The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Smiling Embiid has 39, powers 76ers past Nets in OT

- By Kevin Cooney

PHILADELPH­IA » A few weeks before the All-Star break, Joel Embiid said he wasn’t having much fun on the basketball floor this season.

Embiid was back to his old self Thursday night, flapping his arms to the crowd, smiling from ear to ear and taking over a game at critical moments.

Embiid had 39 points and 16 rebounds, Alec Burks and Shake Milton added big baskets in overtime and the Philadelph­ia 76ers extended their dominance at home with a 112-104 victory over the Brooklyn Nets.

“Having fun means a lot of things,” Embiid said. “This year, I haven’t been smiling as much as previous years. That doesn’t mean I’m not having fun or that everything is not going well. It’s about playing basketball the right way. I feel like the first part of the season, I was trying to make sure that everyone was comfortabl­e. But if we’re going to go somewhere, I’ve got to be one of the guys and that starts on defense and playing hard, doing the little things.”

Playing without All-Star point guard Ben Simmons because of lower back tightness, Philadelph­ia improved its record at the Wells Fargo Center to 26-2. The 76ers are 9-19 on the road.

Tobias Harris added 22 points and 12 boards for the 76ers. Burks had 19 points, including a pair of layups in overtime that gave Philadelph­ia the lead for good.

Caris LeVert scored 25 points and Spencer Dinwiddie had 22 for Brooklyn, which announced before the game that Kyrie Irving would have season-ending surgery on his right shoulder.

“Obviously, Embiid is one of, if not the best center of the league,” Dinwiddie said. “He does his job on both ends of the floor. And tonight, he did his job and got his team a win.”

It was a night of extended runs that started with Philadelph­ia breaking out of the gate to a 22-6 lead, only for the Nets to follow with a 44-8 stretch that helped them to a 52-42 halftime lead. It could have been worse for the Sixers if not for a 12-2 closing run.

“The run we had at the end of the first half to get it back to 10 was big,” Embiid said. “We were able to get some momentum in those moments.”

Embiid started to assert more of a presence early in the second half, controllin­g the game from the paint and helping the Sixers get within 78-77.

“When you go to the AllStar Game and other AllStars come to you when its crunch time at the end of the game, there’s no greater boost than that,” 76ers coach Brett Brown said. “And his defense, his energy and his passion were contagious tonight for the other four players.”

Dinwiddie hit a fadeaway jumper with 30 seconds left in regulation to give Brooklyn a 103-101 lead, then fouled Embiid at the other end with 16 seconds to play. Embiid hit both foul shots to even the score and Brooklyn played for the last shot, but Wilson Chandler’s layup at the rim after a pass from Dinwiddie was knocked away by Embiid just as the horn sounded to send the game to overtime.

After Dinwiddie hit one of two free throws to give Brooklyn a 104-103 lead, the 76ers went on a 9-0 run with Burks hitting two running layups and Milton converting a pass from Harris in the lane into an easy basket. TIP-INS » Sixers: Simmons played in Sunday night’s AllStar Game in a reserve role for LeBron James’ squad. Simmons is officially listed as day-to-day. In his place, Raul Neto started at the point guard spot. It is the third game this season that Simmons has missed. He injured the AC joint in his shoulder in November and missed two games. WORKING ON HORFORD » Al Horford’s adjustment to life coming off the Philadelph­ia bench was rocky on Thursday night. Horford’s initial entrance came just as Brooklyn started its 44-8 run, where the 76ers forward appeared flat-footed against Brooklyn’s smaller lineup.

Horford,in the first year of a four-year, $110 million contract, scored six points, grabbed three rebounds and the 76ers were outscored by 26 points in his 18 ½ minutes.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? 76ers’ Tobias Harris, left, and Joel Embiid celebrate during overtime in an NBA basketball game against the Brooklyn Nets on Thursday in Philadelph­ia. Philadelph­ia won 112-104.
MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 76ers’ Tobias Harris, left, and Joel Embiid celebrate during overtime in an NBA basketball game against the Brooklyn Nets on Thursday in Philadelph­ia. Philadelph­ia won 112-104.

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