Nets’ Ben Simmons booed as Sixers spoil his Philadelphia return

PHILADELPHIA — Ben Simmons shrugged off the boos that rose out of the Philly crowd each time the mercurial player handled the ball.

The Brooklyn Nets guard even egged on fans one more time over their reception toward one of the more loathed former Philly stars.

“I thought it was going to be louder,” Simmons said.

Tobias Harris scored 24 points, and a spirited Philadelphia 76ers team playing without Joel Embiid and James Harden spoiled Simmons’ homecoming with a 115-106 win over Brooklyn on Tuesday night.

“I feel like this is a huge win for us,” Harris said. “I knew going into the game we were all going to come out with this type of energy and this type of buzz to get up to play.”

There was plenty of buzz from the time the doors opened in anticipation of Simmons’ return. He had 11 points, 11 assists and seven rebounds to the tune of steady boos. Simmons even had a late-game fade familiar to the Sixers. He didn’t take a shot, was scoreless in the fourth quarter and registered only two points in the second half.

Kyrie Irving scored 23 points and Kevin Durant had 20 before Nets coach Jacque Vaughn pulled his starting lineup with three minutes left in the game.

“Everybody wants to see our team fail,” Durant said. “Nobody likes Ben. Nobody likes Ky. Nobody likes myself.”

The expected marquee matchup was dimmed with Embiid out due to a sprained left foot, Harden still out with a tendon strain in his right foot and starting guard Tyrese Maxey also out with a broken left foot.

Embiid vs. Simmons will have to wait.

Simmons vs. 76ers fans was pretty good.

Simmons was heckled, drew a flagrant foul, shushed a sellout crowd of 20,184 on a layup and even Jordan-shrugged after hitting free throws. Simmons played with poise as boos rained on him for the bulk of his 32 minutes.

“I feel like I’m in a good place,” Simmons said. “I’m happy. I do what I love. To be out there and having that experience was amazing.”

He already had three assists when he went to the free throw line early in the game. Simmons was booed but never looked rattled and sank both baskets. Simmons had a reverse layup minutes later for his first bucket.

Sixers fans were mostly well-behaved — save for a couple of short-lived profanity-laced chants — and mostly saved the four-letter words for tape on the back of their old No. 25 jerseys.

Simmons and second-year Sixer Georges Niang tussled late in the first half, and Niang gave his former teammate a light stiff-arm to the body that earned a technical foul.

Harden couldn’t believe the call from the bench. Sixers owner Josh Harris looked appalled.

Simmons missed the technical free throw, and the crowd roared as much as it did all game. Simmons, though, hit the court for a steal and knocked the loose ball to Durant for a bucket.

The Sixers still took a 63-57 lead into the break.

It wasn’t all jeers, all game. Simmons did make 76ers fans go wild over him when he missed consecutive free throws in the second half and triggered a free fast-food chicken promotion, however.

“I thought he was in attack mode, he was aggressive, showed a lot of poise through the course of the night,” Vaughn said. “The experience to get through and get it behind him, really good.”

Simmons averaged 15.9 points, 8.1 rebounds and 7.7 assists over four seasons with Philadelphia, which drafted him out of LSU, where he played only one season. His omnipresent headaches, such as his refusal to shoot beyond 15 feet, outweighed his otherwise gifted defensive and playmaking talents. Simmons’ relationship with the Sixers deteriorated following the 2021 playoffs, and he demanded a trade.

Simmons made a surprise return to the Sixers shortly before last season opened but was promptly kicked out of practice and suspended for one game. The punishment didn’t matter; the No. 1 pick of the 2016 draft never had any intention of playing.

Simmons hugged 76ers coach Doc Rivers in the handshake line following Tuesday’s contest and met with friends and family sitting on the baseline before he headed for the visitors tunnel — and one final chorus of boos.

“I think it’s going to be like this forever,” Simmons said. “I really don’t see it changing.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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