RECAP
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BOX SCORE
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GAME LOG
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SHOT CHART
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GAME FLOW
TORONTO (AP) -- The Toronto Raptors weren't going to let Allen
Iverson put an end to their season.
| | Vince Carter spots up for two of his 39 points. |
Employing a double-teaming defense that took Iverson totally out
of his rhythm, Toronto got 39 points from Vince Carter and dominated the fourth quarter to beat Philadelphia 101-89 Friday night and force a seventh game in their Eastern Conference
semifinal.
The Raptors, winning for the third time this season when facing elimination, looked nothing like they did two nights earlier in Philadelphia when they lost by 33 and allowed Iverson to score 52.
Sending the series back to Philadelphia for the deciding game
Sunday, the Raptors played with composure, were the more physical
team and benefited from a series of adjustments made by Hall of
Fame coach Lenny Wilkens -- the most important of which was sending
two defenders at Iverson as soon as he touched the ball.
"That's how we have to do it. We understood that no one man in
this league can guard him one-on-one," Carter said. "That's the
respect he's earned, and we knew if he scored 52 again we might
have lost this game."
Iverson missed 10 of his first 12 shots and finished just 6-for-24 from the field for 20 points. He began the night averaging 39.0 points in the series.
Rookie Morris Peterson, making his first start since Game 1 of
the first round, scored 17 points for the Raptors. Antonio Davis added 17 points and 13 rebounds, and Alvin Williams had 15 for the Raptors, who turned it into a blowout with a late 11-0 run in which Carter scored nine points.
Peterson, who scored a total of 20 points in the Raptors' first 10 playoff games, hit a pair of 3-pointers early in the fourth quarter to give Toronto an eight-point lead after the Sixers had cut a 19-point deficit to two.
"Those two 3s were about as important as any two shots in this series," 76ers coach Larry Brown said.
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I don't know how much motivation we need. If we lose Sunday, it's summer vacation -- and I'm not ready to go home yet. ” |
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— Allen Iverson |
Carter drove through traffic for a layup that gave the Raptors
an 11-point lead with 7:59 left as Iverson was missing his first
four shots of the fourth quarter, and Carter followed with a drive,
a 23-footer, a 24-footer and a bank shot in the 11-0 run.
"We made a tremendous comeback, and unfortunately we wasted it," Brown said. "When we cut it to two, they responded."
Game 7 will be Sunday at 5:30 p.m. ET.
"That's a guarantee. We are going to win. We're going to come
out and beat them and win Game 7," 76ers center Dikembe Mutombo
said. "We know what kind of mistakes we made and we're going to
come back and be ready for Game 7."
Iverson had only six points at halftime after missing two layups
and shooting an airball as the Sixers were falling behind by as many as 19. He came back with 12 in the third quarter but had just two in the fourth.
"They did a good job of doubling me and getting the ball out of my hands, but we didn't play defense well and that's the reason we lost," Iverson said.
Wilkens made several adjustments aside from immediately
double-teaming Iverson. He moved Peterson into the starting lineup
in place of Chris Childs and had Carter apply fullcourt pressure
when Aaron McKie or Eric Snow brought the ball upcourt -- forcing Philadelphia to run several seconds off the shot clock before running its offense.
The move to Peterson paid immediate dividends as he scored seven points in the first quarter, including a windmill dunk over Jumaine
Jones followed by a 3-pointer for an 18-7 lead.
Jerome Williams pressured the 76ers into throwing away a routine
inbounds pass early in the second quarter, sparking the Raptors to
a 15-6 run that ended with a runner by Alvin Williams for a 48-31
lead.
Davis hit a pair of foul shots to make it 52-33 with 1:35 left in the quarter, and Iverson went into the locker room at halftime with just six points on 2-for-11 shooting.
Philadelphia used a 22-10 run to pull within three, 69-66, late
in the third quarter on a 3-pointer by Rodney Buford, and Iverson made it a two-point game heading into the fourth quarter on an 18-footer with 25 seconds left.
But the Sixers didn't have much left after that, and now they're
facing the type of winner-take-all game they had hoped to avoid.
"I don't know how much motivation we need," Iverson said. "If
we lose Sunday, it's summer vacation -- and I'm not ready to go home
yet."
Game notes Snow, already slowed by bad ankle, jammed his foot late in the game and is questionable for Game 7. ... Carter is scheduled to
graduate from the University of North Carolina on Sunday morning
and would like to find a way to make it to Chapel Hill and then fly
to Philadelphia for Game 7. ... Oakley posted up Iverson during the
first quarter and received the ball with a clear path to the
basket. Inexplicably, he fired a wild pass that flew six feet over
Wilkens' head. Oakley was called for a flagrant foul for knocking
Mutombo to the floor in the third quarter, and Alvin Williams drew one moments later for a hard foul on Tyrone Hill.
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ALSO SEE
NBA Scoreboard
Philadelphia Clubhouse
Toronto Clubhouse
Raptors-76ers Series Page
AUDIO/VIDEO
Vince Carter was impressed with the play of rookie Morris Peterson.
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ESPN's Sal Paolantonio catches up with Morris Peterson after Toronto's Game 6 victory over Philadelphia.
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
Larry Brown gives all the credit to the Raptors for their game 6 victory.
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