Twin killing gets A’s 10th straight win in 1-0 shutout in night cap

The left field lighting powered off during the fifth inning at the Oakland Coliseum causing a 24 minute and 47 seconds delay during the second game of a doubleheader between the Minnesota Twins and Oakland A’s at the Oakland Coliseum on Tue Apr 20, 2021 (AP News photo)

Minnesota 0 – 2 – 0

Oakland 1- 4 – 1

Game 2 of doubleheader

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–A half and hour after Oakland A’s (11-7) pitcher Sean Manaea, Mitch Moreland, and Matt Olson demolished the Minnesota Twins (6-10) in a seven inning laugher, the A’s attempted to pull off a twin killing that would extend their winning streak to double figures and set them up for a series sweep tomorrow. in the opening game of today’s double header.

Minnesota, it goes without saying, was seeking to reverse its recent tailspin to that end sent two-time all star (2018 and2019) right hander to the mound. He brought a 2-1, 3.38 record with him. His most recent start was in the second game of a double header in Boston on April 14. He left with the game tied at 1-1 in the fifth but took the loss, and the Twins were swept.

Oakland sent Jesús Luzardo, who, at 0-1, 8.31, still was trying to reestablish the rhythms that had made him one the A’s brightest hopes for the near future.

The first three innings passed quickly and more or less uneventfully, but right fielder Seth Brown provided two highlights in the second that are worth mentioning. In the top of the frame, he made a spectular diving catch of a dying quail off the broken bat of Brent Rocker for the third out. Then, in Oakland’s half of the inning, Brown’s one out double moved Mitch Moreland to third for the Athletics’ first threat of the game.

Then, in the bottom of the fourth, it was Brown who drove in the game’s first run. Olson went opposite field against the shift to lead off with a double and moved on to third on Chapman’s fly to right. Following a walk to Moreland, Brown’s single produced a 1-0 lead for the A’s.

Moreland was called out at second by a pick off throw from Berríos, but home plate umpire Scott Barry ruled that time had been called before the play began. The reprive was, however, short lived. Elvis Andrus lined out to left, and Luis Arraez made a swift, accurate throw to Willians Astudillo at second to double off Moreland and put an end to the threat.

A light bank failure in left field with one out in the top of the fifth caused a delay of 24 minutes, 47 seconds. When play resumed, Luzardo didn’t miss a beat, striking out Brent Rocker and getting Estudillo to pop out to shallow right field, where second baseman Vimael Machín made a lovely over the head grab of the ball.

Berríos didn’t lose any effectiveness during the delay, either. He set the A’s down, 1-2-3, in the fifth, and the game remained tied at one. After a walk to Arraez and a strike out of Ryan Jefferson, Luzardo handed the ball over to Lou Trivino, who struck Garver for the second out.

During Garver’s AB, Arraez advanced to second on a passed ball. With the dangerous ex-Athletic Josh Donaldson at the plate, Trivino uncorked a wild pitch that brought Arraez within 90 feet of home. Trivino struck Donaldson out looking.

Luzardo’s line ended up at no runs over 5-1/3 innings, on two hits, one walk, and three strike outs. He threw 65 pditches, 44 for strikes and reduced his bloated ERA to 5.89.

The fifth was the final frame for Berríos, who was replaced by Hansel Robles. Minnesota’s starter had allowed an earned run on four hits and one walk. He struck out five Athletics and hit one of them, Canha. 59 of his 89 hits were strikes.

Melvin called on Jake Diekman to try for the save in the top of the seventh. He started off inauspiciouslly, hitting Nelson Cruz with a 2-2 delivery to open the inning. The count went to 2-2 on the following batter, Byron Buxton, who fanned.

Jorge Polanco hit a 2-2 pitch to short, where Andrus couldn’t handle it. The error put runners on first and second with one out. Diekman struck out Rocker on an 0-2, 95 mph four seamer. Then Astudilo drove a 1-2, 96 mph four seam fastball to the left field wall, where Canha made a leaping catch to give the Athletics their tenth consecutive win.

The W went to Luzardo; the gutsy save to Diekman, his first. The tough loss went to Berríos.

Tomorrow´s fray, scheduled for 12:37. Frankie Montás (2-1, 4.91) will face Kenta Maeda (1-1, 2.45) in the final game of the A’s current home stand.

Posey goes yard twice in Giants 10-7 win

San Francisco Giants hitter Wilmer Flores hits for a three run home run against Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Connor Brogdon on Tue Apr 20, 2021 at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia (AP News photo)

By Jeremy Kahn

Buster Posey did something in the second game of the three-game series that was last accomplished nearly five years ago.

Posey picked up his first multi-home run for the first time since 2016, as the San Francisco Giants came back to defeat the Philadelphia Phillies 10-7 at Citizens Bank Park.

Tommy La Stella hit a home run, but the big punches by the Giants came in the top of the eighth inning, as they scored six runs in the inning to take the lead for good.

Alex Dickerson slammed a three-run home run and then Wilmer Flores slammed a three-run pinch hit home run to secure the Giants third straight win.

All 10 runs came via the long ball, as the Giants have hit 25 home runs through 17 games during the 2021 season.

Dickersons three-run home run gave the Giants their first and only lead of the game, and then just four batters later, Flores picked up his first pinch-hit of the season that gave the Giants their final three runs of the game.

The six runs scored by the Giants were the first six runs allowed by Phillies reliever Connor Brogdon, who entered the game with a 0.00 earned run average and left with a 7.36 era.

It was the first multi-homer game for Posey since May 18, 2016 against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field.

Posey hit both of his home runs against former Giants farmhand Zack Wheeler, who was part of the Carlos Beltran trade with the New York Mets on July 11, 2011.

Logan Webb, who was activated off the injured list prior to the game after being placed on the list due to side effects from the Covid-19 vaccine went four innings, allowing four earned runs, seven hits, two walks and striking out four in just four innings of work.

To make room for Webb, Trevor Gott was designed for assignment, and closer Jake McGee was activated and pitched the ninth inning in the game. Sam Selman was sent to the alternate site after being called up to replace McGee.

Former Phillies pitcher Jose Alvarez pitched a perfect eighth inning to earn his first win of the season.

Brandon Belt was forced to leave the game with a right quad strain and will be re-evaluated by the team on Wednesday.

NOTES: According to the Elias Sports Bureau, Curt Casali is the first Giants catcher to catch shutouts in four consecutive starts since Broadway Aleck Smith, May 6-24, 1901…the last Major Leaguer to catch shutouts in four consecutive starts was Pittsburgh’s Francisco Cervelli (five straight) in June 2015.

The last time that the Giants threw back-to-back shutouts was against the Colorado Rockies on September 14 and 15, 2018 at Oracle Park.

UP NEXT: Anthony DeSclafani closes out the road trip on Wednesday afternoon, as he takes the mound versus the Phillies, who will send Zach Eflin to the hill.

Gulls power past Barracuda 5-1

San Jose Barracuda forward Zach Gallant (60) tries to put one past San Diego Gull goaltender Lukas Dostal (1) during Tue Apr 20, 2021 game at SAP Center in San Jose (@sjbarracuda photo)

by Marko Ukalovic

SAN JOSE, Calif—The San Diego Gull scored three unanswered goals en route to a 5-1 victory over the San Jose Barracuda on Tuesday evening at SAP Center.

The loss snapped San Jose’s three game winning streak, its longest of the season. San Diego have won three out of its past four games. The Gulls sit in third place in the Pacific Division with 40 points. The Barracuda fall to fifth place with a winning percentage of .536.

Alexander Barbanov made his debut for the ‘Cuda. The San Jose Sharks traded for the Russian forward back on April 12 in exchange for Anti Suomela with the Toronto Maple Leafs. He finished with just one shot on net and a plus-minus of -1.

San Diego (20-13-0-0) only needed 18 seconds to draw first blood for the game’s opening goal. Sam Carrick threaded a pass between two ‘Cuda defenders to Anderw Poturalski who wired a wrist shot past Barracuda goalie Alexei Melnichuk to the far corner for his eighth goal of the season.

The Gulls doubled its lead less than five minutes later. A battle along the ‘Cuda bench resulted in a two-on-one odd man rush where Alex Limoges skated in and snapped home a wrist shot top-shelf past Melnichuk for his second goal of the season at the 4:50 mark. Limoges ended a six-game goal less draught.

San Jose (12-10-4-2) had a power play opportunity late in the opening 20 minutes when Jamie Devane went to the sinbin for tripping. However they weren’t able to get a puck past Gulls goalie Lukas Dostal.

San Diego started the second period just as they did the first period by scoring an early goal. Once again the Gulls capitalized on odd man rush. Sam Carrick led a two-on-one with Limoges and after a give and go, Carrick beat Melnichuk through the five hole with a wrist shot for his 13th goal of the season at the 1:40 mark.

Carrick now has scored 19 goals against the Barracuda in his career.

The Barracuda responded just 36 seconds into the third period to get on the scoreboard. Lean Bergmann chased down a loose puck inside the Gulls zone. He swindled by two defenders before beating Dostal with a backhander for his second goal of the season. It his second goal in three games.

San Diego regained its three-goal lead on the power play just past the half way point of the final period. Nikolas Brouillard fired a shot from the right point that Limoges redirected from the slot past Melnichuk for his second goal of the evening and third of the season at the 10:45 mark.

Limoges finished with a three-point game (2G, A) as he had a hand in three of the Gulls five goals.

The Gulls put the game away with another power play goal three minutes later. Josh Mahura sent a rink wide pass over to Axel Andersson and he rifled a wrist shot through a screened Melnichuk for his first career AHL goal at the 13:42 mark.

Dostal finished the evening with 39 saves on 40 shots to earn his sixth straight victory and 11th on the season. Melnichuk (4-6-3) made 17 saves on 22 shots in the losing cause.

GAME NOTES: San Jose went 0-for-4 on the power play. San Diego went 2-for-3.

This was the Barracuda’s first regulation loss on SAP Center ice this season.

The Three Stars of the Game were: 1) Limoges 2) Carrick 3) Melnichuk

UP NEXT: Both teams are back at it again on Wednesday 4/21 at 6:00pm at SAP Center.

A’s Manaea goes the distance (7 innings) to get 7-0 shutout in front game over Twins

Oakland Athletics’ Matt Chapman (26) and Matt Olson (28) make a celebratory reaction after Olson hit a grand slam off Minnesota Twins pitcher Jorge Alcala (66) in the fourth inning of game one of their MLB doubleheader at the Oakland Coliseum in Oakland, Calif., on Tuesday, April 20, 2021 (photo from Bay Area News Group)

Minnesota. 0 – 6 – 2

Oakland 7 – 5 – 0

First game doubleheader

By Lewis Rubman

OAKLAND–After an unexpected day off yesterday, due to Covid19 problems in the Minnesota organization, the Oakland A’s and Minnesota Twins got around to the business of playing pandemic- inflected baseball with a pair of games scheduled to go seven innings each, beginning at 3:30 this afternoon.

34 year old right hander Matt Shoemaker brought a 1-0, 4.32 record with him to the mound for the Twinkies, while Sean Manaea, four years Shoemaker’s junior and throwing with his left hand, put his 1-1, 4.32 record on the line for the Athletics.

Eight of the nine batters Oakland’s southpaw would have to face in the visitors’ starting lineup were either right handed or, in one case, switch hitters. The home team brought an eight game winning streak with them to the Coliseum, while the Twins were 2-6 over their last eight contests.

Before the game, Stephen Piscotty was reinstated from the paternity list (congratulations) and was back patrolling right field at game time. Ka’ai Tom was designated for assignment. He’d gone one for 16 and scored one run in the nine games he’d played for the A’s.

Mike Moreland put the A’s ahead 2-0 in the bottom of the second with a line drive over the yellow line across the right field scorebord just to the right of the 382 foot marker. Sean Murphy, who had forrced Chapman out at second, was on base at the time. It was Moreland’s first round tripper and sixth and seventh RBI for the green and gold.

Moreland extended the lead in his next at bat, leading off the home fourth.. This time he went really deep, 405 feet to right center on a 92 mph slider that Shoemaker threw him on an 0-2 count. An out, a single, and a walk later, Shoemaker was out of the game.

He’d lasted a mere 3-1/3, in which he’d given up three runs (all earned) and still was on the hook for two more possible tallies. He hadn’t struck anyone out but had walked four batters and allowed four hits. Of his 67 pitches, 39 were strikes.

Shoemaker’s replacement, Jorge Alcalá, manmaged to get Laureano on a called third strike, but he walked Jed Lowrie to load the bases, and then surrendered a massive grand slam into the right field second deck by Olson. It was his fourth home run of the year and raused his RBI total to an even dozen, tying him with Lowrie for the team lead.

The two runs for which Shoemaker was on the hook now were on his record. He also remained on the hook for the loss, which left him at 1-1, 6.28. After Alacalá got his second strike out (Chapman) to end the inning, he was gone, and Luke Farrell made his first appearance as a Twin to open the fifth. Lewis Thorpe mopped up for Minnesota in the sixth.

Moreland and Olson’s power led the offense for Oakland, which also included four stolen bases, one each by Canha and Piscotty, and two by Andrus.

Manea was the winning pitcher, improving his record to 2-1, 3.04. He was credited with a complete game, the second of his big league career. His other CG was his 2018 no hitter against the Red Sox. In his seven inning stint today, Manaea gave up six hits and a walk. He struck out seven.

The teams will be at it again in a half an hour.

San Jose Sharks podcast with Mary Lisa: Marleau plays more games than any other in NHL history

The San Jose Sharks Patrick Marleau acknowledges the crowd at SAP Center in San Jose after eclipsing Gordy Howe for the all time games played record in the NHL on Mon Apr 19, 2021 (AP News photo)

On the SJ Sharks podcast with Mary Lisa:

#1 The San Jose Sharks Patrick Marleau on Monday night at the T Mobile Center in Las Vegas set the NHL all time most games played record at 1768 surpassing former record holder and hockey great Gordy Howe who held the record of the most games played at 1767.

#2 The game played in Vegas the fan at the T Mobile Center gave Marleau a rousing standing ovation during the pre game warm up skate

#3 Marleau’s wife Christina and four son’s were at the game on Monday night which would not be allowed in San Jose due to strict Covid 19 protocols where fans are not allowed inside SAP Center. Marleau said he couldn’t have done it without Christina and the boys all these years.

#4 Marleau is 41 and has made 1596 appearances with the Sharks, 164 with the Toronto Maple Leafs and eight with the Pittsburgh Penguins.

#5 The Sharks (18-22-5) took a tough shootout loss on Monday night 3-2 to the Las Vegas Golden Knights (32-11-2) and once again Sharks goaltender Martin Jones suffers another loss saving 38 and allowing three goals.

Join Mary Lisa for the Sharks podcasts each Tuesday morning at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Headline Sports podcast with Daniel Dullum: Europe could get a Super League for soccer; Bieber is on record setting start in Cleveland

Cleveland pitcher Shane Beiber delivers a pitch in the bottom of the first inning against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ballpark in Cincinnati on Mon Apr 19, 2021 (AP News photo)

Daniel Dullum on Headlines Sports podcast:

1 Super League proposed in European pro soccer

2 Cleveland pitcher Shane Bieber off to record-setting start to season

3 Top hoops recruit Chet Holmgren headed to Gonzaga; Bulldogs’ Jalen Suggs declares for NBA draft

4 Sharks’ Patrick Marleau breaks Gordie Howe’s NHL record for games played

5 Alex Smith retires after remarkable comeback season

Join Daniel for Headline Sports podcasts Tuesdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: A’s and Twins will restart series with doubleheader today at Coliseum

The Detroit Tigers Will Castro slides behind Oakland A’s catcher Sean Murphy during the sixth inning at the Oakland Coliseum on Sun Apr 18, 2021 the A’s won the ball game 3-2 (AP News photo)

#1 After the tough start the Oakland A’s had at 0-6 the A’s look like contenders now after winning eight straight games.

#2 The A’s got two shutouts during their four game series with the Detroit Tigers the first shutout came on Friday when the A’s shutout the Tigers 3-0 behind A’s starter Frankie Montas and three relievers

#3 On Saturday starter Cole Irvin pitched six innings, four hits and the bullpen shut the Tigers out for the rest of the game.

#4 How much will the postponed game from Monday break the A’s momentum from their eight game winning streak going into today’s doubleheader.

#5 The Minnesota Twins organization is concerned about what is happening in their community with civil unrest, racial injustice and their Covid-19 protocols as a result they’ve had a number of games postponed.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez has all the play by play of Oakland A’s baseball on the Oakland A’s Spanish flagship station 1010 KIQI LaGrande San Francisco and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

One Belt, Two Runs: Giants win 2-0 in Philly

By Morris Phillips

Philadelphia fans will boo anyone at anytime. They’re pretty much known for that.

But it’s not all knucklehead behavior, there’s some common sense in there as well. So when it became clear that this was Gabe Kapler’s night, Philly fans relented.

The Giants, behind Brandon Belt’s bat and brilliant pitching, shut down the Phillies and stopped the boos, winning 2-0 at Citizens Bank Park on Monday.

Kevin Gausman survived six eventful innings to pick up the win and three Giants’ relievers finished the job, sparing Kapler any trips to the mound to incite the boo birds. The win, Kapler’s 200th as a manager, superceded all that huffing and puffing anyway.

“My feelings are I’m just kind of focused on doing a good job with the San Francisco Giants,” Kapler said when asked about his first return after two seasons managing the Phillies, “And that’s genuinely how I feel.”

What could have been all hyped up and agitated, was rendered mundane, first by Belt, who provided all the scoring in the third with a two-run shot off starter Chase Anderson. The slugger welcomed Anderson’s hanging breaking ball and redirected it 372 feet away beyond the right centerfield wall. But Belt’s blow didn’t portend a slugfest.

Instead, Gausman settled in, Anderson didn’t allow anything else and batters on both sides squandered some choice opportunities. The teams combined to go 1 for 15 with runners in scoring position, but it felt like Gausman faced all 15, as the Giants’ ace wiggled out of jam after jam.

“He wasn’t lights-out stuff — I think he’ll tell you the same,” Kapler said of Gausman. “He was just a fighter today, and I think that’s the reason he was able to do what he did.”

In the fourth, Gausman was saddled with runners at second and third, no outs. But he executed Plan A, striking out Mickey Moniak and Nick Maton, hitters with little big league experience (26 at-bats combined) inexplicably hitting back-to-back in the Philadelphia lineup. Pinch hitter Brad Miller was next, and Gausman tricked him with a splitter that was grounded to third for an easy third out.

Matt Wisler, Camilo Doval, and Wandy Peralta each contributed an inning of scoreless relief and the Giants had back-to-back shutouts after Sunday’s 1-0 win at Miami.

Kapler’s 200th win came with the fourth-year manager stuck on 200 losses, giving him the unique distinction in Major League history of holding both totals at same time. But that is his history: finishing two games under .500 with the Phillies (2018) and Giants (2020), and exactly. 500 in Philadelphia in 2019. This season’s 10-6 start–ironically with Kapler’s starting pitchers and bullpen being deployed brilliantly and backing it up with their performances–reflects the growth, especially juxtaposed against his numbers from the previous seasons.

“Hopefully it’s a big win for him, his first time coming back to Philly,” Gausman said of his manager. “It was a good way to kind of set the tone for this series.”

The Giants and Phillies resume play Tuesday with the Webb/Wheeler matchup at 4:05pm. Logan Webb returns to the starting rotation due to Johnny Cueto’s injury to face Zack Wheeler, who was traded from the Giants’ farm system nearly a decade ago.

Marleau Passes Howe in Sharks SO Loss to Golden Knights 3-2

The San Jose Sharks Patrick Marleau acknowledges the crowd at the T Mobile Center in Las Vegas before the start of the game against the Vegas Golden Knights on Mon Apr 19, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Mary Walsh

The San Jose Sharks and the NHL celebrated Patrick Marleau’s 1768th game on Monday in Las Vegas. With that game, Marleau passed Gordie Howe and became the all-time leader for NHL games played. The Sharks wore a patch with a silhouette of Marleau against a background of the number 12. Martin Jones wore a mask specially designed for the occasion. After the first stoppage of play, the game was paused for some words from NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman to Marleau:

“You don’t get to play in one game, let alone 1,768 just because you’re a good guy or a positive role model and beloved by fans, though you are all of those things. To earn a precious spot in an NHL lineup, night after night, year after year, you have to earn it every single game.”

The Sharks lost to the Golden Knights Monday, by a score of 3-2 in the shootout. Mark Stone scored both regulation goals for Vegas and Alex Tuch scored the shootout winner. Robin Lehner made 29 saves for the win. Nikolai Knyzhov and Noah Gregor scored for San Jose and Martin Jones made 38 saves in the loss. The game extended the Golden Knights’ winning streak to seven and the Sharks’ losing streak to six.

Sharks defenseman Nikolai Knyzhov scored at 9:27 of the first. His shot from the point whistled through traffic and over Lehner’s blocker. It was Knyzhov’s second goal of the season.

The shot count for the first was 11-11. The Sharks took two penalties in the first and their p.k. gave up three shots. Tomas Hertl left the ice hastily during the period but returned to finish the game.

Noah Gregor made it 2-0 29 seconds into the second period. Gregor turned and fired from just above the face-off circle and the puck went through Lehner and over the line. That was Gregor’s fourth goal of the season.

Mark Stone cut the lead in half on a power play at 1:22 of the second. Stone tipped a shot from Shea Theodore, sending it into the top corner. Assists went to Theodore and Max Pacioretty.

Each team had one power play and one shot on the power play in the second period. The shot count was 14-7 for the Golden Knights.

Mark Stone tied the game with another power play goal at 3:25 of the third period. Stone brought the puck up from the goal line and lifted it over Jones’ pad. Assists went to Pacioretty and Theodore.

The shot total for the third period was 11-10 Sharks. The Sharks took two penalties and the Golden Knights one. Each power play had one shot in the period. The Sharks won 46% of their face-offs in the game.

The Sharks got credit for two shots in an almost non-stop overtime period. The Golden Knights had five overtime shots.

Patrick Marleau shot first for San Jose. Lehner made the save. Alex Tuch shot first for Vegas and scored. Ryan Donato shot second for San Jose and he was stopped too. Chandler Stephenson shot second for Vegas and missed. Logan Couture shot third for San Jose and he was stopped too.

The Sharks next play on Wednesday, again in Las Vegas against the Golden Knights at 6:30 PM PT.

Curry’s 49 point big night helps Warriors upset 76ers 107-96

Oh Brother! The Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) takes a shot against brother and Philadelphia 76ers Seth Curry (31) at Wells Fargo Bank Arena in Philadelphia on Mon Apr 19, 2021 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Golden State Warriors’ (29-29) Stephen Curry had another brilliant performance with 49 points Monday night as the Warriors stunned the Philadelphia 76ers (39-18) 107-96. The Sixers owned the best record in the Eastern Conference before the start of the game.

The Sixers are also the best squad in the NBA as they hold opponents to 108 points a game. The Sixers’ best defensive player, Ben Simmons, was not on the court Monday night. Forward Tobia Harris was not in the Sixer lineup, either.

The Warriors went with a small-ball lineup. The Warriors may not be the best defensive team in the NBA, but they know how to defend. The Sixers were looking to sweep the series as they beat the Warriors 108-98 at the Chase Center on March 23rd. Curry missed that game with a tailbone injury.

Curry, who scored 47 Saturday night in Boston, played as if his hair was on fire. Curry had his sixth game of the year with ten three-pointers. Curry tied Kobe Bryant’s NBA record of a player 33 years or older scoring 30 or more points in ten consecutive games.

Curry broke the record Monday night. Curry owns the record for most games, making ten threes with 21. It was quite a night for Curry. Warrior fans at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia were chanting MVP, MVP. Steve Kerr had this to say about Curry’s performance “There’s something beautiful about it. It really is an art,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “What he’s doing is amazing to watch. Nobody in the history of this game has ever done what he’s doing right now.”

The teams played a very tight, competitive, exciting ball game. The Sixers scored the first 12 points in the first quarter. Curry knocked down a couple of threes and finished the first 12 minutes of the game with 11 points. The teams were tied 24-24 at the end of the period.

The Warriors second unit opened up a six-point lead 39-33. The Sixers tied it at 43. The Warriors hand their hands full, trying to contain the Sixers’ big man, Joel Embiid. The Sixers were 20-2 when Embiid tallies ten or more points on free throws. The big guy uses his body to draw fouls, and the smaller Kevon Looney and Draymond Green each committed three.

The teams left the court for the halftime break tied at 55 apiece. Curry paced the Warrior attack with 20. He connected on four three in eight tries. Damion Lee, coming off the bench, had 12, Andrew Wiggins eight. Kelly Oubre, making his first appearance since missing six games with a wrist injury, had six.

In the third quarter, defense was the name of the game for each team. The Warriors outscored the Sixers 20-15. Each team had to fight to get points on the game. Neither team, except for the Sixers’ early 12-0 lead in the first quarter, could pull away.

The Warriors knew that they had to stop Embiid if they wanted to win. As usual, Steve Kerr inserted his second unit to start the fourth quarter. Green and Curry would return with about six minutes and 30 seconds left in the game. Green had four fouls on him, and he had to be careful as Embiid was going to the rim every time he got his hands on the ball.

The Second unit held its own until the Sixers went on a 12-2 run to lead 84-83. Steph was back on the floor. Curry made a three to tie the game at 86. The Sixers fought back and led 90-86. Curry made another three. The Warriors led 93-92.

Curry made another three, and Green knocked down a two-pointer to put the Warriors ahead 98-92. The Warriors’ defense put the clamps on the Sixers’ offense. The Sixers scored four points in the last three minutes and forty-two seconds of the game.

Curry made another three to make it 101-92. With the score 101-95, Curry made a sensational step-back three to put the Warriors in the driver’s seat 104-95. Curry added three more free throws to lead the Warriors to victory 107-96.

Game Notes and Stats: With the win, the Warriors are 29-29 for the year. They have won three of the four games played on the five-game road trip. The Sixers are 39-18.

Curry finished the night with 49 points, three rebounds, and five assists. He was 14-for28 from the floor, and he connected on ten threes in 17 tries. Andrew Wiggins had a double-double with 16 points and ten boards. Damion Lee had 12 points, six rebounds, and an assist.

Lee was five-for-six from the floor. He made two threes in two tries. Kevon Looney had five pints and a career-high 15 rebounds. Green’s line was eight points, six rebounds, and six assists. Kelly Oubre had nine, and Jordan Poole six.

The Warriors shot 45% from the floor. They made 14 threes in 32 attempts. They took 13 fewer shots than the Sixers. The Warriors outscored the Sixers 25-14 from the free-throw line. On defense, the Warriors outrebounded the bigger Sixers 58-49. 

Joel Embiid had a double-double with 28 points and 13 rebounds. Embiid made eleven points from the charity stripe. The Sixers are now 20-3 when he scores more than 10 points from the free-throw line. Curry’s brother, Seth, tallied 15 points in the first half. The Warriors held him scoreless in the final 24 minutes of the game. Danny Green made four three for 12 points. The Sixers’ backup center, Dwight Howard, did not score. He pulled down ten rebounds. 

The Warriors finish the five-game road trip Wednesday night when they face the Washington Wizards. The game will start at 4 pm.