PHILADELPHIA — Allen Iverson, with his tattoos, cornrows and hip-hop persona, ended up in the center of a celebratory group hug with the fans in the expensive courtside seats at Wachovia Center.
Seconds earlier, with just 3.3 seconds remaining in overtime and the scored tied, Iverson jumped in front of Jarvis Hayes’ inbound pass near midcourt and raced home for a layup, securing a 116-114 victory for the Philadelphia 76ers over the Washington Wizards.
Iverson, who finished with 28 points, 13 assists and no turnovers, could not contain his elation at game’s end. He raised his hand to his ear as if to let the 17,516 “Black Friday” fans know he couldn’t hear them. He then jumped on the seats in the first row, threw his hands around the shoulders of any fan who would fit and whooped it up with the smiling group as the 76ers (6-6) celebrated a win over the Wizards (6-5), whose three-game winning streak ended.
The scene, involving one of the biggest yet most controversial stars in the league, stood in stark contrast to the incident involving the Indiana Pacers’ Ron Artest, Jermaine O’Neal and Stephen Jackson and the rogue Detroit Pistons fans, who engaged in one of the ugliest rumbles in the history of American professional sports Nov.19.
“I hope I don’t get fined or suspended for going in the stands, but I think my reason was a good one,” Iverson said. “It was just special. They were right there. Without them I don’t think we would have had the momentum to be able to get over the hump after those guys hit big shot after big shot. Hopefully, fans will remember it and cherish it for the rest of their lives.”
The Wizards will remember it. Cherishing it is something altogether different.
Washington played the game while coach Eddie Jordan mended in a Washington-area hospital following the discovery of blood clot in his left calf Thanksgiving Day.
“I spoke to him before the game,” said assistant coach Mike O’Koren, who filled in for Jordan. “He’s doing a lot better. He’s fine. He’s coming along, but it’s going to take some time.”
Barring complications, Jordan will return to the bench Wednesday when the Wizards play host to New Jersey.
In their failed attempt to win their fourth game in a row for the first time in nearly three years, the Wizards erased Philadelphia’s 91-82 lead in the final six minutes of regulation, then forced overtime when Hayes (18 points, seven rebounds) split two defenders from 26 feet and drilled one of the Wizards’ 10 3-pointers to send the game to overtime tied 103-103.
Antawn Jamison led the Wizards, who packed the box score with his fifth double-double (27 points, season-high 15 rebounds) of the season. Larry Hughes had a spectacular game, scoring 20 points to go with 12 rebounds and nine assists. Gilbert Arenas added 20 points, and Brendan Haywood finished with his second double-double (14 points, season-high 14 boards) in the loss.
“I don’t think we could have played any better,” said Arenas, who was Hayes’ intended target on the final inbound pass and thought he was fouled on Iverson’s steal. “He went through me to get the ball. So they let him get the ball to see if he could make it in two seconds, which he did. So you can’t do anything about it.”
Hayes also thought Arenas might have been fouled on the play. But the Wizards made their share of mistakes along the way including 17 turnovers that led to 23 points, compared with Philadelphia’s eight that led to seven.
“It’s tough,” Hayes said. “God almighty, it’s tough. It’s one of those things that seems almost a backbreaker. But we’ve got practice tomorrow, and then we’ve got to play at Toronto.”
While Iverson starred for the 76ers, he was not a one-man show. Kyle Korver shot 6-for-12 from behind the 3-point arc to finish with career highs in points (26) and rebounds (eight). Center Marc Jackson finished with 21 points and eight rebounds. And reserves John Salmons (16) and Samuel Dalembert (13) combined to give the 76ers bench a 38-22 scoring advantage.
But Iverson’s play and the ensuing victory celebration overshadowed everything else.
“Games that end like that always hurt you the most,” said Hughes, who spent his first two years in the NBA as Iverson’s teammate in Philadelphia. “That’s what he does. I know that he liked the angle he had to the ball. For a guy who likes to steal the ball, that was the perfect pass.”
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Donyell Marshall and the Toronto Raptors went out of their way -- way out -- to beat the Philadelphia 76ers.
Marshall tied the NBA record with 12 3-pointers and the Raptors finished with a league-record 21 in their 128-110 victory over the 76ers on Sunday night.
Marshall was 12-for-19 from 3-point range and finished with a career-high 38 points to help the Raptors match the franchise record for points.
The Raptors, 21-for-34 from 3-point range, broke the previous NBA record of 19 3-pointers set by Atlanta in a victory in Dallas on Dec. 17, 1996.
"The basket just looked humongous out there today," Marshall said. "My teammates kept telling me to shoot it. They kept saying no matter what play we run we're going to look for you in the corner."
The 76ers repeatedly left Marshall open in the corner as Marshall tied the record set by Kobe Bryant for the Los Angeles Lakers against Seattle on Jan. 7, 2003. The 6-foot-9 power forward tried to surpass Bryant's record in the final 3 minutes, but one attempt rimmed in and out and he missed another
Marshall left to a standing ovation with 17.5 seconds left. His previous career high for points was 37 against Milwaukee on Feb. 23, 2000.
"You can't give a great shooter like that open looks like that. It's suicide," Philadelphia's Chris Webber said. "I told him in the first quarter if he gets those looks, he'd better go for the record and he did."
Marshall, who is from Pennsylvania, knew a lot of family members and friends were watching on television.
"To do it against a team you grew up watching, it felt good," Marshall said.
The two teams combined for an NBA record 31 3-pointers.
Marshall said he took advantage of Philadelphia's style of defense.
"They are predicated on stopping you in the paint and making you shoot outside jump shots," Marshall said. "When you have a coach that preaches that style they're going to keep doing that no matter what."
Toronto trailed by 10 in the first quarter, but the Raptors set a team record with 11 3-pointers in the first half. Marshall made a team-record six 3-pointers in the half, including his first five attempts.
"We knew all about the record at halftime. I was trying to do everything I could to keep him pumped up," Toronto's Jalen Rose said. "I told him what the record was. I told him who had the old record and who broke it before that. And I told him near the end of the game, don't get tired."
The Raptors went on a decisive 19-4 run in the third quarter as Rafer Alston and Jalen Rose had 3-pointers.
Marshall set the team record for 3-pointers in a game with an open shot from the corner with 4:12 left. He tied Bryant's mark with 2:52 left.
"Any time you see a power forward step out and take 19 threes, that's either grounds to get you out of the NBA fast or say that you're a 3-point specialist," Rose said.
Marshall is due to become an unrestricted free agent this summer
"I want to be his agent. From now on he's buying all of the dinners and all of the drinks. We got him paid today," Rose said.
Allen Iverson had 32 points for the 76ers.
Game notes
Rose had 25 points for Toronto, and Morris Petterson added 20. Peterson went 4-for-6 from 3-point range. ... The Raptors tied the franchise record of 128 points, last done March 10, 1996, against Dallas. ... Former boxer Rubin "Hurricane" Carter sat courtside.
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When it was time for Detroit to get back into the game or allow Philadelphia to even their playoff series, Chauncey Billups took over.
Billups made two clutch 3-pointers. He hit a nice fadeaway, and sank a couple of foul shots.
By the time Billups finished scoring 10 straight points for the Pistons in the final 3:05 of regulation, the 76ers' lead was gone -- and so might have been their shot at making this a long series.
Billups scored 12 of his 25 points in the fourth quarter, Rasheed Wallace hit a couple of 3-pointers in overtime and Detroit overcame an inspired effort by Allen Iverson to go up 3-1 in its first-round series with a 97-92 win over the Sixers on Sunday.
"It seemed like the tide was turning, nothing was really going good for us," Billups said. "I wasn't really making too many shots. I wanted to try. If I'm going to go down, I'm going to go down fighting.
"Shots just started going for me and we started to run a couple of plays for me."
The Pistons survived another scare from Philadelphia, and headed home with a chance to wrap up their playoff series. Game 5 is Tuesday in Detroit.
"The guys competed their guts out. They just got beat by the best team in the world," said Sixers coach Jim O'Brien.
After Billups carried the Pistons in a frantic finish to the fourth quarter, Wallace hit a decisive 3-pointer with 1:29 left in OT. Richard Hamilton hit a runner on the baseline with 14.5 seconds left, then sealed the win with a couple of free throws.
"Those were good shots from myself, Rip and Chauncey," Wallace said. "I'd take those shots any day."
Wallace's 3 came right after Chris Webber hit a 3-pointer and Iverson made two free throws, tying the game 90-all.
"He told me to come to him because he was feeling it," Hamilton said. "He knocked down a big shot for us."
Rasheed Wallace had 17 points and Ben Wallace added 12 points and 12 rebounds for the Pistons, who bounced back from a Game 3 loss Friday night.
Tayshaun Prince, who added 17 points, went down briefly at the end of the third quarter with a mildly sprained right ankle, but returned to the game. He was listed as day-to-day.
Iverson again did his best to carry the Sixers, scoring 36 points on 14-for-24 shooting with eight assists.
Webber added 23 points, including several key baskets in the third and fourth quarters. Samuel Dalembert had 15 rebounds.
Iverson did all he could in going over 30 points for the third time in the series, including a running halfcourt shot down the left side to end the first quarter and a jumper with 28.3 seconds left in regulation that gave the Sixers a short-lived 82-80 lead.
"I could feel bad, and I do, but I feel real good about our effort," Iverson said. "I feel real good about my teammates."
Billups answered Iverson's final 3 in regulation with a 3-pointer from the corner that gave the Pistons an 83-82 lead with 22 seconds left.
Billups, though, got a little too aggressive and fouled Willie Green, sending the 78 percent free throw shooter to the line with 3.1 seconds left. Green missed the first and hit the second to tie the game.
"I was just concentrating on trying to sink it, but, unfortunately, I came up short on a free throw that could have won the game for us," said Green, who left the game briefly in the second quarter to get eight stitches over his left eye.
Rasheed Wallace missed a long jumper after Green's free throw, and the game went into overtime.
The 76ers had a nine-point lead with just over 6 minutes left.
With the lead going back and forth late in the fourth quarter, normally reserved Sixers chairman Ed Snider started acting more like Dallas owner Mark Cuban, leaping from his courtside seat and waving his arms while protesting a non-call.
Iverson made his boss feel better with a 3-pointer, but Billups came right back down with a 3 of his own, pulling the Pistons to 80-76 with 2:59 left.
"I was just waiting to run the offense and then I decided to be aggressive," Billups said. "Guys were finding me and shots were going down."
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