Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Redick, Simmons push streak to 11

- By Christophe­r A. Vito For Digital First Media

PHILADELPH­IA » J.J. Redick scored 19 points and Ben Simmons had 15 points and 12 rebounds to lead the Philadelph­ia 76ers to their 11th straight victory, 121-95 over the Brooklyn Nets on Tuesday night.

Neither Simmons nor Redick played in the fourth quarter for Philadelph­ia, which won its third consecutiv­e contest without All-Star center Joel Embiid. Embiid had surgery on Saturday after suffering an orbital fracture in his left eye in Wednesday’s 118-101 win over the Knicks. Embiid will be out for the remainder of the regular season and is slated to return for the playoffs, although his exact return date is not known.

The 76ers are headed to the postseason for the first time since 2012 and are vying for home-court advantage. Philadelph­ia began Tuesday in the fourth spot in the Eastern Conference, a half-game ahead of fifthplace Indiana and a halfgame behind third-place Cleveland. The 76ers have five games remaining.

Marco Belinelli added 17 points for the 76ers (47-30), who also didn’t have starter Dario Saric (cellulitis right elbow).

Spencer Dinwiddie had 16 points for the Nets (25-53).

The 76ers were up 61-49 at the half and took control in the third quarter. Philadelph­ia scored 11 of the first 12 points of the period, capped by Redick’s fast-break layup with 8:36 left that made it 72-50. They went on to outscore the Nets 32-22 in the period to take a 93-71 advantage into the fourth.

*** Embiid broke his face six days ago. Between a surgical procedure and related rest and rehabilita­tion, Embiid hasn’t been around the team.

That’s not to say no one has seen him.

“It’s the beauty of FaceTime where we can talk,” plugged-in Sixers coach Brett Brown said.

With one breath, Brown spoke with optimism about Embiid’s post-surgical status. (How’s Embiid look? “Not too bad,” said Brown.) In the next, Brown discussed the other essential realities of his job—pickand-rolls, playoff rotations, and everything in between.

Life is coming at Brown pretty fast, with the fifthyear coach needing to juggle the demands of directing a team headed to the postseason for the first time in six years, and tempering expectatio­ns about when and where his cornerston­e center will return to the court. The latter, for what it’s worth, remains unclear.

Before Tuesday’s game against visiting Brooklyn, Brown said it’s “not so far away” that Embiid could pass through the NBA’s concussion protocol, attempt free throws, and engage in light cardio workouts.

“We don’t know when that is. That will sort of be the next stage,” Brown said. “Those types of things let him feel more engaged. He hasn’t yet been around the team since the injury, but we all communicat­e extensivel­y with FaceTime.”

Brown has a muchcleare­r idea about his playoff rotations. In particular, he mentioned the potential court-time casualties. The more court time Brown affords Markelle Fultz, for example, the less time he can allot for T.J. McConnell.

“It’s hard,” Brown said, of his rotational carousel. “But it’s part of the growth of the program.”

Brown added that Richaun Holmes and Justin Anderson, among others, could experience a pinch in playing time.

“In all my years doing this, in this league, rarely do you see rotations grow as the playoffs became closer. At times, they shrink and they could with us.”

*** Dario Saric will be sidelined until at least Friday, Brown said.

Saric sat out a second consecutiv­e game with an infection in his right elbow. Brown said Saric will miss Wednesday’s trip to Detroit and the Sixers expect he will return for Friday’s visit from Cleveland, a game that will carry significan­t implicatio­ns for Eastern Conference playoff seeding. ***

Earlier in the day, the team unveiled a sculpture outside its Camden, N.J., practice facility in the likeness of Julius Erving. The Naismith Hall of Famer spent all 11 of his NBA seasons with the Sixers, from 1976-87, leading them to the 1982-83 championsh­ip. The Sixers retired Erving’s No. 6 jersey in 1988.

The sculpture is the sixth installed on what is called “76ers Legends Walk,” with Erving being part of the Tuesday ceremony.

With a nod to his statue he said, “...this is classic, right here.” ... Another familiar face was at the Sixers game, as it was worked by NBA referee Ed Malloy, a Cardinal O’Hara alum who lives in Aston.

 ?? CHRIS SZAGOLA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The 76ers’ Robert Covington, right, defends a shot by the Nets’ Joe Harris (12) during the first half Tuesday in Philadelph­ia.
CHRIS SZAGOLA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The 76ers’ Robert Covington, right, defends a shot by the Nets’ Joe Harris (12) during the first half Tuesday in Philadelph­ia.

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