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News » Brand hits game-winner as 76ers beat Clippers


Brand hits game-winner as 76ers beat Clippers


Brand hits game-winner as 76ers beat Clippers
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Elton Brand went through the usual pregame routine a former All-Star makes the first time he plays his old team.

There was the hug for Clippers coach Mike Dunleavy, the greetings with the assistants and trash talking with his former teammates. He ended the reunion with something to remember: Brand beat his former team with his biggest basket yet for his new one.

NBA roundup


Friday's action

  • KG wins in return to Minnesota
  • Carter rallies Nets from 18 down
  • Rockets rally past Wizards in fourth
  • Sixers' Brand beats former team
  • Howard keys OT victory for Magic
  • Hawks get sloppy win over Bobcats
  • Kidd sparkles as Mavs mash Grizz
  • Bucks clobber short-handed Knicks
  • Mason, Spurs shoot down Jazz
  • Hornets, back in OKC, sting Thunder
  • Trail Blazers blow out Kings
  • Rose leads Bulls past Warriors
  • Kobe, Lakers cruise past Nuggets

FOXSports.com analysis

  • Rosen: Knicks sacrificing present
  • Hill: D'Antoni a difference maker
  • Rosen: Pistons' new personality
  • Galinsky: NBA power rankings

Photos

  • Celtics celebrate 17th title

Brand hit a 15-footer with 57 seconds left and finished with 17 points in his first game against Los Angeles, leading the Philadelphia 76ers to an 89-88 victory over the short-handed Clippers on Friday night.

"It's one of those nights that I'm glad it's over," he said. "It was a big deal, there was a lot of anticipation. We got the victory so it's time to move on."

The Clippers lost shortly after acquiring forward Zach Randolph and guard Mardy Collins from the New York Knicks for Cuttino Mobley and Tim Thomas.

Los Angeles built off a strong end to the third and was inching toward a double-digit lead until it all unraveled over the final 2:50. Andre Iguodala converted a three-point play and Andre Miller hit a 3-pointer to get the Sixers within one.

Then Brand, who bolted the Clippers and signed a free-agent deal with the Sixers, nailed the winner.

"I've seen him make that shot a few times," said Dunleavy.

Brand played his first game against the Clippers since signing a five-year deal worth around $80 million in July. Brand grabbed a franchise-record 4,710 rebounds and scored 9,336 points for Los Angeles from 2001-08 and became the face of the long-suffering franchise.

But the two-time All-Star forward left on sour terms once Dunleavy said Brand backed out of a verbal agreement to return to the Clippers and then never offered an explanation why.

"If he called me up and said, 'Coach, I know I told you I was coming back, but I think a situation came up that's better for my family, I'm going to move on,' then, hey, sorry to hear it, but I wish you the best and good luck," Dunleavy said before the game.

Brand shook Dunleavy's hand and gave his former coach a quick embrace before the game.

"There's no hard feelings," Brand said. "He's a good guy."

Brand struggled most of the game from the floor, missing a couple of open looks late in the fourth that could have sliced Philadelphia's deficit.

"They know where I like the ball, they know my moves," Brand said. "Some of those coaches taught me those moves."

Then he made up for it in a big way.

"When the ball is in his hands, we want him to score," Sixers coach Maurice Cheeks said.

Thaddeus Young scored 17 points and Iguodala had 14 points and 12 rebounds for the Sixers.

Al Thornton scored 22 points for the Clippers, Baron Davis had 18 and Chris Kaman added 17.

Davis signed with the Clippers with the idea that he would play with Brand. Once Brand left for Philly, their relationship fizzled and Davis said this week he had nothing to say about Brand.

Davis sparked the Clippers in the third when he sank a 3, then blocked Iguodala's shot on the other end. The Clippers got the ball back and Eric Gordon made two free throws to help the Clippers take a 72-68 lead into the fourth.

The Sixers were sloppy in the fourth and the Clippers pounced. Thornton scored off a Sixers turnover at midcourt and Kaman followed with a three-point play to open an 83-75 lead.

Davis nailed a turnaround jumper for an 88-84 lead with 1:45 lead, but that was it for the Clippers.

The Clippers dropped to 2-10, one huge reason why Dunleavy said it was time to shake up the roster before the season slipped away.

Randolph, the 19th overall pick in the 2001 draft, led the Knicks with 20.5 points and 12.5 rebounds. He has career averages of 16.4 points and 8.2 rebounds over seven seasons and fills the void in the post the Clippers have missed since Brand left.

"We're 2-10, so I hope it helps," Kaman said.

The Sixers hope this win can get their season going. They have played nothing at all like the fast-breaking, easy-bucket team that used a strong second half last season to make the playoffs. They lost at two-win Minnesota on Wednesday and have largely abandoned their running game to placate Brand with mixed results. Brand's scoring is well off his career mark and the starting five really hasn't clicked.

"We need to come in and play loose," said guard Willie Green. "We are coming in a little too stagnant and hesitant."

Notes

Dunleavy was whistled for a technical in the third. ... Mobley averaged 13.7 points for the Clippers. Thomas, who signed with the Clippers in 2006, averaged 9.5 points. He played with the Knicks for parts of two seasons. Collins, a former Temple Owls standout, averaged 2.2 points and 1.7 assists in nine games. ... The Sixers are 1-5 when scoring less than 90 points.


Author: Fox Sports
Author's Website: http://www.foxsports.com
Added: November 22, 2008

 

 
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