Kyrie Irving exorcises last season’s demons with big game for Nets

76ers handling Ben Simmons mess all wrong — and may pay price

MILWAUKEE — The last time Kyrie Irving was in Fiserv Forum, he was gimping off the court alongside the Nets’ GM and team doctor with an injured ankle that ended his playoffs. And essentially Brooklyn’s title run.

In Saturday’s return? He strode off into the waiting arms of his father Drederick, who clasped him in an embrace that was equal parts victorious and visceral. The Nets’ 126-123 win — and how Irving carried them to it — wasn’t just a game. It was a purge.

“Yeah, it was definitely emotional for me to prepare for this game just because of what you just said,” Irving said. “I haven’t been back in this building since then, and I tried my best not to wear my emotions on my face or on my shoulder, but sometimes they get the best of me.

“But it definitely felt like there was a weight lifted just getting back here, being healthy, getting a win and knowing that there’s a possibility we could see them down the line again. So it makes our competition in our league that much more fun.”

The Nets’ hadn’t had a ton of fun lately.

They are 5-14 since star Kevin Durant went down with an MCL injury on Jan. 15.

Last season it was injuries that short-circuited their campaign as well, when Irving came down on Giannis Antetokounmpo’s foot in Game 4 of an Eastern Conference semifinals they seemed in control of. But they lost that control when they lost Irving to a severely sprained ankle, hobbling off the floor with GM Sean Marks and Dr. Riley Williams, the Nets’ Medical Director and Orthopedic Surgeon.

Kyrie Irving, who scored 38 points, drives on Wesley Matthews during  the Nets' 126-123 win over the Bucks.
Kyrie Irving, who scored 38 points, drives on Wesley Matthews during the Nets’ 126-123 win over the Bucks.
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