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PHILADELPHIA, PA - FEBRUARY 12: Joel Embiid #21 of the

Philadelphia 76ers reacts against the Boston Celtics on


February 12, 2019 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania. (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty
Images)
By Brian Mahoney, Associated Press
In this era of players wanting to join up with other players, or even just being friendlier
with some opponents than guys on their own teams, it’s nice to know there is still some
good, old-fashioned hatred in the NBA.

Yes, Joel Embiid hates the Celtics.

He hates Boston so much that he got fined $25,000 last time the 76ers played them
because he was so sick of losing to the Atlantic Division foes that he lost his cool
afterward.

On Wednesday (Thursday, PHL time), he gets his last chance during this regular
season to beat Boston.

The 76ers host the Celtics, who knocked them out of the playoffs last season, spoiled
their opening game in this one, and then ruined their Christmas with another nationally
televised victory.

A long-time rivalry that delivered a famous fight between Hall of Famers Larry Bird and
Julius Erving has become so one-sided that Embiid declared earlier this season that it
wasn’t even a rivalry anymore, because the Celtics always win.

Boston has won 17 of the last 19 regular-season meetings, the last of which was a 112-
109 victory in Philadelphia in February. Embiid believed he’d been fouled by Al Horford
in the final minute — the NBA’s Last 2-Minute Report would later agree — and was
fined for his public criticism of the officiating that included profanity.

He used more profanity the next night when explaining why he was so angry.

“It was against Boston again which I (expletive) hate. I’m sorry, which I hate,” Embiid
said. “But just emotion, losing to them once again. It was frustrating.”

He might not be done seeing them after Wednesday (Thursday, PHL time). The teams
could meet in the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs.

NOT GOOD ENOUGH


The Los Angeles Lakers just lost to the team with the NBA’s worst record and now face
the one with the best.
To LeBron James, it doesn’t really matter who they play.

The Lakers have enough of their own problems without worrying about their caliber of
opponent.

“Listen, we haven’t played well against a lot of teams,” he said. “Teams that has been
under .500, teams that has been over .500. So with the lack of experience closing out
games, you’re going to have that.”

The Lakers fell 124-123 to the New York Knicks on Sunday (Monday, PHL time), unable
to get many stops in the first quarter or make shots in the fourth. James had two shots
blocked in the final minute, including his final attempt by Mario Hezonja with 2.3
seconds remaining.

Now they head to Milwaukee for a game Tuesday (Wednesday, PHL time), hoping to
end a three-game losing streak. Team LeBron beat Team Giannis in the All-Star Game,
but Antetokounmpo has the better team for a real game.

James knows that. Without Brandon Ingram and Lonzo Ball, the kind of team they can
put on the floor down the stretch, like in Sunday’s (Monday, PHL time) game, just isn’t
good enough on most nights.

“Like I said, we couldn’t close out possessions and we couldn’t get enough timely
buckets on the other end,” James said. “But, I mean, it’s been like that all year.”

OTHER GAMES TO WATCH THIS WEEK:


Utah at Washington, Tuesday (PHL time): Bradley Beal goes for a third straight 40-point
game, but faces a good defensive team.
Indiana at Portland, Tuesday (PHL time): Nate McMillan’s current team faces his old one,
with both battling for home-court advantage in the first round.
Toronto at Oklahoma City, Thursday (PHL time): Opener of a home-and-home, with the
rematch in Toronto on Friday (Saturday, PHL time).
Brooklyn at Lakers, Saturday (PHL time): D’Angelo Russell, the point guard Magic
Johnson didn’t want, is now an All-Star for the Nets.
Phoenix at Sacramento, Sunday (PHL time): Luka Doncic might run away with the Rookie
of the Year award, but the guys picked ahead of him, the Suns’ Deandre Ayton and the
Kings’ Marvin Bagley III, both look good.
ROAD WARRIORS
The road to the NBA title the last few years has gone through Oracle Arena, though this
season Golden State may have to win it on the road.

That might work out better for the Warriors.

Good but not great in their own building, the Warriors have the NBA’s best road record
and will try for what would be a third straight impressive victory on their current trip
Monday (Tuesday, PHL time) when they visit San Antonio.
With Milwaukee and Toronto both owning better records, the Warriors aren’t on pace to
have home-court advantage in the NBA Finals for the first time in five years. Golden
State is 24-10 at home, where All-Star Klay Thompson was critical of fans’ enthusiasm
after a recent loss to Phoenix.

But on the road, Golden State is an NBA-best 23-11 (.676 winning percentage) after
victories at Houston and Oklahoma City to start this four-game trip. The Warriors have
won 19 of their last 23 road games.

They should be tested Monday (Tuesday, PHL time) in San Antonio, where the Spurs
have won 10 straight games. San Antonio has won eight in a row overall.

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