PHILADELPHIA // The 76ers might be in big trouble in a play-off series with Boston once Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett are back. Paul Pierce and his back-up band were enough to finish off a Sixers team that still has something to play for. Pierce hit the winning jumper, scored 31 points and hindered Philadelphia's shot at the Eastern Conference's sixth seed spot in Boston's 100-98 win over the Sixers on Tuesday night.
"We should have won the game," The Sixers guard Andre Iguodala said. "They used a second unit for the majority of the game." Tony Allen and Leon Powe were pressed into service and combined for 28 points, and the Celtics' bench also outscored Philadelphia's reserves. Boston's substitutes were needed because Garnett missed the meaningless game for Boston to rest his strained knee and Allen served a one-game suspension.
Pierce made seven three-pointers to overcome the absence of the two All-Stars, which had to make the Sixers wonder how they could win a first-round series against a loaded and focused Celtics team. "We needed some scoring and I was trying to score the ball more," Pierce said. The Celtics already had the second seed in the East locked up and could face the Sixers in the first round of the play-offs. The Sixers, though, could move up a spot to sixth and play Orlando if results go their way. They were playing Cleveland last night while Raptors were playing Chicago. The Cavaliers, however, are 39-1 at home and were last night trying to match the best home record in NBA history. The Sixers are only 16-24 on the road and have lost six straight games. Iguodala led the Sixers with 25 points and Thaddeus Young had 18.
"We've got to be ready to play no matter who we play in the play-offs," Iguodala said. "If we don't play at a high level, we'll be going home." Young returned after missing seven games with an ankle injury and showed he was back to full form when he used a spin move in the paint for a quick basket to open the game. The rest of the Sixers still have some work to do. Even with Allen and Garnett out, and Pierce on the bench for most of the fourth period, the Celtics rallied from an 11-point hole to take the lead late in the quarter. The lead flip-flopped over several possessions until Pierce buried a step-back 17-footer to make it 99-98 with two minutes left.
Young missed one of two free throws, and then misfired a three-pointer that could have put the Sixers up and bolstered their shot for the sixth seed. With one last attempt for the win, Iguodala tried to drive past Pierce and tossed up a floated pass in traffic that went nowhere. "Paul defended that pretty good, then Andre had to come up to get it, so they took us out of where we wanted to do that," Sixers coach Tony DiLeo said.
Tony Allen scored 18 points in his first start of the year for the Celtics. Glen Davis had 15 points. Allen was suspended one game without pay for elbowing Cleveland forward Anderson Varejao in the groin. Allen would probably have sat out the Sixers game anyway, and Celtics coach Doc Rivers said he did not intend to use Allen or Pierce in the final game against Washington last night. * AP

