Observations after George returns, Maxey scores 39 in Sixers' comeback win originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
Led by Tyrese Maxey’s 39 points, the Sixers battled back to snag a nervy win Monday night over the Clippers.
In Paul George’s season debut, the Sixers earned a 110-108 victory at Xfinity Mobile Arena.
James Harden had two cracks at a go-ahead three-pointer on the game’s final possession, but he missed both.
George had nine points on 2-for-9 shooting, seven rebounds and three assists in his return from offseason arthroscopic surgery on his left knee. Quentin Grimes scored 19 points. Andre Drummond posted 14 points and 18 rebounds.
Harden tallied 28 points. Ivica Zubac had a 14-point, 13-rebound double-double.
The Sixers were down Joel Embiid (right knee injury management), Kelly Oubre Jr. (left knee LCL injury) and Adem Bona (right ankle sprain).
The Clippers were missing four players, including Kawhi Leonard (right ankle sprain) and Bradley Beal (left hip fracture).
Sixers head coach Nick Nurse said pregame that Embiid remains day to day and he doesn’t think the star big man is far away from returning, although Embiid is “not quite pain-free,” According to Nurse, Oubre had a meeting with doctors set for Monday night.
The 8-5 Sixers will face the Raptors on Wednesday night in Philadelphia. Here are observations on their win over the Clippers:
George’s 1st action
George scored the first hoop of the game, sinking a catch-and-shoot three-pointer on the right wing off of a Maxey feed. He then drew a foul on a jumper beyond the arc and made 2 of 3 free throws to give the Sixers a 5-0 lead.
The Clippers followed with a 14-0 run. After George missed a jumper, Harden walked into a pull-up three and Nurse called timeout.
The Sixers’ offense was cold in the early going. Maxey started 0 for 3 from the floor and the Sixers began 2 for 11 as a team. George subbed out with 6:21 to go in the first quarter and the Sixers trailing by nine points.
Nurse had expressed the reasonable hope that George would improve the Sixers’ defense right away. He certainly did not make an immediate positive impact. The Sixers had a poor start in transition and Los Angeles scored the night’s first nine fast-break points.
George finished with 21 minutes and seemed to have no trouble with conditioning. His movement appeared fine and George looked to be unbothered by contact, although the 35-year-old forward didn’t have many forceful moments as a driver. He and the Sixers will expect better nights ahead in his 16th NBA season.
Harden starts hot, Sixers adjust
In addition to George, the Sixers started Maxey, VJ Edgecombe, Dominick Barlow and Drummond.
They used five men off the bench, including Jabari Walker in backup center minutes. Jared McCain checked in to open the second quarter alongside George.
Justin Edwards guarded Harden late in the first and had a tough time. Harden crossed over Edwards and waltzed in for an easy layup that extended the Clippers’ lead to 33-20. He racked up 17 points in the first quarter.
Edwards and the Sixers effectively contained Harden in the second quarter. They shaded help more strongly toward the 11-time All-Star when he surveyed the defense from the top of the floor. The Sixers also hedged pick-and-rolls and sent the occasional double team.
Still, with their offense light on any sustained success, the Sixers entered halftime down double digits. Brook Lopez’s long-range jumper with 2.3 seconds left in the second quarter put the Clippers up 56-46.
Sixers capitalize on Clippers’ fatigue
For the second straight game, Nurse tweaked his starting lineup to begin the third quarter. Grimes replaced Barlow. When Barlow subbed in, he took over as the Sixers’ backup center.
The team’s new lineup put together a promising stretch. George sealed a stop with a block on John Collins and the Sixers scored on their ensuing possession with a Grimes three. Maxey knocked down a mid-range jumper to cut the Clippers’ lead to 64-61.
The Sixers were unable to maintain momentum in the third quarter. Harden’s and-one layup with 1.1 seconds remaining in the third built L.A.’s advantage to 83-73.
Eventually, the Sixers made the Clippers look like a fatigued team playing the second game of a back-to-back on the road.
Harden’s jumpers kept coming up short and he couldn’t create much against Grimes, who defended him very well. Maxey spearheaded a Sixers run. He nailed a three off of beautiful ball movement, converted an and-one bucket and knifed through the defense for a layup that gave the Sixers a 95-94 edge.
Once the Sixers grabbed the lead, the Clippers’ chances seemed slim. Edgecombe, Maxey and Grimes all drained clutch threes.
The Sixers couldn’t cement a win in convincing fashion. With his team up four points, Edgecombe missed a pair of free throws. And with the Clippers down two and pressuring the Sixers in the backcourt, Maxey turned the ball over.
The initial call on the floor was a foul, but Los Angeles won its challenge and got the ball with 11.7 seconds left. Harden’s misses meant the Sixers avoided what would have been a stinging loss.