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The Philadelphia Inquirer
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Sport
Keith Pompey

Joel Embiid, Tobias Harris lead 76ers past Lakers

PHILADELPHIA — A year ago Wednesday, the 76ers used that night’s game against the Los Angeles Lakers as a barometer to see where they stood.

Things were much different in Wednesday night’s meeting, as both teams were battling injuries and looking to get into a groove.

Fortunately for the Sixers, Joel Embiid was healthy and Tobias Harris was able to play. Embiid finished with 26 points, nine rebounds, and seven assists and Harris added 23 points to lead the Sixers to 105-87 victory at the Wells Fargo Center. This win came after Embiid was named an Eastern Conference All-Star starter for the fifth consecutive season.

The Lakers were without LeBron James after he woke up with left knee soreness. Meanwhile, this was Anthony Davis’ second game back after missing 17 with a left knee MCL sprain. Davis, however, was far from rusty, finishing with game highs of 31 points and 12 rebounds for the Lakers (24-25)

The Sixers (29-19) welcomed back Danny Green, who had missed the past seven games with scar tissue breakage in his right hip. However, they were still without Seth Curry (left ankle soreness) and Shake Milton (back spasms).

Sluggish Embiid

Embiid said after the previous couple of games that he was tired.

He finally played that way on Thursday. The Sixers center, who had been on a dominating scoring stretch, was sluggish against the Lakers.

This contest marked his 21st consecutive game played. It is the second longest stretch of his career.

The Sixers have talked about giving him a day of rest. Saturday’s matchup against the struggling Sacramento Kings would be the perfect time. The Kings (18-32) have lost five straight games and 10 of their last 12.

But there’s been several occasions when the Sixers wanted to rest him, only to have Embiid force his way into playing.

“We’re all for that,” Doc Rivers said. “I love when players want to play. That’s good for him.”

Carmelo vs. the fans

Lakers forward Carmelo Anthony got into it with a fan with 7 minutes, 1 second remaining in the game. A fan yelled something at Anthony after he was fouled by Georges Niang near the mid-court sideline. Anthony turned around and yapped something back at the fan. He was restrained by the players. Then the refs and security rushed over and the fan was escorted out of the arena. Anthony got into another altercation near the baseline close to the tunnel area across from the Sixers’ bench.

Both of these altercations came after he exchanged words with fans after fouling Embiid in the third quarter. Yahoo Sports reported the fan kept calling Anthony a “boy,” yelling for him to “get in the corner boy” and “keep shooting boy.”

Harris’ night

Harris was cleared to play before the game after missing shootaround because of the non-COVID-19 illness.

But you couldn’t tell that anything bothered him.

The power forward started out hot, scoring seven points in the first quarter on 3-for-3 shooting. He cooled off a little in the second quarter, but regrouped for what turned out to be a dominating performance.

Harris’ points came on 10-for-15 shooting.

Green’s return

For Green, it was good to be back on the floor.

The 34-year-old finished with nine points and two rebounds in 15:33.

The 13th-year player has missed a total of 14 games this season due to hip and hamstring injuries. The time away made him cherish his time on the court, especially the big games.

“A lot of guys that were drafted with me are not allowed to play in these games anymore,” said Green, selected 46th overall by the Cleveland Cavaliers in the 2009 draft. “I’ve been very fortunate and blessed to stay a part of this league long enough. You take it for granted early on.

“Now, you realize and cherish and understand what these games are. You see guys that are retired show highlights of guys they played against and these are good memories that you are going to have forever and live on through your kids and grandkids.”

This was Green’s first game since suffering the injury on Jan. 12 against the Charlotte Hornets. He said it took about two weeks for the scar tissue to heal. He’s had the same injury while playing for the San Antonio Spurs.

“Luckily, thank God, it wasn’t anything major. But, yeah, I left a little rip and pop type situation. It wasn’t anything major. It was just scar tissue that was breaking up.”

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