Houston Chronicle

Tucker was Game 1 X-factor

- By Tim Reynolds

MIAMI — Nobody on the Miami Heat roster knows Philadelph­ia guard James Harden better than P.J. Tucker.

They got further acquainted in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference semifinals.

The UT product set the tone of the night for Miami by playing full-court defense against his former Rockets teammate, then kept doing more and more dirty work in his 28 minutes. His final numbers — 10 points and seven rebounds — didn’t come close to measuring the impact he made in a 106-92 win for the Heat over the 76ers on Monday night.

“It’s what I do,” said Tucker, a big part of Milwaukee’s run to an NBA title last season who’s trying to win another ring with Miami. “Just trying to change the game, affect the game without scoring, figuring out a way to win the game. That’s it.” Sounds simple. It isn’t. Tucker was the ringleader of a defense that held Harden to a 5-for-13 shooting night (just 1 for 4 in the second half ), hardly the numbers Philadelph­ia probably needs him to have while injured MVP finalist and scoring champion Joel Embiid is sidelined. Harden finished with 16 points, and scored only four after halftime.

“It’s not about James,” 76ers coach Doc Rivers said. “It’s about all of them. We’re a team, and we just have to play as a team. James can score more. We’ve got to get him in better spots. … It’s not just one guy who’s going to take up the slack from Joel.”

Harden acknowledg­ed after Game 1 that he can be more aggressive. What he didn’t say was that Tucker made that task quite difficult Monday night.

“P.J. is P.J.,” Harden said. “Plays hard, but it’s not something that I’m worried about.”

Tucker didn’t limit his moments of impact to when he was defending Harden, a three-time scoring champion and former MVP. He had a sequence in the third quarter that seemed to be a springboar­d to the Heat changing the game.

He got into the lane for a basket that put Miami up 66-61. The Heat got a stop on the next possession, and the next few seconds were all Tucker.

He knocked away a rebound from the 76ers to extend a Miami possession, got another offensive rebound, then fought off Tobias Harris so Bam Adebayo could get another rebound that led to free throws.

“I have just the utmost respect for him,” Adebayo said.

The game was still in the balance at that point. It wasn’t for much longer. The Heat led by as many as 21 in the fourth.

“There’s really a timeliness to his winning plays,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “It’s tough to describe it. They’re momentumsh­ifting plays, and he just senses the moment. And a lot of times it’s going to be those intangible plays with loose balls, deflection­s, taking a charge or just pursuits on both ends of the court that don’t necessaril­y translate to a stat. They just infuse confidence and life into your team. He’s a really inspiring player.”

 ?? Michael Reaves / Getty Images ?? The Heat’s P.J. Tucker helped harass 76ers star James Harden into a 5 for 13 shooting night, and his hustle came up big in a key third-quarter sequence.
Michael Reaves / Getty Images The Heat’s P.J. Tucker helped harass 76ers star James Harden into a 5 for 13 shooting night, and his hustle came up big in a key third-quarter sequence.

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