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Скачать с ютуб Allen Iverson FULL Highlights vs Gilbert Arenas & Earl Boykins (2003) *Arenas Clutch в хорошем качестве

Allen Iverson FULL Highlights vs Gilbert Arenas & Earl Boykins (2003) *Arenas Clutch 8 лет назад


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Allen Iverson FULL Highlights vs Gilbert Arenas & Earl Boykins (2003) *Arenas Clutch

The Golden State Warriors desperately needed someone besides Earl Boykins to make a basket in the fourth quarter. Gilbert Arenas obliged. The ice-cold Arenas made a 3-pointer and running layup in the final 90 seconds, allowing the Warriors to hold on for a 102-98 victory over the Philadelphia 76ers that kept their playoff hopes alive. The Warriors saw their 25-point lead cut to 87-75 entering the fourth quarter and had no one providing any offense besides the 5-5 Boykins, who scored 10 of his 23 points in the final period. "I've always said that the fourth quarter is the easiest quarter in the game," said Boykins, who made 8-of-14 shots. "You don't have nothing to look forward to. You just have to go all out, right there. Tonight, I was able to make my shots." The 76ers pulled within two points three times, including 97-95 with 1:40 remaining on a driving layup by Aaron McKie. Arenas was practically the only Warrior who did not have a hand in their blistering first half. Having missed nine of his first 10 shots, Arenas pulled the trigger on a 3-pointer that gave Golden State a 100-95 lead with 1:26 to go. "I caught a great look and I didn't have a great look all night," Arenas said. We've (Arenas and himself) been doing this all year and tonight was no different," Boykins said. "It's just a matter of who wants the ball, and tonight we both wanted it." Keith Van Horn answered eight seconds later with a 3-pointer, again making it a two-point game. Philadelphia's Eric Snow fell out of bounds with one rebound and Boykins ran down another before Arenas drove the left side and banked in a runner for a 102-98 lead with 17 seconds left. "He didn't have many points tonight, but he had five really important points in the last minute and a half of the game," Warriors coach Eric Musselman said. "We put the ball in his hand on the middle pick-and-roll and he took it to the rim." Van Horn missed two free throws and Snow missed a 3-pointer, allowing the Warriors to improve to 2-1 on their critical five-game road trip. Antawn Jamison scored 26 of his 30 points in the first half for Golden State (36-37), which remained 2 1/2 games behind Phoenix (37-34) for the eighth and final playoff berth in the Western Conference. "This is a tough stretch and we have to do well in this stretch," Jamison said. "We know we have a chance but we have to play near perfect basketball." Allen Iverson had 28 points and 10 assists for the Sixers, who are 2-3 since posting a 15-2 mark coming out of the All-Star break. They fell 1 1/2 games behind New Jersey in the race for the Atlantic Division title. "That's what happens when you get down (25) points," Iverson said. "You fight and fight and get back into the game, and then at the end of the game everything has to go perfect. It don't work that way in this game." The Sixers were swept in the season series by the Warriors for the first time since the 1996-97 campaign. Philadelphia coach Larry Brown, who picked up three technical fouls in the two games, did not meet the media afterward. "He's just resting up," assistant John Kuester said. "We're going to take a trip to Atlanta. He's very disappointed. This is a tough loss." In the first half, Jamison and the Warriors were red-hot and Iverson, Brown and the Sixers lost their cool. Jamison scored 16 points in the opening period and Golden State made nine of its last 11 shots, building a 33-24 lead. His fast-break dunk extended the advantage to 47-32 midway through the second quarter. In the last five minutes of the first half, Derrick Coleman was called for flagrant and technical fouls and Brown and Iverson were whistled for technicals. Golden State scored four straight easy baskets off turnovers and built its largest lead at 66-41 with 30 seconds to go. "(At halftime, Brown) said, 'I'm not going to throw any tirade or anything, or I could be in here for hours telling you all what you did wrong,'" McKie said. It was still 70-45 early in the third quarter before the Sixers began their comeback. They turned up their defensive pressure and relied on Iverson, who scored 12 points in the period. Philadelphia opened the fourth quarter with a 10-2 run that Boykins halted with two free throws. Layups by Kenny Thomas and McKie made it 91-89 with 5:12 remaining, but Boykins answered again, this time with a jumper and a runner that rebuilt the lead to six points with 3:35 left. "With Iverson having five fouls, we tried to keep it in Boykins' hands," Musselman said. "He about 12 points in 11 minutes in the first half and we felt that he really had his confidence going tonight." "He played great," Iverson said. "He showed a lot of heart for a guy that size. That speaks for itself. The guy plays with his heart and the ability that God gave him. Never under estimate anyone on this level."

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