The Dallas Mavericks are developing a knack for letting easy wins turn into tough ones.
In their first game since needing overtime to salvage what was once a 20-point lead, the Mavericks needed double overtime to beat the Philadelphia 76ers 125-122 Wednesday night after letting a 15-point fourth-quarter lead slip away.
"We keep shooting ourselves in the foot," said Antawn Jamison, who scored 23 points. "We have to understand the urgency of the situation. We have to fight and stay competitive."
These close games are only part of the emotional ups and downs coach Don Nelson has gone through this week. Before tipoff, he spent about a half-hour discussing his job status with team owner Mark Cuban, with Cuban telling Nelson, "You ain't going anywhere." The topic has become a source of speculation because the team has yet to get on a roll this season.
The Mavs responded through three quarters, going up 85-70 early in the fourth. Helping Antoine Walker notch a second straight triple-double seemed to be all that was left, especially considering that Philadelphia was without injured starters Kenny Thomas and Derrick Coleman.
But the 76ers started nailing 3-pointers and even went up by four in the final three minutes of regulation. Neither team led by that much again.
"No moral victories," said Philadelphia's Allen Iverson, who had five 3-pointers and finished with 31 points, eight rebounds and seven assists.
"We had opportunities to win the game, we just couldn't get it done. That's the sad part about everything. The game was right there for us to win. We just didn't execute the way we needed to down the stretch."
Dirk Nowitzki helped win it with five points in the second overtime, including the go-ahead jumper with 24.1 seconds left. He finished with 25 points and 14 rebounds.
Michael Finley had 32 points. Walker got his milestone with 11 points, 17 rebounds and 13 assists -- but shot 4-of-19 and fouled out in the final minute of the second overtime.
The Mavs certainly could've done without the extra 10 minutes; at 3:14 it was the longest game in team history. And this was their only home game in a stretch of five games in seven days that concludes Friday at Denver and Saturday at Portland.
Dallas ended up allowing it most fourth-quarter points all season, 37. Philadelphia scored its most points of the season, aided by great 3-point shooting: 9-of-12 in the fourth quarter and first overtime. The 76ers went 0-for-3 in the second OT.
Glenn Robinson had 34 points and seven rebounds, and Samuel Dalembert set career highs with 24 points and 16 rebounds.
In the fourth quarter, Dallas recovered to lead by two with 20 seconds left. Robinson tied it with 14.9 seconds left, then Finley missed a 20-footer at the buzzer.
Iverson and Nowitzki traded 3s in the first overtime, then with 21.9 seconds left the 7-foot Nowitzki lost the ball out of bounds while trying to back down 6-foot-3 Eric Snow. It was only the fourth turnover for Dallas; three would've tied the NBA record.
Aaron McKie, playing only his second game after missing seven straight with a strained hamstring, had a jumper go in and out at the buzzer.
Nowitzki hit a jumper for the first points in the second overtime. Philadelphia tied it, but never led again.
The key basket was a 15-footer by Nowitzki that made it 122-120. It came at the end of a wild series that began with him missing a shot, Jamison missing two follows, then 5-foot-11 Travis Best snagging that rebound in the paint and feeding Nowitzki.
Dalembert missed one of two free throws with 18.5 seconds left when he could've tied it at 122.
After Best made two foul shots to put Dallas back up by three, Snow missed one of two free throws. Then Finley went 1-of-2 from the line, giving Philadelphia one last chance.
Snow wasted it by putting up an airball on a 3-pointer.
Coleman missed a second straight game with a sprained left knee. Thomas, who was averaging 10.9 points and 12.7 rebounds the last six games, sat out because of a sprained right ankle.
Game notes
The Mavs played their first back-to-back overtime games since 1998. ... Walker became the first Dallas player with consecutive triple-doubles since Jason Kidd did it Jan. 12-13, 1996. Kidd also did it April 5-7, 1995. ... On the day the second-winningest coach in league history was told his job was safe, the league's all-time winningest coach returned as Lenny Wilkens was hired to run the New York Knicks. "Good," Nelson said. "Put it (the wins record) out of sight. That's fantastic." Wilkens has 1,292 wins; Nelson has 1,118.
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Midway through the fourth quarter Allen Iverson unlaced his white and light blue sneakers and found a child in the stands to send home with a little gift.
Wednesday night was that easy, and record-setting, for Iverson and the Denver Nuggets.
Iverson scored 31 points, and the Nuggets were nearly flawless, scoring the most points in the NBA this season in a 138-96 rout of the Seattle SuperSonics
"It was fun to watch," Denver coach George Karl said. "It was fun to see everyone play well."
Denver easily snapped its three-game losing streak, with a large amount of its points coming on uncontested dunks and layups. Toss in 9-for-17 shooting on 3-pointers with all those easy baskets at the rim, and the Nuggets set a franchise record by shooting 67.0 percent.
The previous franchise mark was set 30 years ago, when the Nuggets shot 66.7 percent against New Jersey early in the 1978 season. Denver also bettered the 66.2 percent shooting of the Lakers earlier this season, the previous best in the league.
The highest scoring game before Wednesday night came against Denver, when the Suns scored 137.
"I've been in the league 12 years and I've been playing a long time. I don't know if we've been this hot before, but it was pretty special," Iverson said. "It was fun."
Playing a tired Seattle team certainly helped the Nuggets. The Sonics were finishing off a back-to-back, having played at Golden State a night earlier and offered little resistance at the defensive end.
With Denver trying to chase down a playoff spot in the competitive Western Conference, games against teams like lowly Seattle are now must-wins. The Nuggets are a half game behind Golden State for eighth in the West.
"It's crazy," Iverson said of the West. "We've got to concentrate on us and not on anybody else."
Perhaps the brief losing streak and falling out of a playoff spot is what the Nuggets needed to refocus. Karl noticed how sharp his team was during shootaround on Wednesday morning, and it certainly carried over.
Kenyon Martin made 11 of 14 shots and scored 23 points, including a trio of dunks in the third quarter alone. Carmelo Anthony added 16 points and played just 30 minutes. Iverson made 13 of 18 shots and was done early in the fourth quarter. Karl, who missed Monday's loss to Detroit with the flu, got an easy welcome back to the bench, watching the fourth quarter instead of coaching.
"They know they are capable of doing this more often and probably need to do it more often," Karl said.
Mickael Gelabale continued his strong play for Seattle, scoring 16 points. Rookie Kevin Durant continued to struggle with his shot, making just 4 of 17 attempts and scored 16 points.
Denver jumped out quickly, using a 15-4 run midway through the first quarter to take a 27-13 lead on Martin's powerful dunk over Seattle's Nick Collison.
That run was the first of three major first-half spurts for the Nuggets, who shot 62 percent in the half and led 64-45 at halftime.
Iverson capped an 8-0 run early in the second quarter, by crossing over between his legs four times on Collison, then darting into a lane for a soft floater. Linas Kleiza added 12 points in just 14 minutes in the first half and J.R. Smith capped the half with a falling down 3-pointer with less than a second left in the half. Both Smith and Kleiza finished with 15.
"If no one is on the floor, it's hard to shoot the percentage they shot," Seattle coach P.J. Carlesimo said. "We didn't defend at all."
The Nuggets lead only grew in the third quarter. Anthony went to the bench for good late in the quarter and Iverson capped his night with a fast-break, no-look drop pass to a trailing Martin for an easy layup and a 100-75 Denver lead after three quarters.
"We've been up numerous times ... and teams can come back to beat you. But tonight we stepped on them and didn't let them get back up," Denver's Marcus Camby said.
Karl picked up his 862nd win, two shy of Jack Ramsay for 10th on the NBA's all-time coaching wins list.
Game notes
Seattle G Earl Watson out again with an illness. Carlesimo was unsure if Watson would be available to play Friday night when Seattle hosts Miami. ... Denver was without F Eduardo Najera, who remained in Denver for personal reasons. ... Seattle G Luke Ridnour didn't play in the second half after experiencing tightness in his right hamstring.