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The Philadelphia Inquirer
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Sport
Marc Narducci

Sixers make Jimmy Butler's return miserable in 113-86 rout of Heat

PHILADELPHIA _ Jimmy Butler returned for his first game in Philadelphia since departing the 76ers in a summer sign-and-trade with the Miami Heat and as far homecomings go, this one turned out to be a major dud.

Despite being the catalyst for a vastly improved squad, Butler couldn't exercise his will as his new team got clobbered by his old one.

The Sixers led by 20 points at halftime, increased it to 33 points after three quarters, and led by as many as 41 in Saturday night's 113-86 rout of the Heat at the Wells Fargo Center.

It was a season-low point total for a Sixers opponent.

It appears as if the Sixers (11-5) are rounding into form, having won four in a row. They improved their home record to 7-0.

The Heat (11-4) are a year removed from going 39-43 and missing the playoffs. They should be a playoff team, as long as performances like Saturday's are kept to a minimum.

A subplot from the Butler storyline was that guard Josh Richardson was also playing his first game against his former Heat teammates.

Richardson spent the previous four seasons with the Heat and came to the Sixers as part of the Butler sign-and-trade.

Before the game, Richardson said playing his former team wasn't a big deal.

"It's just another game," Richardson said.

His play and body language suggested otherwise. He seemed genuinely excited when he made a big play and there were plenty of them.

Richardson scored a season-high 32 points, hitting 6 of 7 from deep range.

He had missed the two previous games with right hip flexor tightness. Furkan Korkmaz, the player who replaced Richardson in the starting lineup the previous two games, was sidelined with a left-ankle sprain.

Both teams were playing the second game of back-to-backs, but while the Sixers had the luxury of beating San Antonio Friday at home, the Heat played in Chicago, where they defeated the Bulls.

Butler was the first Heat player introduced and the 100th consecutive home sellout crowd gave it to him early and often with a continued chorus of boos. So much for welcoming back a popular player. Not only that, but Butler was booed loudly every time he touched the ball.

The Sixers came out firing, leading by as many as 20 points in the first quarter and holding a 28-13 advantage after the first 12 minutes.

In the second quarter, the Sixers kept their foot on the gas and led 55-35 at halftime.

Miami entered the game third in the NBA in three-point field goal accuracy (39.4%). In the first half, the Heat were just 1 for 12, while the Sixers were 5 for 11. For the game, the Sixers were 14 for 29 (48.3%), while the Heat struggled, shooting 6 for 24 (25%).

Butler, for all the boos, was playing extremely hard, but his teammates weren't following suit.

He finished with 11 points, all in the first half. Butler shot 4 for 13.

For much of the time they were together on the court, Butler and Sixers point guard Ben Simmons guarded each other. Simmons had just four points, but added eight rebounds and seven assists.

Also for the Sixers, Joel Embiid finished with 23 points and 11 rebounds, Tobias Harris scored 19 and Al Horford added 16 in another balanced effort. No starter played more than 27 minutes.

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