Kawhi leads Raptors to series-tying win over Sixers

Agence France-Presse

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Kawhi leads Raptors to series-tying win over Sixers
Toronto levels its Eastern Conference semifinals duel against Philadelphia to 2-all with a monster double-double effort from Leonard

LOS ANGELES, USA – Kawhi Leonard scored 39 points and pulled down 14 rebounds to propel the Toronto Raptors to a 101-96 victory over the Philadelphia 76ers that knotted their NBA playoff series at 2-all. 

Marc Gasol added 16 points and Kyle Lowry contributed 14 for the Raptors, who held ailing Sixers center Joel Embiid to 11 points on 2-of-7 shooting from the field.

The Raptors will try to seize a series lead when the action shifts back to Toronto for Game 5 on Tuesday, May 7 (Wednesday, May 8, Philippine time).

After losing back-to-back games, Leonard said the Raptors’ mindset was to “come in and play hard.”


“The whole team concept was coming in and playing harder, being smarter and take your shots,” Leonard said. “We needed it. This is a big win, but we’ve got to come back and get it for Game 5.”

Leonard scored 17 points and grabbed 10 rebounds in a first half that finished with the Raptors holding a narrow 47-45 lead.

It was the first time in his career that he notched at least 15 points and 10 rebounds in a half.

After 7 lead changes in the 3rd quarter, the increasingly physical encounter was tied 75-75 heading into the 4th.

The Raptors were clinging to a 91-90 lead when Leonard drained a step-back three-pointer over a reaching Embiid with 1:01 left to play and 3 seconds left on the shot clock.

It put Toronto up 94-90 and the 76ers wouldn’t get the gap below four points from there.

“I just saw there were about 3 seconds left on the clock,” Leonard said of the clutch basket. “(Embiid’s) so long so I just I just tried to fade away and shoot it over the top of him and luckily it went down.”

The 76ers connected on just 5 of 21 attempts from the field in the 4th quarter, missing 9 straight in one span and the Raptors made 7 free throws down the stretch to seal it.

“Little bit more of a grind it out affair,” said Toronto coach Nick Nurse, whose Raptors were ousted in the second round of the playoffs the last two seasons.

“Neither team was shooting the ball that well, especially in the first half. We played hard and tried to make it as tough as we could on them and made some plays there at the end.”

Fourth-quarter drought 

Philadelphia coach Brett Brown said a six-minute “drought” in the 4th quarter owed plenty to Toronto’s determined defense.

“You give Toronto credit, their defense went up a new level and it was a closeout type of 4th period,” he said.

“It was 75-75 at the end of the 3rd and we went into a drought… that was littered with missed layups, missed free throws, some open three sprinkled in with some turnovers. I give Toronto credit.”

Brown noted that Embiid’s disappointing scoring numbers told an incomplete tale. The big man from Cameroon was battling a viral illness that had him warning the coach at 6 a.m. that he might not be able to play.

With 8 rebounds, 7 assists, and 2 blocked shots, Brown said Embiid remained a key contributor nevertheless.

“To his complete credit, he just kind of willed his way through it,” Brown said.

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