NBA

76ers on brink of conference finals

76ers
Philadelphia 76ers center Joel Embiid (21) drives to the basket against Boston Celtics guard Marcus Smart, right, during the second half of Game 5 in the NBA basketball Eastern Conference semifinals playoff series, Tuesday, May 9, 2023, in Boston.
AP Photo/Charles Krupa

Philadelphia hasn’t been to the Eastern Conference finals since 2001. Denver hasn’t played a home game in the Western Conference finals since 2009.

The 76ers and Nuggets are on the brink of updating those numbers.

Philadelphia went into Boston and won Game 5 of their East semifinal series on Tuesday night for a 3-2 lead in that series, while Denver snapped a two-game slide and held serve at home to take a 3-2 lead over Phoenix in Game 5 of their West semifinal series.

They can close out those matchups on Thursday — Philly getting a chance to clinch at home, Denver facing a Game 6 in Phoenix before a potential Game 7 back in the Mile High City on Sunday if necessary. The Nuggets made the West finals in 2020, but that was in the restart bubble and no Denver fans got to be at those games.

HOW TO WATCH

• Thursday’s doubleheader is on ESPN.

• Any games that are needed Friday would also be on ESPN.

• Team broadcasters will no longer air games. Everything after the first round is exclusive to national windows and not available for local telecasts.

• The NBA Finals on ABC begin June 1.

Philadelphia 76ers guard James Harden (1) calls to teammates during the first half of Game 5 against the Boston Celtics in the NBA basketball Eastern Conference semifinals playoff series, Tuesday, May 9, 2023, in Boston.AP Photo/Charles Krupa

POWER OF 3

Denver had 13 3-pointers to Phoenix’s nine in Game 5 of that West series on Tuesday night.

It’s further proof that simple math still works: make more 3’s, and a team just has a better chance of winning. Teams with at least three more made 3’s than their opponents are now 29-11 in this year’s playoffs.

That’s a 72.5% winning rate, and is basically flat to what was the case in the regular season.

Those teams who made at least three more 3’s than their opponents in the regular season went 591-234, or a 71.6% winning clip.

THE U

For the second consecutive night, a Miami Hurricane came off their bench to deliver in a big playoff spot. On Monday it was Lonnie Walker, getting 15 points to help the Lakers beat Golden State. And on Tuesday, it was Bruce Brown — who had 25 points in 27 minutes to help Denver top Phoenix.

AWARD WINNERS

The All-Rookie Team — led by unanimous pick Paolo Banchero — was announced Monday. The All-Defensive Team was revealed Tuesday.

TNT will unveil the All-NBA Team on Wednesday night, and on Thursday at noon, the Twyman-Stokes Teammate of the Year will be revealed.

Philadelphia’s Joel Embiid was announced as this season’s MVP, and here’s a list of the other major award-winners this season:

• Memphis’ Jaren Jackson Jr. won Defensive Player of the Year.

• De’Aaron Fox of Sacramento won the inaugural Clutch Player award.

• Sacramento’s Mike Brown became the first unanimous Coach of the Year.

• Boston’s Malcolm Brogdon won Sixth Man of the Year.

• Utah’s Lauri Markkanen was the easy winner of Most Improved Player.

• Orlando’s Paolo Banchero was a near-unanimous Rookie of the Year.

QUOTABLE

“I was hoping he was going to pay my fine.” — Denver’s Nikola Jokic, on his quick pregame greeting with Suns owner Mat Ishiba before Game 5 of that matchup. Jokic was fined $25,000 after trying to grab the ball from Ishbia after it went into the crowd in Game 4.