PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 14 (Ticker) -- Chris Webber kept his cool while the Atlanta Hawks lost theirs.

Webber scored 10 of his 29 points in the final five minutes as the Philadelphia 76ers collected their fourth straight victory, a 106-101 triumph over the Hawks, who were called for a pair of late technical fouls.

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Allen Iverson scored 39 points but none in the last eight minutes for the 76ers (12-11), who again blew a fourth-quarter lead but scrambled to climb above .500 for the first time since November 29.

"We're making it real tough on ourselves, but the positive is that we got the win," Iverson said. "We can't continue to let this happen. Hopefully we will continue to get better at the end of these games."

Looking for their first three-game winning streak since April 2004, the Hawks grabbed a 95-94 lead when Al Harrington went around Webber for a layup with 2:33 remaining.

Webber, who made 10-of-23 shots and pulled down eight rebounds, responded with a jumper and two free throws before Atlanta's Tyronn Lue tied it for the last time at 98-98 on a 3-pointer with 90 seconds to play.

"When I get my shots, I can do it," Webber said. "This is what I expect of myself. When (I have those) 12- or 13-point games, nobody goes home more upset than me. It is something that I'm just not used to. I just credit my teammates because it is about your teammates getting you the ball in the right places."

Iverson and Harrington traded misses before the Sixers took the lead for good when Andre Iguodala split a pair of foul shots with 38 seconds to go.

On the ensuing possession, Lue missed a driving layup, but Atlanta's Josh Smith was pushed out of rebounding position by Kyle Korver, who challenged Josh Childress' follow shot that was rebounded by Webber. Smith argued the lack of a call and was whistled for a technical foul.

"Things just didn't go our way," Childress said. "I don't know how else to put it without getting in trouble. It was a home game for Philadelphia, that's all I can say."

Webber made the technical foul shot and both free throws, but not before Hawks coach Mike Woodson picked up a pair of technicals and was ejected for continuing the argument. Webber split those two for a 103-98 lead with 18 seconds left, sealing the win.

"The bottom line is that I'm going to fight for my team," Woodson said. "They're fighting for me, I'm going to fight for them. I don't know what Josh did for his technical. He was mad because he fouled out of the game. He didn't say anything to the official."

Woodson may have been frustrated with the officiating, which saw the Sixers go without a foul until the 4:22 mark of the second quarter and hold a 35-18 advantage in free throws.

"Maybe we were shooting jump shots earlier, but at the end we making plays at the rim," Woodson said. "Chlidress makes a good offensive rebound, goes right back up, gets fouled and nothing. They give Iguodala the same call at the other end. It's just not right."

"When you're a bad team, you don't get any benefit-of-the-doubt calls," Harrington said. "You see it on TV, the media knows it, and we were a casualty of that tonight. We played as hard as they did. We deserved that one as much as they did."

John Salmons scored 11 points and Korver 10 for the Sixers, who have won 10 of their last 12 meetings with the Hawks. Rookie Shavlik Randolph swept 12 rebounds.

"I just try to go out and play because if you're a good player, good things will happen when you're out on the court," said Randolph, who scored four points. "Whether it's going to be scoring, rebounding or defending. I think there will be good things that happen when I go out there and I'm being active."

Harrington scored 27 points, Lue added 21 and Johnson 17 for the Hawks, who were without starting center Zaza Pachulia (back spasms) and lost Johnson to foul trouble for most of the second half.

With Johnson on the bench, the Hawks went to a zone and rallied to take their first lead at 60-58 on a 3-pointer by Harrington at the 7:38 mark.

"I thought we just defended," Woodson said. "You're not going to stop Allen Iverson. Webber had a big game as well. All you can do is try to contain them and hope for the best. I thought we did an adequate job. I thought our defense was solid in the third and fourth (quarter). Once we caught up, it was back and forth."

Six points each by Iverson and Salmons fueled a 12-4 run that opened the final period and gave Philadelphia a 90-82 advantage.

Coming off a season-low 19 points vs. Minnesota on Monday, Iverson scored 22 in the first half as the Sixers opened a 53-46 lead.