PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 7 (Ticker) -- For the first time in a long time, Allen Iverson and Glenn Robinson looked like teammates.

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Iverson scored 10 of his 20 points and Robinson eight of his 19 in the third quarter as the Philadelphia 76ers rolled to a 100-80 victory over the Los Angeles Clippers.

Robinson was acquired in a four-team trade in the offseason, but his ankle injury and Iverson's knee woes have conspired to put them together on the court just six times coming into this game. As a result, the Sixers sputtered to a 15-19 start.

But in the third quarter, Iverson and Robinson worked together perhaps as well as they have this season. In rebuilding a one-point halftime lead to double digits, Iverson had a pair of steals that turned into layups and Robinson drilled a pair of jumpers.

"We worked with each other well; the chemistry was there," Robinson said. "I don't know if we've played 10 games together all year, but that's going to come with time, and we'll get better and better as we get more and more comfortable with each other."

"That's the way you draw it up," Iverson said. "That's the way you would hope everything would play out, just like it did tonight."

Iverson's three-point play made it 68-51 and capped a 9-0 burst.

"They had some good exchanges," 76ers coach Randy Ayers said. "We just have to try and keep them together. Hopefully, we can get some reps in practice."

Kenny Thomas had 16 points and 13 rebounds and Eric Snow added 15 and nine assists for Philadelphia, which has won seven straight home meetings with Los Angeles dating to March 10, 1996 -- three months before Iverson was drafted.

Elton Brand had 26 points and 12 boards for the Clippers, who played without suspended swingman Corey Maggette and fell to 0-2 on their three-game road trip.

Los Angeles shot under 39 percent (27-of-70) from the field, surrendered 32 points off 21 turnovers and was outscored in the paint 56-32.

"You can't win games when you turn the ball over the way we turned the ball over," said Clippers coach Mike Dunleavy, whose team trailed by 24 points in the final period. "We couldn't make open shots when we had them."

Midway through the second quarter, Iverson was flagrantly fouled by Eddie House. He went after the Clippers guard and had to be restrained by teammates.

"I really don't care when guys hit me in the arms, my chest, my leg, anything like that real hard," Iverson said. "But when you hit me in my face or my head, it's a different story. ... I'm glad somebody was there to stop me before I got to him."