It was the dunk heard ’round Barclays Center.

And Spencer Dinwiddie’s teammates all want to see more of it.

Dinwiddie got the crowd and his bench off their feet in the third quarter on Sunday night when he threw down a dunk over Tobias Harris in the Nets’ 109-89 win over the 76ers. But while fans may have been surprised by seeing Dinwiddie go up like that, his teammates were not.

They were just frustrated he doesn’t flash that ability more often.

“Spencer’s probably the most athletic guy in the NBA that doesn’t use his athleticism, so we give him a lot of grief for not dunking the ball enough,” Joe Harris said.

“I haven’t seen Spence dunk since he was at Colorado, so it was good to see that [stuff] tonight,” DeAndre Jordan joked. “Spencer, he tries to save his athleticism for — I don’t know [what]. We probably won’t see another dunk until, like, 2020. … His son was here too, so he got to see it. Hopefully he wasn’t eating candy or something to where he missed it.”

“I wish he’d do it more,” coach Kenny Atkinson said.

If the referees had been calling more fouls, Dinwiddie said the dunk probably wouldn’t have even happened. He figured he could have gotten fouled by Harris under the rim on a layup, but instead decided he should try for the one-handed jam.

Dinwiddie was happy that the dunk came on Harris, his former teammate on the Pistons. He planned on texting the Long Island native after the game.

“If you throw on somebody you don’t know, your trash talk is less meaningful,” Dinwiddie said. “Like I can text him and be like, ‘Bro, what’s happening?’ ”

Many reports have tabbed Kyrie Irving as the source of the toxicity around the Celtics last season, but a former teammate refuted those claims over the weekend.

“Kyrie got a lot of the blame and was undeserving,” Jaylen Brown told Brandon “Scoop B” Robinson. “It wasn’t his fault that certain guys couldn’t take a step back. It wasn’t his fault. That was the front office and the coach’s fault. He gets a lot of that blame because he was the star. But a lot of that should be on the organization and coaching staff. It’s in the past. Kyrie is in a better place in Brooklyn, somewhere his roots are. He’ll be fine.”

The Nets snapped a two-game skid by beating the 76ers, a feel-good win they thought they needed before hitting the road for games against the Pelicans (Tuesday) and Spurs (Thursday).

“Coming back and getting a win against a quality opponent on the second night of a back-to-back — at six o’clock [Sunday] after a 7:30 game [Saturday], NBA — but we needed that to springboard us into this road trip,” Garrett Temple said. “New Orleans hasn’t been winning, but they’ve been in every game and San Antonio’s the same. We know we gotta lock in and try to get two on the road.”

The Nets ruled out Irving (shoulder), Caris LeVert (thumb) and rookie Nic Claxton (hamstring) for Tuesday’s game in New Orleans.