Game Recap
No Joel Embiid. No Tyrese Maxey. No Kelly Oubre Jr.
Didn’t matter Sunday night in South Philly.
Quentin Grimes caught fire late and the Philadelphia 76ers scrapped their way past the Portland Trail Blazers 109-103, riding a fourth-quarter takeover from the guard who suddenly looked like the best bucket-getter on the floor.
Grimes poured in a season-high 31. Fourteen of them came in the fourth. Tough pull-ups. A couple downhill attacks. Portland kept switching, kept chasing, and he kept cooking.
Meanwhile the Blazers went cold from deep when it counted. A lot of good looks. Not many makes.
Philadelphia closed it out the messy way. Steals. Loose balls. One last burst of energy.
Sometimes that’s enough.
Key Performances
Quentin Grimes’ Fourth-Quarter Heater
Grimes spent three quarters probing, picking spots, playing within the flow.
Then the fourth hit.
He started hitting mid-range jumpers off switches. One dribble, rise up, splash. Next trip he curled around a screen, buried a three. The Blazers tried different defenders. Didn’t matter.
Fourteen points in the final period. And every bucket felt heavier than the last.
Short bench, tired legs everywhere, and Grimes carried the offense like a vet closer.
Rookie VJ Edgecombe’s Double-Double Grind
VJ Edgecombe looked like he’d had enough of Portland bodies flying at the rim.
The rookie finished with 18 points and a career-high 12 boards, good for his third double-double of the season. Strong stuff from a first-year wing still figuring out NBA spacing.
But the play that stuck?
Late jumper with under two minutes left. Calm. No panic. Splash.
Then came the hustle plays. Chasing rebounds. Sliding into passing lanes. Stuff coaches circle on film.
Justin Edwards Keeps Showing Flashes
Justin Edwards dropped 21 and did his damage during a crucial third-quarter stretch.
Nine points in the period alone. Quick bursts in transition. A couple confident pull-ups when Portland sagged off.
And the dagger sequence late.
Steal. Breakaway. Hammer dunk.
Game basically over.
Portland’s Problem: Too Many Missed Threes
The Blazers had looks. Plenty of them.
They just couldn’t buy enough threes to flip the momentum.
Portland finished 17-for-53 from deep. That’s 32.7 percent, and a bunch of those misses came during runs where Philly looked vulnerable.
Deni Avdija led Portland with 25 points, mixing drives with a few outside makes. Jerami Grant added 20, doing his usual mid-range scoring dance.
Donovan Clingan battled inside all night, posting 11 points and grabbing 15 rebounds.
Still, the spacing never punished Philadelphia’s defense the way Portland needed.
Too many empty possessions. Too many bricks when the comeback window cracked open.
Turning Point
Philadelphia pushed the lead to 101-87 with 5:34 left. Building rocking a little. Game felt done.
Then Portland woke up.
Ten straight points. Suddenly it was tense again.
But the Sixers didn’t fold.
Edgecombe drilled that jumper with 1:53 left. Crowd exhale.
Next possession, Edwards jumped a passing lane. Gone the other way. Windmill-ish slam. Ballgame.
The kind of chaotic sequence coaches love because it’s all effort.
Can Philly Survive Without Its Stars?
For one night, yes.
Playing without Embiid, Maxey and Oubre usually means trouble. That’s three primary scorers, three guys who bend defenses.
Instead the Sixers leaned on young legs and opportunistic defense. Grimes handled the scoring load. Edgecombe cleaned the glass. Edwards supplied scoring bursts.
Not pretty. But gritty.
The kind of win that keeps a locker room believing while the stars heal up.
Portland, meanwhile, heads home still searching for consistency on the perimeter.
And if the threes aren’t falling, the math gets ugly fast.