 NBA finals at the STAPLES Center – the night Allen Iverson walked over Tyronn Lue. A.I. had 48 points, 5 rebounds, 6 assists and 5 steals that night.

FIRST TIME IN 39 YEARS: The 76ers were 1-21 when trailing by 10 points after the first quarter on the road. They trailed 29-19 after the first quarter and then trailed by as many as 17 points (at 38-21) 2 ½ minutes into the second quarter before outscoring the Raptors 83-63 the rest of the game. The only other time the 76ers won a road playoff game when they trailed by double digits going into the second quarter was May 29, 1983, when they beat the Lakers 111-94 in Game 3 of the NBA finals at the Forum in Inglewood, California, after trailing 32-21 through the first quarter. Overall, the 76ers are now 8-32 in the playoffs when trailing by double digits after the first quarter.

CLOSING IN ON WILT: With 33 points and 13 rebounds, Embiid recorded his 11th career playoff game and second in a row with 30 and 10. That’s the 3rd-most 30 and 10 games in 76ers history, behind only Wilt Chamberlain (14) and Dolph Schayes (13). This is the second time Embiid has had back-to-back 30 and 10 games. The only other 76ers with 30 and 10 in consecutive playoff games are Chamberlain (three times), Schayes (twice) and Charles Barkley, Billy Cunningham, Moses Malone and Hal Greer (once each).

PILING UP THE POINTS: Embiid had an 18-point second quarter after his 19-point first quarter on Monday. That makes him the first player in 76ers history to score 18 points in a quarter in back-to-back postseason games. It’s also the 3rd-most points in franchise history in a playoff third quarter … but the second-most in the past week. Tyrese Maxey scored 21 points in the third quarter in Game 1. There have now been a total of 12 individual quarters of at least 18 points in 76ers playoff history, and three of the 12 have been in the past five days.

BURYING THEIR 3’S: After shooting 50 percent and 47 percent from 3-point range in the first two games of the series, the 76ers shot 42 percent from deep on Wednesday. This is the first time in franchise history the 76ers have opened a series by shooting at least 40 percent in each of the first three games.

WHO NEEDS A BENCH? Maxey played 47 minutes, 20 seconds. That’s the most minutes any 76er has played in a postseason game since Iverson played 47:40 in Game 1 of the 76ers’ 2005 first-round series against the Pistons. Tobias Harris (46:44) and Danny Green (46:15) also played over 46 minutes, making this the first 76ers postseason game in 57 years where three 76ers played at least 46 minutes. According to Stathead, on April 9, 1965, Chamberlain played 53 minutes, Chet Walker 52 minutes and Hal Greer 50 minutes in a 134-131 overtime win over the Celtics in Game 4 of the Eastern Division finals. Maxey and Embiid combined for 14 of the 76ers’ 21 baskets in the second half and overtime. James Harden added three and Georges Niang, Tobias Harris, Danny Green and Paul Reed had one each.

BUT THEY WON ANYWAY: The 76ers committed 22 turnovers, although they only had eight after halftime. Still, that’s their most in a postseason game in 36 years, since they committed 25 in a 126-108 win over the Bucks in Game 6 of their 1986 Eastern Conference semifinals series.

HE ACTUALLY MADE SHOTS: Before fouling out, James Harden made 7 of 13 field goal attempts for 54 shooting from the field. It’s the first time he’s been over 44 percent in his last nine games and his highest shooting percentage in his last 16 games, since he shot 55 percent against the Nuggets back on March 14 on 6-for-11. This was the 46th game this year Harden has taken at least 13 shots and only the ninth where he’s shot at least 44 percent. Harden also contributed 10 more assists, giving him 30 in the series, the 4th-most assists ever by a 76er in the first three games of any postseason series. <<

ESPN: Philadelphia 76ers Postseason Player Stats 2021-22 through 3 Games: espn.com

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- Eric L -



To: Eric L who wrote (96)4/23/2022 1:30:53 PM
From: Eric L  Respond to of 122
 
More Game 3 of the Raptors v 76ers Series ...













Officiating Crew chief Marc Davis's team called the game ...



This time the Sixers won in Toronto. Marc's crew is seldom whistle happy and they called a good game on Wednesday night.

The downside: 76ers’ Joel Embiid may have torn ligaments in his thumb. According to reports on Friday, the Philadelphia 76ers’ Joel Embiid is experiencing pain and discomfort in his right thumb. Despite the apparent injury, Embiid did in fact participate in Friday’s practice session and is reportedly expected to play in Game 4 of the Sixers’ first-round series against the Toronto Raptors. Additionaly, it is understood that he may be given an MRI in the near future as the team attempts to discover the extent of the damage to his thumb. Early reports suggest that there could be torn ligaments, but the 76ers star has vowed to play through it.

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- Eric L -



To: Eric L who wrote (96)4/23/2022 2:02:31 PM
From: Eric L  Respond to of 122
 
Talking Heads React To Sixers Game 3 Win V Raptors (3 Videos)

Each best viewed full screen.

How far can Joel Embiid lead the 76ers? | First Take: Stephen A. Smith and Michael Wilbon



How Doc Rivers drew up Embiid's game-winner | Get Up: Mike and SethGreenberg, Brian Windhorst



Mike Greenberg breaks down highlights from the Philadelphia 76ers' Game 3 win against the Toronto Raptors in the 2022 NBA Playoffs, then Brian Windhorst and Seth Greenberg react to the game.

A Singular Playoff Moment | FIRST THINGS FIRST: Nick Wright, Chris Broussard, Kevin Wildes



Joel Embiid's game-winning three proved to Nick Wright that unlike another player currently in the running for MVP, the Philadelphia 76ers' star has what it takes to carry his team in the playoffs. Nick compares Embiid to Hakeem Olajuwon, and while he isn't predicting the 76ers will win the Finals, he does believe Embiid leading his team to a 3-0 lead against the Toronto Raptors prove he's one of the most skilled big men in the league.

If Joel Embiid is hurt, 76ers title hopes are DONE` | NBA Countdown: Stephen A. Smith ,,,

,,, with Jaalen Rose and Michael Wilbon



The NBA Countdown crew reacts to Joel Embiid suffering a right thumb injury that he will look to play through. Stephen A. Smith says it only confirms to him that the Philadelphia 76ers won’t win the NBA championship.

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- Eric L -



To: Eric L who wrote (96)4/23/2022 9:19:56 PM
From: Eric L  Respond to of 122
 
April 23, 2022 Game 4 76ers loss to Raptors in R1 of 2022 NBA Playoffs



Sixers Postgame Live (10.49 Video)



Raptors actually show up in Game 4 and send series back to Philly Amy Fadool, Jim Lynam and Marc Jackson breakdown the Sixers' loss to the Raptors in Game 4.

Doc Rivers Postgame Interview after Game 4 (8:02 Video)



#4 76Ers at #5 Raptors Full R1 Game 4 Highlights | April 23, 2022 (9:29 Video)



Led by Pascal Siakam’s Playoff career-high 34 PTS, along with 8 REB and 5 AST, the Toronto Raptors defeated the Philadelphia 76ers in Game 4, 110-102. Gary Trent Jr. added 24 PTS for the Raptors in the victory, while Joel Embiid tallied 21 PTS and 8 REB for the 76

The Inside Crew reacts to the Raptors avoiding the sweep in game 4 | NBA on TNT (2:25 Video)



The Raptors stay alive and avoid the sweep in Game 4 against the Sixers. Highlights from Inside the NBA with Shaq, Charles Barkley, Kenny Smith and Ernie Johnson.

Stephen A. calls out Embiid after Raptors avoid a sweep in Game 4 | ESPN SC (8:12 Video)



Stephen A. Smith with Mike Greenberg, Jalen Rose and J.J. Redick. Joel Embiid will undergo an MRI tomorrow for suspected ligament damage per Adam Woj but he insists hell play on through with surgery after season if required..



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- Eric L -



To: Eric L who wrote (96)4/26/2022 9:16:22 PM
From: Eric L  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122
 
April 25, 2020 Playoff: JUST EMBARRASSING! Sixers lose Game 5 to the Raptors



Sixers Postgame Live (10:32 Video)



Amy Fadool, Jim Lynam Kate Scott, Alaa Abdelnaby and Marc Jackson recap the Sixers' ugly Game 5 loss to the Raptors. Now the series heads back to Toronto for Game 6 on Thursday.

Sixers react to ugly loss to the Raptors in Game 5 | More Sixers Postgame Live (15:39 Video )



0:00 - Joel Embiid
2:47 - Tobias Maxey & Tyrese Maxey
6:03 - James Harden
8:48 - Doc Rivers

Raptors at 76ers Full Game Highlights (9:35 Video)



Led by Pascal Siakam’s 23 PTS, 10 REB and 7 AST, the No. 5 seed Raptors defeated the No. 4 seed 76ers in Game 5, 103-88. Scottie Barnes added 12 PTS, 8 REB, 4 AST and 3 STL for the Raptors in the victory, while Joel Embiid tallied 20 PTS, 11 REB and 4 AST for the 76ers. The 76ers lead this best-of-seven First Round series 3-2.

>> The Sixers are in trouble, and it’s on Doc Rivers and James Harden to avoid a historic collapse

David Murphy
The Philadelphia Inquirer
April 26, 2020

msn.com

Somebody needs to wake up and smell the history, because it’s a hell of a lot closer than anybody with the 76ers seemed to realize after their embarrassing 103-88 no-show of a loss to the Raptors in Game 5.

[ ] .. Maybe the onus is on Doc Rivers. Maybe it is on James Harden himself. Most likely, it’s on both. The Sixers are suddenly two losses away from becoming the first NBA team to ever blow a 3-0 lead in a series, and the two guys who should best recognize imminent postseason failure don’t seem to see it coming.

[ ] ... The problem with that notion is that what worked in the first three games of this series was an offense that relied on Joel Embiid to score points and create space. Right now, that is not an option. That should be obvious to anybody who has watched Embiid’s first two attempts to play through a torn thumb ligament. There’s a reason he sounded so dejected after Game 4 when he bemoaned the fact that basketball is a sport that demands a lot out of a player’s dominant hand. Embiid is well aware what he can’t do, and a lot of them are things whose importance people clearly still don’t grasp. ... <snip rest ... read ull article at link above>

M76

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- Eric L -