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Tim Duncan scored 15 of his 32 points in the decisive third quarter and Will Perdue added a career-high 21 as the San Antonio Spurs continued their recent mastery over the reeling Philadelphia 76ers with a 110-85 victory. Duncan also grabbed eight rebounds and Vinny Del Negro contributed 14 points and 12 assists for San Antonio, which has won eight of its last 11 games. The Spurs are 14-2 against the 76ers over the last eight seasons. "That was quite an anomaly, probably never to be seen again," Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. "We had one of those nights. Vinny got 12 assists, no turnovers, seven rebounds ... he was playing the point which is not his position. Tim Duncan was super, David (Robinson) does what he does out there, which is anchor the defense and Will had a career night. We had all these things happen at once and it was a good time for it to happen. We just caught fire." In two games against Philadelphia this season, Duncan has racked up 59 points and 25 boards. Duncan scored seven points to key a 15-2 run at the start of the third quarter, turing a 52-45 lead into a 67-47 advantage with 8:03 left. Duncan hit a layup, Perdue sank two free throws and Jaren Jackson nailed a three-pointer to give the Spurs a 59-45 lead with 9:57 left in the third. After Theo Ratliff made two foul shots, Duncan scored the next five points and Jackson hit another three-pointer, making it 67-47. The Spurs took a commanding 87-59 lead into the final quarter. "We started flowing, we all got on the same page, the ball started moving, people got open shots and everything went our way," Duncan said. Duncan also commented on San Antonio's play with himself, Robinson and Perdue on the floor at the same time. "The first couple of games it was a problem, people were kind of bumping into each other, now we're more comfortable with it. I'm comfortable at the three spot, David still has problems remembering he's a four, but once he remembers, he's one of the best. Will is Will, he hangs around the rim and finishes the job." San Antonio outscored Philadelphia, 35-14, in the third quarter thanks to some red-hot shooting. The Spurs shot a blistering 12-for-13 (92 percent) from the field, while holding the Sixers to just 5-for-22 (23 percent). Allen Iverson scored 15 of his 24 points in the first quarter and Derrick Coleman added 18 points for Philadelphia, which suffered its fifth straight loss. The 76ers fell 20 games under .500 for the first time this season (25-45). "They were great, we were poor," Philadelphia coach Larry Brown said. "I'm really embarrassed by it, obviously it was a lack of coaching not to be totally prepared. We focused on Duncan and David because they are two of the best in the league. They just beat us in all areas. I don't have any explanation for what happened, it's disappointing." The Sixers scored 10 unanswered points, capped by Anthony Parker's three-pointer, to pull within 89-69 with 9:55 to play. Monty Williams hit one of two free throws to trigger an 11-4 run in the second quarter. Jackson drilled a three-pointer, David Robinson made a foul shot, Del Negro hit a jumper and Robinson converted a layup to put the Spurs ahead, 51-41 with 2:29 to go in the first half. San Antonio settled for a 52-45 lead at the break. Jackson hit 4-for-5 from three-point range en route to 16 points and Robinson added 10 and eight rebounds for the Spurs, who shot 55 percent (39-for-71) from the field and had a 26-15 advantage from the foul line. Tim Thomas had 13 points on 5-for-17 shooting from the field and Parker finished with nine points for Philadelphia, which shot 42 percent (33-for-78) from the field.