PHILADELPHIA — Thaddeus Young had 18 points and 11 rebounds, and Evan Turner scored 21 points to help the Philadelphia 76ers beat the Atlanta Hawks 99-80 on Friday night.
Jason Richardson scored 17 to help the Sixers snap a five-game losing streak. Jrue Holiday had 11 points after missing four games with a sprained left foot. The 76ers held the Hawks to 39 percent shooting and outrebounded them 45-37.
The Sixers learned before the game that injured center Andrew Bynum had been cleared to start a six-step rehabilitation process. There is still no timetable for when he can return to play from bone bruises in his knees.
Josh Smith led the Hawks with 17 points and Lou Williams scored 13.
Williams averaged 11.3 points during seven years with the Sixers and led the team in scoring last season with 14.9 points a game.
His signature moment came in Game 4 of a first-round playoff series in 2011 against Miami when he helped the Sixers avert a sweep with a go-ahead 3-pointer from the top of the arc over a lunging Dwyane Wade with 8.1 seconds left that lifted Philadelphia to an 86-82 win.
When the Sixers decided to clean house and make the move to get Bynum from the Los Angeles Lakers, Williams, Elton Brand and Andre Iguodala all went elsewhere.
The Sixers were cruising until the third quarter when Williams showed that quick scoring punch off the bench that made him so valuable for them. He hit two straight 3-pointers, then sank two free throws to pull the Hawks within eight after they were down by 16.
With no other scoring options for the Hawks on this night, Atlanta’s run didn’t last long. The Sixers stormed back in the fourth, and consecutive 3-pointers by Spencer Hawes and Richardson pushed the lead back to 20. Hawes had 12 points and eight rebounds.
Williams stuck it to his former team on a sweet steal-turned-fast-break-layup in the first half. He was fouled on the play and yelled “Game Time!” to fans in the front row. He converted the three-point play.
But outside of his short burst in the third, Williams was kept in check. He playfully jawed with Turner most of the game — though the familiar “Looouuu!” call at the Wells Fargo Center lost the L and sounded more like boos.
“We miss Lou, dearly,” Sixers coach Doug Collins said.
They also miss Bynum, though the 7-footer has yet to even practice with the Sixers. Bynum said his right knee feels fine and there’s still some pain in his left knee. An exam on Thursday showed Bynum’s weakened cartilage hasn’t gotten worse and the potential of surgery is off the table.
Bynum vowed to return, he just didn’t know when.
“I really don’t know. It’s just that I know I will be back,” he said. “It’s not a career-ending situation.”