Los Angeles Times

Clippers’ victory puts 76ers’ Nurse in foul mood

Officials admit after the game that George should have been whistled on final play.

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PHILADELPH­IA — Kawhi Leonard completed two three-point plays late in the game, then made a block at the rim on the final possession to lead the Clippers to a 108-107 win over the Philadelph­ia 76ers on Wednesday night.

Paul George had 22 points for the Clippers while Leonard added 17. James Harden, in his return to Wells Fargo Center, had 16 points and 14 assists for the Clippers, who had lost six of nine.

Tyrese Maxey had 26 points for the 76ers while Kelly Oubre Jr. added 17, but was stuffed at the rim by Leonard on a play that 76ers coach Nick Nurse thought should have resulted in a foul on George.

The officiatin­g crew after the game said a foul should have been called on the last play that would have sent Oubre to the line with a chance to win the game.

Nurse stormed onto the court to dispute the non-call and had to be restrained by his assistants. Oubre also jumped into the mix, pointing at each official before being pulled away after the final horn.

“Well, I think, listen, I think he took it in there pretty hard, right?” Nurse said. “I looked it on our computer screen a couple times. I thought there was certainly contact. Certainly as much as the last two or three that got called and-1s at the other end. And that’s all. I just thought it was enough contact to call. But that’s the way it goes sometimes.”

The game officials agreed.

“On the last play on the f loor, in real time the crew interprete­d that play as the defender jumping vertically,” referee Kevin Scott said to a pool reporter. “However, in postgame video review we did observe some slight drift to his left by the defender George, and a foul should have been ruled.”

Leonard grabbed 10 rebounds to go with his 17 points, most coming in the second half after he bounced back from a one-for-8 shooting first half. “We had to stay focused if we were going to stay in the game,” he said.

“I liked our fight when we got down 15 points,” Clippers coach Tyronn Lue said. “It’s a tough game for a first game of a road trip . ... I just liked us staying with it and attacking the paint and getting to the rim.”

Leonard scored with 44 seconds left, was fouled by Tobias Harris and hit the free throw to give the Clippers a 105-104 lead. 76ers guard Buddy Hield responded with a long three-pointer to give Philadelph­ia a 107-105 lead with 23 seconds to play.

After a timeout, Leonard sliced down an empty lane with a reverse layup and added the free throw after being fouled by Oubre to give the Clippers a one-point lead again. Oubre drove the lane at the other end of the floor, but Leonard pinned the ball against the rim and backboard.

Harden played 11⁄2 seasons for the 76ers before being traded to the Clippers on Oct. 31 as part of a sevenplaye­r deal after a public summer contract dispute with Daryl Morey, Philadelph­ia’s president of basketball operations.

Harden was greeted by boos when he was the first Clippers player introduced, then was heckled every time he touched the ball. After a sluggish start, Harden began to assert himself on the offensive end and distribute the ball. He was six of 15 from the floor and grabbed five rebounds.

“I expected it,” Harden said. “I really don’t know what it’s about, but I expected it. So it is what it is. I don’t even know why they were booing. You can ask them. I don’t know why they were booing.”

When asked if he would ever patch up his relationsh­ip with Morey — to whom he was close during time in Houston and Philadelph­ia — the answer was direct. “No,” Harden answered. “Hell no.”

Both local teams capture key road games, with one of them winning in controvers­ial fashion at the end.

 ?? Matt Slocum Associated Press ?? THE CLIPPERS’ Kawhi Leonard, center, goes up for a shot against the 76ers’ Tobias Harris, right, and Nicolas Batum during the second half. Leonard had 17 points in the Clippers’ one-point win over Philadelph­ia.
Matt Slocum Associated Press THE CLIPPERS’ Kawhi Leonard, center, goes up for a shot against the 76ers’ Tobias Harris, right, and Nicolas Batum during the second half. Leonard had 17 points in the Clippers’ one-point win over Philadelph­ia.

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