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Saturday, October 23, 2021

Brooklyn Nets: Resilient Effort at Philadelphia Results in Season's First Win

From the desk: THE HOOPS OF FLATBUSH

FRIDAY
NETS      114
SIXERS  109
FINAL

Nets Give Flatbush Fans Attitude Adjustment With Win Over Sixers

Two games, same lineup, same slow and sloppy start.

At halftime, I took a look at Twitter and saw everyone clamoring for Bruce Brown, myself included.  He did not play - coach's decision.

But then, in the second half, the Nets started playing defense.  Through the second half of last season, the Nets fell into a habit of falling behind early, coming back before the half, and taking leads in the third.  These first two games got off to somewhat similar starts, but unlike against Milwaukee, this contest favored the Nets.

Coach Nash is still doing what in pre-season he could not: better understand what he's working with.  We know Bruce Brown will not sit for much longer.  For now, Brown is seen as a known variable, other players not so much, and that's what Coach Nash is trying to figure out.  Meanwhile, after trailing most of the night, this lineup on this night showed their coach some resiliency.

Joe Harris needs to hit more three-pointers like the one he nailed at 7:50 of the fourth.  However, poor transition defense resulted in a ten-point deficit with 5:32 left.  After Patty Mills cut the Nets deficit down to two points, Brooklyn turned the ball over on a 24-second violation.  Durant later drew a charge, and Harden scored on the ensuing inbounds play again, tying the game at two.

An 11-0 run and LaMarcus Aldridge scoring 13 of his 23 points in the fourth propelled Brooklyn late in the fourth.  They seized a 111-109 with 15.2 seconds left.  With Durant, Harden, Aldridge, Harris, Patty Mills on the floor, Durant was fouled on an inbound and converted both free throws giving the Nets a four-point lead.  The Nets, who took their first lead in the fourth, finished on a 16-1 run to end the game.  Philadelphia, who led by seven at halftime, was outscored 29-18 in the final session.

Either James Harden is not getting whistles, or he might be working with Coach Nash to figure out this new cast.  He finished with 20 points and eight assists.  Against the Bucks, Harden had just four attempts from the line and the same against the Sixers.  For now, that's an acute deviation from his usual game.

But the Nets turned things around when KD became the facilitator.  Kevin Durant posted a triple-double with 29 points, 12 assists, and 15 rebounds, all game highs, in 37 minutes, and cycling back to my point about Harden, KD was 10/10 from the line.

Joe Harris represented himself well with 14 essential points and five rebounds in 33 minutes.

Too much cannot be said of LaMarcus Aldridge, who matched both Philly starters Tobias Harris and Seth Curry with 23 points in 23 minutes off the bench.  He was 10/12 from the field and a perfect 3/3 from the line.  Patty Mills was again a sparkplug off the bench with eleven points and a +31 in 30 minutes.  All told, Brooklyn's bench outscored Philly's by a 44-23 margin.

Unlike game one's shot disparity, Philly only outshot Brooklyn by a 91-88 margin.

Blake Griffin is still trying to find his way, going 1 for 6 from the field and scoreless in five attempts at three.



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