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PHILADELPHIA – Joe Johnson scored 22 points, Josh Smith added 18 points and 10 rebounds, and the Atlanta Hawks built a big lead and held off the surging Philadelphia 76ers 92-85 on Saturday night.

Marvin Williams contributed 18 points, Al Horford had 10 points and 12 rebounds, and Mike Bibby had 10 points for the Hawks (36-41), who responded after losing to the Sixers 109-104 on Friday in Atlanta.

Andre Iguodala scored 25 points for Philadelphia, which had clinched a playoff berth for the first time in three years with Friday’s win. Andre Miller added 18, Lou Williams and Rodney Carney had 13 apiece and Samuel Dalembert had 10 rebounds for the 76ers (39-38), who had their two-game winning streak snapped. Still, they have won 21 of their last 29 games.

After Cleveland lost to Orlando on Saturday, the Sixers could have climbed within two games of the fourth seed in the Eastern Conference playoff race. Instead, they fell from fifth to sixth pending the outcome of the Washington-Chicago game.

Atlanta led 70-57 after the third quarter and maintained an advantage throughout the fourth. The Sixers chipped away and cut it to 90-85 on a 3-pointer by Carney with 1:20 remaining.

But the Hawks took advantage of an offensive rebound by Horford and soon sealed the win on a jumper by Bibby with 34 seconds left.

Atlanta led by as many as 12 points in the first half and cruised to a 55-44 advantage at halftime thanks to 56 percent shooting from the field.

Willie Green, Reggie Evans and Dalembert combined to miss all 10 of their field goals for the Sixers. Green was 0-for-7.

Notes: Atlanta is closing in on its first playoff berth since 1998-99. The Hawks entered the game with a three-game lead over Indiana for the eighth spot in the Eastern Conference. “We control our own destiny,” coach Mike Woodson said. Sixers public address announcer Matt Cord missed the game, his first absence in 11 years. Cord was recovering from neck injuries suffered in a car accident. Tom Lamaine filled in.

Magic 101, Cavs 86

CLEVELAND – They’re the East’s third-best team, the one being overlooked and even underrated as the playoffs approach.

And that’s just fine with the Orlando Magic.

“If you listen to what the experts are saying, all the teams are jockeying to play us,” Magic coach Stan Van Gundy said.

Hedo Turkoglu scored 23 points, Rashard Lewis added 21 and the Magic, one of this season’s biggest surprises, locked up the Eastern Conference’s No. 3 playoff seed Saturday with a 101-86 win over the staggering Cleveland Cavaliers.

The Magic, who have sat behind Boston and Detroit in the standings for much of the season, won despite getting only four points on 1-of-8 shooting from All-Star center Dwight Howard – 17 below his average. Orlando’s defense, though, was the difference.

The Magic held Cleveland to 14 points on 17 percent shooting (4-of-23) in the fourth quarter and didn’t let Cavaliers superstar LeBron James get his first points of the final period until there was 1:48 left. By then, Orlando was up by double digits and in cruise control.

James, who has been bothered by back spasms, finished with 17 points (on 6-of-22 shooting), nine assists and seven rebounds. But for the second straight game, he wasn’t able to score as he usually does and his teammates didn’t give him any help.

His back was tight, but James refused to blame it for the loss.

“I just not been able to come through for my team in the fourth quarter the last two games,” James said. “It starts with me.”

James said the spams are in his lower back and he has been stiffening up during halftime. The Cavaliers, who have been injury-plagued all season, are trying to nail down the No. 4 seed. They have five regular-season games left and James would prefer not to miss any of them.

“Right now, I can’t afford to,” he said. “We’ve got to clinch the fourth seed. We still have to get better. We’re at a point right now where we have so many injuries that it’s hard for us to improve.”

Howard had 12 rebounds, Jameer Nelson had 16 points and 9 assists and reserve Pat Garrity had 13 points for the Magic (48-28), who won 40 games last season and are now two victories from their first 50-win season since 1995-96 – when they lost in the conference finals.

Unable to get the ball down low where he’s most comfortable and double-teamed almost every time he touched it, Howard had just two points and one rebound.

Cleveland outrebounded Orlando 32-11 in the first half, including 14-3 on the offensive glass.

At halftime, Van Gundy let his players know that he wasn’t happy with the lopsided numbers or their effort.

“I was beside myself,” he said.

The Magic came out much hungrier after the break.

“We came out with a lot more energy,” Howard said. “We just played harder than they did. “

Delonte West scored 19 points and Zydrunas Ilgauskas 18 for Cleveland, which has dropped five of seven and is staggering toward the regular-season finish line.

With the score tied 75-all, the Magic ripped off 10 straight points, the last coming on a three-point play by Keyon Dooling with 5:37 left. Ilgauskas finally ended the drought for Cleveland, but Turkoglu, one of the NBA’s best performers in the fourth quarter this season, scored five points and Orlando opened a 92-79 lead with 3:02 remaining.

Cleveland’s outside game was almost nonexistent, and with Orlando sagging its defense to stop James from driving, the Cavaliers needed someone to step up. No one did. Wally Szczerbiak and Daniel Gibson both went 1-of-7 from the field.

James was only 1-of-7 in the fourth and Cleveland is 10-for-46 in the final 12 minutes of its past two games.

“We got lucky. LeBron James had one of his bad nights,” Van Gundy said. “We’ll take it.”

Notes: Before the game, Cavs coach Mike Brown revealed that James’ back has been bothering him for some time. Brown wants to get James as much rest as possible over the final five games to have him as fresh as possible for the playoffs. … Orlando won for just the second time in 22 games when trailing after three quarters. … Turkoglu is a leading candidate for the league’s most improved player award. He’s averaging career-highs in scoring, assists, rebounds and minutes played. On top of that, Turkoglu leads the Magic in fourth-quarter scoring (6.1 points) and has won three games with shots in the closing seconds.

AP-ES-04-05-08 1848EDT

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