Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Sixers roll to easy win over T-Wolves

- By Dan Gelston

PHILADELPH­IA » Jimmy Butler’s final miserable months in Minnesota were blighted by trash talk toward his teammates and a sour demeanor that forced the Timberwolv­es to trade him.

At home in Philadelph­ia, Butler is still working out the kinks with his new star teammates. But Butler had one final parting gift for his old team: a complete thrashing that left the Timberwolv­es in tatters.

Butler scored 19 points in the first meeting with Minnesota since the trade, and the 76ers scored 83 points in the first half in a 149-107 rout on Tuesday night.

“I do want to beat those guys,” Butler said, “but I want to beat every team.”

The Golden State Warriors were the only team to score more firsthalf points in a game this season when they dropped 92 on the Chicago Bulls on Oct. 29. The Sixers hit a team-record 21 3-pointers and reached their highest point total in the 22-year history of the Wells Fargo Center.

Joel Embiid had 31 points and 13 rebounds in a final tuneup before the Sixers hit a pivotal stretch of the season.

“We’ve got some heavyweigh­ts coming in but so be it,” coach Brett Brown said.

The Sixers needed the breather against Minnesota. They play their next 12 games against teams with winning records and the Sixers are not quite where Brown wants them as they go toe-to-toe with those NBA heavyweigh­ts.

“Not to the level that I wished it was,” Brown said. “It’s not anything that I’m panicking about.”

They never had reason to worry about Minnesota.

The Sixers stuffed a season’s worth of highlights into the first half. They cut to the hoop with ease for layups and big Ben Simmons dunks. They buried mostly unconteste­d 3-pointers — 10 of 20 in the half — and even made all 11 free throws.

Simmons, who had 20 points and 11 rebounds, flexed and Embiid waved his arms to an adoring crowd after big baskets.

Butler took a backseat in his first game since the Timberwolv­es sent him to the 76ers in a package deal that brought forwards Robert Covington and Dario Saric in return.

“It was everything that I thought it would be,” Butler said. “Seeing some old faces. Not too much trash talking, though, I don’t think anybody’s talking like that. I like the fact that we beat them.”

Covington and Saric were popular core pieces of Philadelph­ia’s Trust the Process rebuild and both received massive ovations from an appreciati­ve crowd in tribute videos.

“It means they really appreciate what I did the last three years here,” Saric said. “I’m thankful for that. They really respect me.”

The Sixers found thumping the Timberwolv­es a breeze. They’re having a tougher time molding the Butler-Simmons-Embiid combinatio­n into a dominant Big 3 instead of a big mystery. The Sixers have a thin bench and are experiment­ing with rotations to find the right ones that can make them evolve into the Eastern Conference favorites they expected to become this season.

TIP-INS

76ers: Signed G Corey Brewer to a 10-day contract. He has career averages of 8.9 points and 2.8 rebounds in 783 games.

WHAT A HALF

The team record for points in a first half is 86. The Sixers shot 66 percent (31 of 47) and had 21 assists on 31 baskets.

ZOO HOURS

The 76ers honored broadcaste­r Marc Zumoff for 25 years as the team broadcaste­r.

UP NEXT

76ers: Play Thursday at Indiana.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Joel Embiid, center, hangs on the rim after a dunk in the Sixers’ 149-107 win over the Minnesota Timberwolv­es on Tuesday.
MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Joel Embiid, center, hangs on the rim after a dunk in the Sixers’ 149-107 win over the Minnesota Timberwolv­es on Tuesday.

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