NBA·Recap

Lowry strong in Raptors' win despite trade rumours

Kyle Lowry had a big first half amid reports that Toronto has offered him in a trade, Kawhi Leonard finished with 24 points, and the Raptors held off the Philadelphia 76ers 119-107 on Tuesday night in a matchup between two of the Eastern Conference's top teams.

Sports Illustrated has unconfirmed report of possible swap with Memphis

Toronto's Kawhi Leonard, centre, goes for a shot against Philadelphia's Ben Simmons during the Raptors' win on Tuesday. (Matt Slocum/Associated Press)

Kyle Lowry doesn't want to play for any team but Toronto.

A detour through his hometown is always welcome, though.

Lowry had a big first half amid reports that Toronto has offered him in a trade, Kawhi Leonard finished with 24 points, and the Raptors held off the Philadelphia 76ers 119-107 on Tuesday night in a matchup between two of the Eastern Conference's top teams.

Lowry, a Philadelphia native and former Villanova star, had 17 points in the first half and finished with 20. He seemed unfazed by a report from Sports Illustrated that Toronto had offered him to Memphis as part of a trade package for Mike Conley and Marc Gasol.

"I personally want to be in Toronto," Lowry said. "I've never asked for a trade. My goal is to try to win a championship here, and that's what I want to do."

WATCH | Highlights from Toronto's win:

Game Wrap: Raptors hold off Embiid, Sixers in Philly

6 years ago
Duration 1:59
Despite a game-high 37-point and 13-rebound performance from Joel Embiid, the Toronto Raptors hung on to defeat their Atlantic Division rivals 119-107 on the road on Tuesday night.

Serge Ibaka also had 20 points to help the Raptors overcome the Joel Embiid-led Sixers. Embiid had 37 points and 13 rebounds for his league-leading 44th double-double, while Ben Simmons scored 20 points and Jimmy Butler had 18.

With the Sixers trailing by 18 early in the fourth quarter, Embiid ripped off 12 points in a three-minute stretch to slice Toronto's lead to 108-101 with 6:59 left and get the home crowd on its feet for the first time all night. But the Raptors (39-16) never let the Sixers (34-20) get closer than seven.

"Offensively, defensively, they were just better than us," Embiid said. "But I'm proud of our effort in the second half."

After erupting for 40 points in the first quarter behind 11-for-11 shooting from the free-throw line, the Raptors built a 21-point advantage midway through the second quarter. Lowry, who missed Toronto's last game due to back soreness, fueled the run with three 3-pointers in a two-minute stretch.

"He was awesome," Raptors coach Nick Nurse said. "You know, that's Kyle in a super-focused game. He took his 3s, he took his deep ones, he took some drives. Whenever you see him pull that little slam-on-the-brakes, spin-to-the-left fadeaway, you know he's in the game right."

Lowry added another 3, which bounced all around the rim before dropping in, four minutes before halftime to help Toronto take a 72-55 lead into the break — the Raptors' best offensive first half of the season.

"I love playing at home," Lowry said. "My mom's in the building. It's different."