Observations after Payne catches fire, scores career-high 32 in comeback win originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia
Just about everything Cameron Payne tossed up turned to gold Tuesday night.
Payne had a brilliant, career-high performance in the Sixers’ 139-129 win over the Grizzlies at Xfinity Mobile Arena. He scored 32 points on 9-for-10 shooting (8 for 8 from three-point range) and also tallied 10 assists.
The Sixers improved to 35-30 and Memphis fell to 24-40.
Four Sixers passed 20 points. Kelly Oubre Jr. posted 31, Quentin Grimes scored 22 and VJ Edgecombe added 21.
Grizzlies guard Ty Jerome scored 26 points and dished out eight assists. He was ejected with 1:18 left in the fourth quarter after picking up two technical fouls in quick succession.
Both teams were very undermanned. The Sixers’ injuries included Joel Embiid (right oblique strain) and Tyrese Maxey (right pinky sprain), who will miss at least the next three weeks.
The Sixers will face the Pistons on Thursday in Detroit. Here are observations on their Payne-led victory over Memphis:
Edgecombe in and at the point
Oubre scored the Sixers’ first five points with a top-of-the-key jumper and a pair of free throws.
There was otherwise nothing doing for the Sixers’ offense in the opening minutes. The team started 1 for 7 from the field and 1 for 8 from three-point range.
The Sixers’ defense also had minimal success. Memphis regularly beat the Sixers off the dribble in the first quarter and fired up comfortable jumpers. Jerome’s and-one leaner lifted the Grizzlies to a 17-7 lead.
Edgecombe started in the backcourt next to Grimes and served as the Sixers’ primary ball handler. The rookie returned from a three-game absence with a lumbar contusion.
The Grizzlies applied early full-court ball pressure. To Edgecombe’s credit, he wasn’t bothered much by it and the Sixers reduced their turnovers across the board following a few subpar games in that area. The team committed just four turnovers in the first half.
Payne’s got his jumper back
The Grizzlies had no traditional center available in Philadelphia.
With matchups presumably in mind, Sixers head coach Nick Nurse removed Andre Drummond from the rotation. Jabari Walker played center once Adem Bona subbed out. Later, starting power forward Dominick Barlow was the Sixers’ biggest player on the floor.
The Sixers’ second unit had a strong finish to the first quarter. A Walker put-back layup tied the game and Grimes’ and-one lefty layup gave the Sixers a 32-29 edge.
Payne caught fire off the bench in the second quarter and never cooled off.
Between the 10:06 and 8:09 mark of the second, Payne hit three long-range jumpers and scored 11 points. He wound up with 14 points and zero misses in the second period.
After signing with the Sixers in February and struggling as a shooter through his first 10 NBA games of the season, Payne was due to heat up. The veteran guard’s not the sort of player to be shaken by a rough patch. He’s weathered slumps over the years and understands that he needs to keep shooting through inevitable ups and downs.
Forced turnovers fuel comeback
The Sixers were down three points at halftime. To no one’s surprise, that deficit increased in the third quarter.
The team trailed by as many as 14 points in the third, although the Sixers had a high-energy close to the period and the Grizzlies only led by six entering the fourth.
Memphis had an unsurprising advantage in second-chance points (28-15). And, if it weren’t for Payne, the Sixers would’ve been dramatically outmatched from three-point territory. Everyone besides Payne combined to go 3 for 23.
The Sixers’ knack for forcing turnovers ultimately spurred their comeback surge in the fourth quarter.
Oubre converted a crowd-pleasing and-one layup after a Payne steal. Two more Memphis giveaways led to dunks by Oubre and Barlow. The young Grizzlies seemed rattled by the Sixers’ aggressive defense and the fact that their lead was disappearing. Payne’s seventh triple put the Sixers up 119-115, capped a 12-0 run and prompted a Memphis timeout.
Suddenly, with Payne the star of the show, the Sixers could do no wrong. The Grizzlies asked for timeout again after Payne drove and dropped off a pass to Barlow for an and-one bucket that gave the Sixers a double-digit lead.
Payne raced to his absurdly efficient career high and the Sixers celebrated with the lively lefty at the final buzzer.