Sixers Pummel NY Knicks, 141-127
Updated 11:52 PM EST, Sat, Oct 31, 2009
Andre Iguodala scored 32 points, including the go-ahead three-point play in overtime, and the Philadelphia 76ers blew a 23-point lead before beating the New York Knicks 141-127 on Saturday night.
Lou Williams added 27 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists for the 76ers, who seemed headed for a quick knockout in the undercard bout on the Philadelphia-New York weekend card. Instead, they barely held on at the end after a furious Knicks rally ended with an overtime loss for the second time in two nights.
Thaddeus Young scored 25 for the Sixers, who made 16 of 22 shots in the first quarter, rang up 70 points in the first half, and shot 61 percent in their second victory in two nights.
Somehow it ended up being a difficult one. New York scored 41 points in the fourth and 71 in the second half but dropped to 0-3, its worst start since losing its first five under Larry Brown in 2005-06.
Marreese Speights, who had 20 points and 10 rebounds, made two free throws on the play that fouled out Harrington with 3 minutes remaining in overtime. Iguodala followed with his three-point play that gave Philadelphia a 129-127, and the deflated Knicks were soon down double digits again.
The Knicks' home opener -- which briefly included ex-Knick Stephon Marbury in a courtside seat -- was clearly the JV game on the weekend of matchups between Philadelphia and New York teams. The Phillies hosted the Yankees in Game 3 of the World Series on Saturday night, and the Giants visit the Eagles in an NFC East contest on Sunday.
It ended up as a Halloween thriller with the 76ers beating the Knicks for the sixth straight time, their longest winning streak in the series since taking eight in a row in the mid-1980s.
The Knicks changed their lineup, giving Gallinari his first start of the season after falling behind 32-13 after one quarter of their double-overtime loss Friday at Charlotte. Gallinari made a 3-pointer the first time he touched the ball, but nothing could solve New York's defensive woes.
Philadelphia was up double digits a little more than halfway though the first quarter, shot 73 percent and led by as much as 16 while building a 40-25 advantage.
New York, which has trailed by at least 21 points in all three games, started to hear some loud boos while falling behind 70-51 at halftime. The lead grew to 23 in the third quarter, but the Knicks cut it to 96-81 after three and kept charging in the fourth.
A three-point play by Harrington and a 3-pointer by Gallinari cut it to 121-120 with 11 seconds to go. Jason Kapono, one of the NBA's best shooters, made only one of two free throws, and Chris Duhon drove for a tying layup with 5.9 seconds remaining. Iguodala missed a jumper as regulation ended.
Copyright Associated Press
First Published: Oct 31, 2009 10:06 PM EST
You Might Like
You have 2000 characters left

















