Philadelphia 76ers Wiretap

Snow Gets His Shot Back

Eric Snow admits that, with Allen Iverson back in the 76ers' lineup, perhaps he was passive in Games 1 and 2 of the first-round playoff series against the Boston Celtics. Perhaps he passed up open shots. Perhaps he tried to involve Iverson too much in the offense.

With the Sixers trailing Boston by two games to none, however, Snow on Sunday exchanged passivity for aggressiveness, and the results showed. Instead of his 4-for-25 performance of the first two games, he was a splendid 9 for 14 for a career playoff-high 23 points.

The Sixers needed every one for a 108-103 victory that forced Game 4 tomorrow night at the First Union Center.

"Maybe I was just trying to get Allen off and get our big men off, and at the same time get shots on the fly," Snow said yesterday after the Sixers had a light practice and a film session. "That's an accurate statement, but I think - no, I know - I was more aggressive [on Sunday].

"All the guys encouraged me to be more aggressive, and it's not necessarily always taking shots. It's pushing the ball up, creating, driving, and trying to get [the Celtics] to help on me, because they do help a lot."

On the Sixers' second possession Sunday, Matt Harpring got Snow the ball along the perimeter. Without hesitation - no dribble, no fake, no glance at a teammate - Snow drilled an 18-footer. With 7 minutes, 45 seconds left in the quarter, he made a tough turnaround jumper from nine feet out, and a couple of minutes later he made a 20-footer off a feed from Iverson that put the Sixers up by 19-10.

Those hoops set the tone for Snow, who insisted after Game 2 that he had not lost his confidence. His shot simply was not falling.

Snow's only bucket of the second quarter came on the last possession of the half. With a 15-2 run, the Celtics had cut the Sixers' 16-point lead to just three until Snow, a career 20.1 percent three-point shooter who was alone in the right corner, made his fourth three-pointer of the season.

In addition to his 23 points, Snow had five assists, two rebounds and a steal and committed only one turnover. He was 4 of 4 from the foul line.

"He's going to hurt us if he doesn't shoot open shots," coach Larry Brown said. "When he's open and shoots it, I always feel good. I don't like him to take shots that don't come out of our offense or when he's not open, but I never worry about him shooting an open shot, and he needed to make some to get some confidence.

Via Philadelphia Inquirer


Larry Brown spoke up for sake of the game

In Sunday's game against the Celtics, Sixer coach Larry Brown came to the rescue of one of the players... one of the Celtics players. Phil Jasner of the Daily News reports that Brown spoke up for Boston's Paul Pierce who came close to being ejected in the fourth quarter.

With four minutes left in the game, the officials were sorting out some pushing, shoving and trash-talking by both teams. Pierce and the Sixers' Allen Iverson already had been called for a double technical. When Pierce and the Sixers' Aaron McKie got in each other's face, McKie was hit with a technical. And, as the officials were pointing toward players, it appeared Pierce might be assessed another technical, which would have meant an ejection.

And that is when Sixers coach Larry Brown, who believes dearly in the sanctity of the game, walked up the sideline and told Hollins: "Don't throw him out of the game." That was Brown's way of saying it was important to allow the players to decide the outcome of an important game. Brown said Hollins replied they had to do what was right; as it turned out, the designations remained and no one was ejected.

Asked about it yesterday, Brown said: "Let the players play."

Via Philadelphia Daily News


Life as Sixers know it gets a reprieve

PERHAPS SOMEWHERE way, way back in a corner of his mind, Allen Iverson might have thought he was going to the foul line to shoot two potentially franchise-altering shots. Maybe, with 19.7 seconds left and the Sixers leading the Boston Celtics by one, Iverson considered how drastically the make-up of the 76ers might change if he missed the free throws, and the Celtics wound up sweeping their playoff series.

He wouldn't have been wrong to feel that way.

This wasn't just a playoff-saving game for the Sixers. It was bigger than that. When the Sixers walked on the court yesterday, they looked one way. Had they lost to the Celtics instead of rallying to a 108-103 victory, that would have been the last time they looked that way.

Whether Iverson acknowledged it or not, that's what was truly at stake when he stepped to the line with the Sixers clinging to a 104-103 lead against a young and hungry Boston squad.

The Sixers are a team that went from playing in the 2001 NBA Finals to winning 13 fewer regular-season games this season and struggling to even qualify for the playoffs.

The season has been a constant soap opera during which the relationship between Iverson and coach Larry Brown has unraveled to the point where it seems as bad as it was during the nuclear summer of 2000 in which Iverson was being shopped around the league.

Via Philadelphia Daily News


Sixers Apr 2002 Archive

  • Iverson displays franchise-player form

    Allen Iverson said he was not a franchise player.

  • Iverson proves his point

    Only days ago Allen Iverson referred to himself as not being a franchise player, rather just being one of many links (albeit a big one) that allows the Philadelphia Sixers to be successful.

  • Has Iverson snapped?

    Has Iverson taken one too many knocks in the head?

  • Celtics put Sixers on the ropes

    Using Seattle's series against San Antonio as an example, 76ers coach Larry Brown stressed that, so quickly, momentum in a five-game playoff series can shift.

  • Sixers let Celtics off the hook

    The only thing left for the 76ers to do now is to hope the Boston Celtics find some way to lose this series.

  • Questioning the Answer

    Some are questioning whether Iverson actually practiced yesterday

  • Iverson set to shake off the cobwebs

    Ashley McGeachy-Fox of the Inquirer reports that the Sixers are hard at work on solving the Celtics.

  • Why Sixers don't go for 3

    ITHINK IT'S ruined the game," Larry Brown was saying before the NBA playoffs began last weekend.

  • Answer prompts questioning

    For the week leading up to the start of the 76ers' playoff series with Boston, the burning question was: Would he or wouldn't he? Would Allen Iverson be back from the fractured metacarpal bone in his left hand that kept him out of the final 14 games of the regular season? Yesterday, the question was: Did he or didn't he? As the Sixers prepared for Game 2 of their best-of-five, first-round series, did Iverson practice or didn't he? Sadly, all that question did was beg more questions.

  • Sixers need shot in arm from Mutombo

    When the Sixers fed him the ball, Mutombo was hesitant, slow-footed.

  • Iverson comes out rusty

    It might have started off that way, but in the end it simply was not Allen Iverson’s day.

  • Celtics were able to befuddle the 76ers

    Many observers at yesterday's NBA Eastern Conference quarterfinal playoff game between the 76ers and Boston Celtics weren't surprised by what occurred.

  • Iverson missing in action

    When hope left the 76ers, it left in a massive wave, one that burgeoned as the afternoon wore on, one they could not escape.

  • O'Brien planned for Allen's return

    He had prepared his team all week as if 76ers star Allen Iverson, the league's leading scorer, would be starting and performing at his usual level.

  • Sixers among merchandise leaders

    Even Dikembe Mutombo has had trouble finding a Dikembe Mutombo jersey.

  • One more time, Sixers short by 1 win

    All it would have taken was one more victory.

  • Collapse Complete: Bucks Fall

    From Eastern Conference Finalists to Lottery Participants

  • Playoff chase

    The quest for the No.

  • Iverson gets the OK to fire away at practice

    According to Phil Jasner, Allen Iverson has finally met a defense he cannot crack.

  • Sixers secure playoff berth

    Phil Jasner of the Daily News reports that with yesterday's win in Orlando, the Sixers have finally secured a spot in the playoffs.

  • Snow is drawing big compliments

    In Allen Iverson's absence, The Sixers need leadership from another source.

  • Another frantic finish goes Sixers' way

    There were 7.

  • Karl: Sixers have alternative answers

    Milwaukee Bucks coach George Karl has changed his tune.

  • Iverson hoping for early comeback

    Allen Iverson was able to squeeze the doctor's hand.

  • Raptors back from extinction

    ESPN's Dan Patrick wonders "who are the Raptors?" Are they the team that lost 17 of 18 earlier this season? Or are they the team that has won 8 straight and forced their way back into the playoff hunt? Losing 17 of 18 in today's NBA is nearly impossible, especially for an Eastern Conference team.

  • Iverson plans early return

    Stephen A.

  • Sixers edge Bucks to improve playoff chances

    The 76ers and the Milwaukee Bucks treated the crowd at the First Union Center to a thriller yesterday, to the high-quality basketball that fans expected from both last season.

  • Speedy has to take it slow now

    When you're less than a week removed from a mild concussion, you're feeling queasy and your head hurts, there can be comfort in the peace and solitude of a quiet, darkened room.

  • Sixers: Winning ugly... but winning

    Sam Donnellon of the Dialy News writes that the Sixers are showing flashes of last year's success.

  • McKie's numbers add up for Sixers

    On Tuesday, Aaron McKie had an injection of cortisone to help with the pain and healing of his sprained right rotator cuff.

  • McKie's playing status uncertain

    Aaron McKie's sprained right rotator cuff is new.

  • Brown Joins Cuban Against Rush

    Seems Mark Cuban isn't the only one who has a bone to pick with Ed Rush, according to Jodie Valade of the Dallas Morning News.

  • Mutombo becomes non-factor in second half

    Dikembe Mutombo dismissed the whole thing as "strange.