Saturday, May 31, 2008

Hornets Hope to Sting Duncan, Spurs Again in Game 2

NEW ORLEANS, May 4 (AP) -- Tim Duncan was annoyed, muttering after losing a ball out of bounds, and later staring at the floor with his hands on his hips after missing a foul shot.

After averaging nearly 25 points and 14 rebounds in five playoff games against the Phoenix Suns, Duncan did little right for the Spurs in Game 1 at New Orleans on Saturday night.

Hornets center Tyson Chandler anchored a defensive effort that routinely employed double-teams against Duncan, who missed eight of nine shots, made only half of his six free throws and finished with five points and three rebounds.

That kind of outing from the "Big Fundamental" is rare. The Hornets aren't sure they can lock down the Spurs' perennial All-Star again in Game 2 on Monday night, but they certainly intend to try.

"They want to give him more shot attempts, want to get him more looks at the basket,'' Hornets forward David West said. "We're not going to leave any of our guys one-on-one with anybody. We haven't done that all year. We won't allow our teammates to get embarrassed, so he's going to get more shots, but every time he catches the ball he's going to see a line of defense. He's going to see Tyson, he's going to see the next line and the next line of defense.''

Chandler said he's considered Duncan the best center in the game for a long time, and because of that has studied Duncan's game to see what he could learn about playing the position. There's another benefit to that for the Hornets in this series.

"I've been watching him so much I know his game and I kind of know his counters,'' Chandler said. "I don't think you'll necessarily stop Tim out there. He's too good of a post player. The thing we have to do is keep him away from his spots. Keep him away from easy buckets. I've watched him long enough to kind of know his game.''

Duncan's response? Everyone will have to wait and see. The Spurs had scheduled practice at the New Orleans Arena on Sunday, but canceled it.

The Hornets, meanwhile, practiced only briefly after watching some game film. Hornets coach Byron Scott said he wanted his players as fresh as possible because he expects them to push the tempo.

"We have to use what we've got. We have the youth, younger legs, things like that,'' Scott said. "We're a little more athletic than they are. We have to try to use those things to our advantage.''

West's ability to score on mid-range jumpers, post-up moves and drives to the hoop was what made him a first-time All-Star this season, and was the difference in the series opener. He finished with a playoff career-high 30 points.

The Hornets have now beaten San Antonio three times this season, all lopsided affairs that featured prolific scoring by West.

Spurs guard Tony Parker made note of that after Saturday's game, saying the Spurs need to refine their defensive approach on West specifically and not be overly preoccupied with Hornets All-Star point guard Chris Paul.

One change Gregg Popovich could try is putting Duncan, one of his best defenders, on West.

If that matchup materializes, Scott said, the Hornets will respond by keeping West on the wing, limiting Duncan's ability to be a rebounding or shot-blocking force inside.

Then there's the matter of stopping Chandler, who converted more than 100 alley-oop feeds from Paul during the regular season and had another in Game 1 of this series.

"You have to have a solid defender guarding Tyson,'' West said. "I know that is one of the reasons why they put Tim over on Tyson, to make sure he can protect the basket.''

In any event, Scott expects Duncan to be much more of a factor from here on, and he does not think it is realistic to expect his team to run away from the defending champions as the Hornets did in their 101-82 Game 1 triumph.

"Tim is too proud to come out and play that way again,'' Scott said. "In our minds right now, this is going to be a long series. They're just too good of a team to play the way they played (Saturday) night for four more games or five more games, so we didn't get their best shot.''

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  • Rampage Beat Marlies 3-0 To Force Game Seven
  • West, Hornets Sting Spurs in Game 1
  • Bryant Leads Lakers past Spurs into NBA Finals

    LA Lakers 100, San Antonio 92

    LOS ANGELES, May 29 (AP) - The Lakers celebrated the Western Conference championship before their adoring fans at Staples Center, but not too hard.

    They've got one more goal to reach before the real excitement begins.

    Kobe Bryant scored 17 of his 39 points in the fourth quarter, and the Lakers rallied from an early 17-point deficit to beat the defending NBA champion San Antonio Spurs 100-92 on Thursday night and win the conference finals in five games.

    They get a week off before opening the NBA Finals next Thursday night at Boston or Detroit. The Celtics lead the Eastern Conference finals 3-2 with Game 6 on Friday night in Detroit.

    "I think it is a tremendous accomplishment,'' Bryant said. "I think the West is extremely tough. We're all extremely excited and proud about it. Now, it's time to go on and see if we can't finish it off.''

    The Lakers are 12-3 in the playoffs, including 8-0 at Staples Center, where they haven't lost in two months. They have won 14 straight home games and 21 of their last 24 postseason games at home.

    "My heart's still pumping, that adrenaline is still running from the game,'' said Lamar Odom, who had 13 points and eight rebounds. "Maybe when I sit down and have something to eat, I'll realize what just happened.

    "We came out here, played our game, and won. It's satisfying, but one more step.''

    A basket by Odom gave the Lakers an 83-76 lead with 5:40 remaining, but a 3-pointer by Brent Barry and a basket by Tony Parker drew the Spurs within two points. Manu Ginobili missed a 3-pointer that could have given San Antonio the lead before Bryant's jumper with 3:33 to play made it 85-81.

    A foul shot by Tim Duncan drew the Spurs within three, but two more baskets by Bryant made it 89-82 with 1:47 to play, and the Spurs weren't closer than five points after that.

    Pau Gasol had 12 points, a career playoff-high 19 rebounds, five assists and four blocked shots and backup guards Sasha Vujacic and Jordan Farmar added nine and eight points, respectively.

    Parker scored 23 points and Duncan had 19 points, 15 rebounds and 10 assists for the Spurs. Michael Finley scored 13 points, Barry and Kurt Thomas added 11 each and Ginobili was held to nine, shooting just 3-for-9.

    "Just got to gear it up again to go to next year,'' Duncan said. "Love what we had this year. We just weren't good enough through stretches.''

    Former Lakers star and executive Jerry West presented the Lakers the Western Conference championship trophy on the court following the game. By that time, the players were all wearing T-shirts and caps denoting their championship status.

    Lakers coach Phil Jackson has won nine championships, tied for the NBA record with former Boston coach Red Auerbach.

    "I like not to get involved personally in this and think of this as a team effort,'' he said regarding what playing in the NBA Finals means to him. "As much as I appreciate the league trying to emphasize the Western Conference trophy, that doesn't mean too much when that big prize is still out there.

    "We look at both those opponents (Boston and Detroit) with a great deal of respect and know that we have a great, great hill to climb to be able to finish in the finals and win.''

    Spurs coach Gregg Popovich pointed to his team's offense - and the Lakers' defense - as the keys to the series.

    "I thought we did a fine job,'' he said. "We just didn't muster the offense, for a variety of reasons. The fact that we didn't come through offensively is a disappointment, but part of that is a credit to the Lakers.

    "(The Spurs) just played a team that was better. That's why the Lakers won. The better team won. You get a seven-game series, you win four games, you're the best team.''

    The Lakers clinched their berth in the finals a year to the day after Bryant called the team's front office "a mess'' during a radio interview. A day later, he demanded a trade, ultimately saying he preferred playing on Pluto rather than returning to the team he joined as an 18-year-old in 1996.

    The situation calmed down until Lakers owner Jerry Buss told reporters during training camp in October he was listening to offers for Bryant, angering the superstar once again.

    But once the season began, Bryant bonded with his teammates, led the Lakers to the No. 1 seed in the rugged West and won his first MVP award.

    "Once the season started, I didn't think about a trade or anything like that,'' Bryant said. "I just buckled down into what I needed to do to get this team to play our best basketball. That's what we did.''

    The Lakers will be playing in the Finals for the 23rd time since moving from Minneapolis to Los Angeles in 1961 and the 29th time overall. They have won 14 championships - nine in Los Angeles and five in Minneapolis.

    The Lakers and the Celtics have met 10 times in the Finals, with Boston winning the first eight matchups and Los Angeles the last two - in 1985 and 1987. That's the last time the Celtics advanced to the championship round.

    The Lakers and Pistons have met three times in the Finals, most recently in 2004, when Detroit won in five games. Shaquille O'Neal, who teamed with Bryant to lead the Lakers to three straight championships starting in 2000, was traded a month later, and the Lakers hadn't won a postseason series since until last month.

    San Antonio's elimination might signal the end of its era of dominance. With Duncan leading the way, the Spurs won championships in 1999, 2003, 2005 and 2007, but with a rotation made up solely of 30-something players except for the 26-year-old Parker, the future seems uncertain.

    Meanwhile, starting guard Derek Fisher and seldom-used reserve Ira Newble are the only players on the Los Angeles roster over 30.

    "I really expected to be here, even with all the questions at the beginning of the season,'' Fisher said.

    Ultimately, it was the Lakers' youth, quickness and athleticism that determined this series. The turning point occurred in Game 1, when the Spurs took a 20-point third-quarter lead before the Lakers outscored them 44-20 for an 89-85 victory.

    San Antonio had a shot in Game 4, but the Lakers held on for a 93-91 victory that put the Spurs on the brink of elimination. And that came Thursday night.

    A 3-pointer by Luke Walton and baskets by Farmar and Bryant gave the Lakers a 74-68 lead with 8 1/2 minutes remaining, and they were on top the rest of the way.

    The Spurs led by as many as 10 points early in the third quarter, but the Lakers turned up their defensive intensity during a 19-8 run that gave them a 61-60 lead - their first since the opening minute. Bryant scored nine points during the spurt. Los Angeles led 64-63 entering the final period.

    The Spurs got 3-pointers from Finley, Ginobili and Barry during a 15-1 run that gave them a 33-16 lead early in the second quarter. The Lakers went nearly 7 1/2 minutes without a field goal until Farmar scored three straight baskets to trim San Antonio's lead to 11.

    It was 46-31 before the Lakers went on an 11-2 run to finish the second quarter, cutting the Spurs' lead to 48-42.

    Notes: Only eight teams in NBA history have rallied from a 3-1 deficit to win a best-of-seven series. The Spurs are now 0-7 in such situations. ... Phoenix was the last NBA team to overcome a 3-1 deficit in a best-of-seven series, accomplishing the feat against the Lakers two years ago in the first round. ... Bryant attempted only 11 free throws in this series after attempting 96 against Utah.

  • Rampage Beat Marlies 3-0 To Force Game Seven
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  • Thursday, May 29, 2008

    Hawks Beat Celts Again in Atlanta, Force Game 7

    Atlanta 103, Boston 100

    ATLANTA, May 2 (AP) - As streamers poured from the rafters at Philips Arena, Marvin Williams stood at center court with arms folded, looking defiant, even with a sore knee. Zaza Pachulia grabbed a microphone and summed up this improbable series.

    "We're going to Game 7! Woooooooooo!'' Pachulia screamed.

    Game 7, indeed.

    Who would have believed it?

    Refusing to let go of their first trip to the playoffs in nine years, the Hawks forced an improbable deciding game with the Boston Celtics when Joe Johnson hit a crucial 3-pointer with 1:07 remaining and Atlanta held on for a 103-100 victory Friday night.

    The Hawks, just 37-45 during the regular season, have now beaten the Celtics three times in the space of a week to set up a deciding game in a series that was supposed to be a sweep. After all, Boston went an NBA-leading 66-16 and defeated Atlanta in all three meetings before the playoffs.

    But, against all odds, the Hawks are heading to Boston for Game 7 on Sunday.

    "Seven! Seven! Seven!'' chanted the record crowd of 20,425 at Philips Arena.

    The Celtics are still the obvious favorite, having won all three games at their place by an average of 22 points. But the Hawks have lasted longer than anyone would have expected.

    "I feel very good,'' said Pachulia, a little-used center who's making quite an impact in this series. "You've got to be able to win on the road. We've lost three in a row. We should be able to win one up there. It would be sad if we lost four in a row.''

    The Celtics looked as shell-shocked as anyone. Paul Pierce fouled out and spent the final minutes on the bench with a towel draped over his head, barely able to watch.

    "It's definitely a dream,'' Atlanta's Josh Smith said. "But we weren't going to be satisfied with just making the playoffs.''

    Williams led the Hawks with 18 points despite missing much of the fourth quarter with a sprained left knee. Kevin Garnett had 22 for the Celtics and Ray Allen added 20, but Pierce - the other member of Boston's Big Three - fouled out on a disputed call with 4:44 remaining.

    The Celtics had a chance after pounding the boards for five chances on one possession before Kendrick Perkins was hacked by Al Horford. Perkins made both free throws with 1:32 left to pull Boston within 97-95.

    Johnson, who went to the final period with just seven points on 3-of-9 shooting, came alive in the fourth. He saved his biggest shot for the end, getting James Posey in the air with a pump fake before hitting Atlanta's only 3-pointer of the game to make it 100-95.

    "I took a few dribbles,'' Johnson said. "I just wanted to get a good look. I felt like it would go in when it left my hand.''

    Posey got Johnson back by making a tough 3 from the wing with 48 seconds left, and the Celtics had a chance when Johnson missed a runner in the lane.

    Wanting to finish off the pesky Hawks, the Celtics drew up a play to give Allen a look from beyond the arc. He missed, though; Johnson grabbed the rebound, was fouled and hit two free throws with 10.6 seconds left.

    After a quick basket by Garnett, Mike Bibby made only one of two free throws with 7.4 seconds to go, giving the Celtics a shot at forcing overtime. But the Hawks kept the ball from Allen and Posey, forcing Rajon Rondo to launch a long 3 that didn't even hit the rim as the horn sounded.

    For the third time in the series, streamers poured from the Philips Arena rafters.

    "I've played 13 years, and I've been here every year for 13 years,'' Garnett said. "This is the first time I've seen this atmosphere like this (in Atlanta). That's the intensity of the playoffs.''

    But the Celtics worked all season to get the home-court advantage throughout the playoffs.

    Next up, Game 7 in Beantown.

    "Our confidence is definitely not shaken,'' Garnett insisted.

    Pierce has apparently seen enough of Atlanta. He had already cleared out of the locker room by the time reporters were let him. The only thing left behind was a banana peel.

    "We put ourselves in this situation,'' Posey said. "For one of these teams, it's going to be their last game. Just expect anything and everything.''

    After the Hawks scored the first basket, Boston led until early in the fourth. The Celtics were up by 12 in the second and nine in the third, looking to finally put away Atlanta.

    But, as they did when falling behind in Game 4, the Hawks refused to fold.

    They finally reclaimed the lead with just over 11 minutes remaining, when Williams soared for the rebound of Bibby's missed 3 and laid it in to put the Hawks ahead 83-82.

    From there, the teams went back and forth until a crucial play knocked out Pierce and gave the Hawks some breathing room.

    Josh Childress scored on a brilliant slashing move off the baseline, holding the ball high above the hoop before he dropped it in. Pierce was called for his sixth foul away from the play fighting for rebounding position with Pachulia. The Boston star was livid over the call, ripping off his trademark headband and standing under the basket in disbelief.

    The officials called a technical on Pierce while "Hit The Road Jack'' blared throughout the arena. Johnson made the free throw, giving the Hawks a 96-89 lead.

    Williams twisted his knee awkwardly trying to guard Pierce on a drive through the lane early in the fourth. The Hawks initially announced the third-year forward would not return, but he checked in to play defense with 20 seconds to go, still hobbling.

    He'd already done enough at that point. In his best game of the series, Williams went 6-of-9 from the field and made all six of his free throws.

    Atlanta got double figures from every starter. Besides Williams' 18, Bibby had 17, Horford 16, Johnson 15, and Smith - who played less than 30 minutes because of foul trouble - finished with 11. Off the bench, Childress had 15 points and six rebounds, while Pachulia contributed nine points and six rebounds.

    Notes: Atlanta went 1-of-7 from 3-point range. Boston was 4-of-19. ... Rondo played with a scrape on his right (shooting) hand. He sustained it in Game 5 going for a loose ball with Bibby. ... While the crowd was the largest for an NBA game at Philips Arena, it was far from the biggest in team history. Amazingly for a team never known for its crowd support, the Hawks hold the league record of 62,046 for a 1998 game at the Georgia Dome against Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls. ... Hawks coach Mike Woodson picked up a technical early in the third for arguing a call. ...

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  • Another Garden Party as Celts Beat Cavs in Game 5

    Boston 96, Cleveland 89

    BOSTON, May 14 (AP) - Someone is going to have to beat the Celtics in Boston to keep them from winning their 17th NBA title.

    Cleveland is hoping for one more chance.

    Kevin Garnett had 26 points and 16 rebounds, and Rajon Rondo added 20 points and 13 assists as the Celtics beat the Cavaliers 96-89 on Wednesday night to move within a win of the Eastern Conference finals.

    Game 6 is Friday night in Cleveland.

    "We know it's a win-or-go-home situation. We've got to approach it that way,'' said LeBron James, who scored 23 of his 35 points in the first 20 minutes and then went cold again. "We're a very good team at home. But a LeBron James team is never desperate.''

    Paul Pierce scored 29 points and helped shut James down for much of the second half. The Cavaliers forward had 23 points with 3:50 left in the first half but made just one basket in the next 20 minutes as Boston erased a 14-point deficit and took the lead for good.

    James, who shot under 26 percent in the first four games, was 12-of-25 from the field but made just four of his last 14 shots and missed all five of his 3-pointers.

    "Whether we get 35 or 20 (from James), it doesn't matter at this point,'' Cavaliers coach Mike Brown said. "To lose the game ... that's what's more disappointing than anything else. Whether he gets this or that, I'm not really concerned, because he's going to contribute in other ways.''

    Cleveland cut an 88-77 lead to 91-87 on two free throws by Delonte West with 46 seconds to play. But, after running down the shot clock, Garnett got the rebound of his own miss and Paul Pierce hit five free throws in the last 16 seconds to ice it.

    "This momentum, and what we did here tonight,'' Garnett said, "we've got to figure a way to carry this on the road.''

    The Celtics are undefeated at home but they have yet to win on the road, a streak that allowed the eighth-seeded Atlanta Hawks to go the distance in the first round and let Cleveland back in this series after Boston won the first two games.

    "We're going to get one. I don't know when,'' coach Doc Rivers said. "It would be great if it's Game 6.''

    Boston, which had an NBA-best 66-16 record in the regular season, has the home-court advantage throughout the playoffs. But no team has ever won a title without winning an away game.

    In fact, Boston could be the first team to advance through the second round without a road win.

    "They have a good cushion, being the best team in the NBA,'' Cavaliers center Zydrunas Ilgauskas said. "They really don't have to win on the road. Hopefully, we can take care of our business at home and come back here and have another shot.''

    Cleveland took a 43-29 lead in the second quarter thanks to eight straight points from James. But Rondo hit back-to-back 3-pointers as the Celtics scored 14 of the last 17 points in the first half, then took the lead with the first four points of the third quarter.

    Garnett's steal on the first possession of the second half sent Ray Allen on a fast break for a long 2-pointer, then Rondo's steal and fast-break layup made it 47-46 for Boston's first lead of the game.

    The Celtics made nine of their first 11 shots in the second half, scoring seven straight points to turn a one-point advantage into a 65-57 lead with three minutes left in the third. Rondo literally jumped out of his pants in the effort; his shorts slid down when he blocked West to protect a five-point lead with 4 minutes to play in the third.

    James made eight of his first 11 shots and seemed to snap out of his series-long shooting slump. But he made just one basket in the third, a baby hook with 45 seconds left in the quarter, and he scored eight in the last five minutes after Boston already led by 12.

    West had 21 points for Cleveland, which missed 10 free throws in the second half. Ilgauskas was held to playoff-low six.

    James scored 11 in the first quarter as the Cavaliers opened an 18-9 lead, but the Celtics quickly cut it to three points. He scored 12 more in the second.

    Then he finally missed one.

    Rondo set up Garnett for a short jumper, then the Celtics point guard made consecutive 3-pointers to make it 43-37. Pierce hit a pair of free throws to cut Cleveland's lead to four points with 1:33 left.

    Notes: West (eyes) and Ben Wallace (dizziness) left the court for the Celtics' introductions to avoid the smoke that accompanies the pregame fireworks. West said he went to an eye specialist after Thursday's shootaround. "It's hard to play this game with one eye unless you're a pirate,'' he said. ... The Celtics scored 12 points in the fourth quarter of Game 4 and 22 in the first 16 minutes of Game 5, giving them 34 points in a 28-minute span. ... Cleveland's Daniel Gibson went to the locker room in the fourth quarter with a bruised left shoulder. He is scheduled for an MRI in Cleveland on Thursday. ... Celebrities in the crowd: Rob Lowe, Jay-Z, Beyonce, Louis C.K., Jonah Hill (Superbad), Donnie Wahlberg, JoJo Levesque and various New England Patriots.

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  • Wednesday, May 28, 2008

    Ginobili, Duncan Leads Spurs to Game 3 Win

    San Antonio 103, LA Lakers 84

    SAN ANTONIO, May 25 (AP) - The San Antonio Spurs opened another big lead over the Los Angeles Lakers on Sunday night. This time, they kept it.

    Manu Ginobili broke out of his scoring slump with 30 points off the bench and the Spurs beat the Lakers 103-84 in Game 3 of the Western Conference finals.

    Tim Duncan had 22 points, 21 rebounds and five assists, and Tony Parker added 20 points and five assists for the Spurs, who remained unbeaten at home this postseason and avoided falling into an 0-3 hole, which no NBA team has ever overcome.

    The Lakers lead the series 2-1. Game 4 is Tuesday in San Antonio.

    The Spurs squandered a 20-point lead to lose Game 1 in Los Angeles and the Lakers routed them in Game 2.

    Kobe Bryant led the Lakers with 30 points and Pau Gasol scored 15. Lamar Odom struggled all night, finishing 2-of-11 from the field for seven points. But he had six of the Lakers' 13 assists and 11 rebounds.

    "They played solid defense, but we missed a lot of easy ones,'' Bryant said.

    The Lakers also struggled at the free throw line, going just 8-of-17. Bryant went to the line only once.

    On Sunday, the Spurs got a lead midway through the second quarter and never looked back, despite a late surge from Bryant.

    "I felt good, and then it was easier for me,'' Ginobili said.

    Up 69-57 entering the fourth, the Spurs opened with a 12-4 run, and Parker's layup gave them a 20-point lead with a little over 8 minutes to play.

    Then Bryant did what Bryant does: almost single-handedly pulled his team out of the hole. He hit four 3-pointers over the course of less than 2 1/2 minutes and his last one brought the Lakers within 88-76 with 5 minutes to play.

    But the Lakers would get no closer, not when the Spurs' title defense would be all but ruined with a Game 3 loss.

    Duncan answered with a three-point play to put the Spurs back up by 15 and not long after Brent Barry's steal that resulted in a three-point play for Ginobili made it 97-78 with 3:26 to go.

    "He bounced back the way I thought he would,'' Bryant said of Ginobili. "He had a spectacular first half.''

    Reserve Jordan Farmar scored 10 points for the Lakers.

    In the first half, Parker was penetrating the paint, but Ginobili was the big key for the Spurs. He had 22 points at the break - more than the 17 he scored in Games 1 and 2 combined. And whether or not his injured left ankle was bothering him, he didn't need it to explode to the basket because he hit 3 after 3.

    After Bryant's driving dunk past Duncan with 4:57 left in the first quarter put the Lakers up 15-8, Ginobili hit back-to-back 3s from the same spot on the wing to get the Spurs within a point.

    He didn't stop in the second quarter.

    His 3 4 1/2 minutes in put the Spurs up 33-30, then he got to the rim about 30 seconds later and was fouled. His free throw made it 36-32.

    "He is such a competitor,'' Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. "He puts so much on his shoulders, he fights through a lot of things.''

    The Lakers struggled in the second quarter - turning the ball over early in the period on a shot-clock violation, missing free throws and shooting 7-of-17 from the field - and the Spurs pulled away.

    Ginobili hit his fifth 3 of the night as the shot clock expired with less than a minute left in the first half. The Spurs outscored the Lakers 28-15 in the second quarter for a 49-39 lead at the break.

    Odom was 1-of-7 from the field in the first half and guard Derek Fisher was scoreless.

    Odom didn't fare any better in the third, and Gasol and Bryant combined for just 10 points as Spurs' defender Bruce Bowen continued to hound this year's league MVP.

    Ginobili cooled in the third quarter - when the Spurs went up by as many as 13 - just as Duncan got hot. Duncan's two jump shots with less than two minutes to play, plus Ginobili's drive that showed he can still get to the rim, gave the Spurs a 12-point lead heading into the fourth.

    Notes: The Spurs last lost at home on April 9 to Phoenix . San Antonio eliminated the Suns in the first round in five games. ... Fisher got a technical foul with 4:45 left in the third quarter just after teammate Vladimir Radmanovic hit a layup to bring the Lakers within eight. ... In a dig at Bryant, the crowd chanted "M-V-P'' when Duncan went to the line late in the fourth quarter. ... Ginobili got a standing ovation from the crowd when he went to the bench with 2:56 to play. ... Fisher finished with two points on 1-of-4 shooting. ... The Spurs hit 10 3s, the Lakers hit six.

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  • Kerr: Suns in 'No Huge Rush' to Hire New Coach

    PHOENIX, May 12 (AP) -- There is "no big rush'' to hire a new coach for the Phoenix Suns, the team's general manager said Monday.

    Steve Kerr said he plans a thorough search that includes people with teams still in the NBA playoffs.

    "We're going to make sure we cover our bases,'' he said. "There's not a huge rush because we're not one of five or six teams out there looking for someone, so we don't feel like we're competing with other people.''

    The Suns are looking for a coach in the offseason for the first time in two decades after Mike D'Antoni left to become coach of the New York Knicks. D'Antoni's departure followed philosophical differences with Kerr, who took over as GM a year ago.

    Kerr said he and owner Robert Sarver wanted D'Antoni to stay, but the coach balked at some of the changes the general manager wanted. Those reportedly included a bigger emphasis on defense, giving playing time to some younger players and perhaps altering his staff.

    But Kerr wants no major alteration in the Suns' style.

    "Our personnel is geared toward getting out and running,'' he said. "It's exciting basketball. I believe in it. I just think we need to be more balanced, though. We have to be better at the other end of the court as well, so I'll be looking for someone who shares that vision.''

    D'Antoni resigned with two years and $8.5 million remaining on his Suns contract. He compiled a 232-96 record over the last four full seasons, but the team could never make it to the NBA finals. Three times the Suns were eliminated by the San Antonio Spurs.

    "Mike had great success here and did a really good job,'' Kerr said. "The players should appreciate what he's done and I appreciate what he's done, but for all the different circumstances and reasons, he's moving on and we're moving on.''

    The Suns' five-game loss to San Antonio in the first round this year reinforced many of Kerr's feelings about the need for an added emphasis on defense. But D'Antoni's easygoing, funny and highly personable demeanor masks an intense competitiveness and more than a little stubbornness.

    That helped lead to his falling out with the Suns, and when D'Antoni asked for permission to talk with other teams, it brought an end to his highly entertaining era.

    Kerr has a list of prospects and was setting up interviews, but wouldn't say how many names were involved, let alone who they are. He acknowledged it could take an experienced coach to best deal with the team.

    "We have a veteran team and we have a chance to win big next year,'' Kerr said. "Maybe it would be different if we were a young team trying to build for the future or whatever, but with that said, whoever stands out, stands out.''

    The coach will have to coexist with Shaquille O'Neal, something others in that position occasionally have struggled with.

    "I think you need somebody with a presence, somebody the guys are going to respect,'' Kerr said. "That's true with everybody, but particularly a guy like Shaq who had a big presence and a big personality and has won championships.'''

    Because there are candidates still involved in the playoffs, it could be several weeks before someone is hired.

    "At the same time, if someone jumps out at us immediately, this could happen quicker than we think,'' Kerr said, "but the point of being methodical is being thorough.''

    Rather than lament the end of the D'Antoni era, Kerr said people should be excited about "the chance to improve our team.''

    With the stunning trade of Shawn Marion and Marcus Banks for O'Neal, and now the drawn-out departure of a coach who won at least 54 games in each of the last four seasons, it's been a tumultuous first year on the job for Kerr.

    The 15-year NBA veteran and former University of Arizona standout left a comfortable job in TV to take the Suns' job.

    "I certainly didn't expect this amount of change in one year, but I also understand that's the way the league works,'' he said. "Things are fluid. They change pretty quickly.''

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  • Tuesday, May 27, 2008

    Banged-Up Billups Intends to Push Through Injury

    AUBURN HILLS, Mich., May 25 (AP) -- Chauncey Billups probably isn't going to be healthy during the Eastern Conference finals.

    Billups refuses, though, to let his sore right hamstring keep him off the court or be an excuse for him and the Detroit Pistons against the Boston Celtics.

    "Hurt or not, I still have to play better and fight through it," Billups said Sunday.

    The All-Star point guard was 1-for-6 for six points with four assists and two turnovers in the Celtics' 94-80 win Saturday night that gave them a 2-1 lead in the series.

    Billups missed two-plus games in the second round against the Orlando Magic after straining his right hamstring and he aggravated the injury when Detroit won Game 2 at Boston.

    Backup point guard Rodney Stuckey is averaging 13 points against the Celtics, trailing only Richard Hamilton in scoring for the Pistons, but Billups doesn't believe the team is better off playing the rookie instead of him.

    "At this juncture of the season, you can't sit out," Billups said. "I'm one of the main leaders of the team. We've got a young guy, Stuckey, who is playing great and we've got to find ways to keep him playing well.

    "But I know I have to play good for us to win."

    The Pistons will host Game 4 on Monday night and coach Flip Saunders is hoping for the best when he put Billups on the court.

    It's one of those things, you're playing him and trying to get him going because you know what he can do," Saunders said. "He wants to play, there's no question."

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  • Slump Won't Stop Allen From Shooting

    BOSTON, May 21 (AP) -- The Boston Celtics expect Ray Allen to rediscover his shooting touch before the Big Three becomes the Big Two and championship No. 17 becomes a pipe dream.

    The Celtics advanced to the Eastern Conference finals and took a 1-0 lead over the Detroit Pistons without much scoring from Allen, an eight-time All-Star closing in on 20,000 career points. In Boston's 88-79 victory on Tuesday night, Allen had just nine points - none of them on outside shots.

    "I've scored a lot in my career,'' Allen said after staying late, as usual, to practice his jumpers at the Celtics' practice facility in Waltham on Wednesday. "But it's good to be in this position, where I'm not going to let it'' affect the rest of the game.

    The Celtics acquired Allen on draft day last summer to start the offseason overhaul that led to the most dramatic turnaround in NBA history. With Allen and mainstay Paul Pierce in the fold, Kevin Garnett agreed to the unprecedented 7-for-1 trade that completed their conversion from a 24-58 record in 2006-07 to an NBA-best 66-16 this year.

    The three All-Stars invited comparisons to the original Big Three of Larry Bird, Kevin McHale and Robert Parish, who won the last of Boston's league-record 16 titles in the 1980s. But as the playoffs heat up this time, Pierce and Garnett are carrying the scoring load with little help from Allen.

    From the last game of the first-round series against Atlanta to the first game against Detroit, Allen is averaging nine points on 31 percent shooting. After scoring in single-digits only six times during the regular season, has done it five times in 15 playoff games, including an 0-for-4 in Game 1 against Cleveland - his first shutout since he was a rookie in 1997.

    "Ray's a part of the Boston Celtics, and the Boston Celtics are winning,'' Garnett said, dismissing the idea that Allen needed emotional support. "I'm sure it's not his first shooting slump, and it's definitely not his last. So I don't have any sympathy for Ray Allen. I think he's playing great basketball.''

    The Celtics wasted no time trying to get Allen involved in Game 1, running a play for him on the very first possession; he missed. Allen missed another jumper but the next time down kicked it out to Pierce for an assist and then drove to the basket for a layup.

    Before the quarter was over, he would add an emphatic dunk that left him swinging from the rim to avoid the players below him. But he also fired up an air ball on a 3-point attempt and hasn't made one of those in three games.

    "I'm not worried about it. I'm really not,'' Celtics coach Doc Rivers said. "We're winning games, and Ray's making plays.''

    In fact, none of the Celtics would express a concern about Allen's slump - "if you want to call it that,'' Garnett said.

    And none of the Pistons would consider the prospect of leaving Allen open and challenging him to beat them.

    "Ray is a good shooter and he's going to shoot the ball, no matter what,'' Pistons coach Flip Saunders said. "I don't treat him what he's done over the week; I treat him what he's done over his career.''

    Detroit guard Richard Hamilton wouldn't even wait for the end of the question before shaking his head, emphatically, "No.''

    "You can never think that he's going to keep missing,'' he said before Detroit practiced at Emerson College's downtown gym on Wednesday. "If you start leaving him open, he can get hot.''

    The Pistons have their own problems.

    Chauncey Billups returned Tuesday night after missing two games and most of a third in the conference semifinals against Orlando with a strained right hamstring. But the Detroit point guard, the MVP of the 2004 NBA finals, scored nine points with just two assists and two turnovers.

    "I needed to play that game,'' he said. "I don't feel good about the outcome of it, but I feel good having been out there, having seen what it was going to be like in my first game, and I look to make improvements in the second game.''

    "It's difficult getting back out there. It's not like I'm just getting out there in a regular season game. There's a lot at stake.''

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  • Monday, May 26, 2008

    Prince, Wallace Help Pistons Even Series Against 76ers

    Detroit 93, Philadelphia 84

    PHILADELPHIA, April 27 (AP) - A dash of perfection was exactly what Detroit needed to go from the brink of a disastrous deficit to back in control of the series.

    All it took was 12 minutes.

    Tayshaun Prince scored 23 points and made all but one shot from the field, and the Pistons played with a purpose and dominated the second half to beat the Philadelphia 76ers 93-84 on Sunday night, tying the best-of-seven Eastern Conference playoff series at 2-2.

    "Everybody knows that we are good under pressure,'' said guard Chauncey Billups said. "I hate that we put ourselves in this position a lot of times.''

    Game 5 is Tuesday night at Detroit.

    The Pistons squashed all that chatter about heading home with a series deficit, erasing a 10-point halftime deficit by outscoring the 76ers 34-16 in the third quarter.

    That combined 4-for-14 first half from Billups and Rasheed Wallace? Forgotten after they drilled consecutive 3-pointers in the period. Prince - 11-for-12 from the floor - followed with a baseline layup to cap an 11-0 spurt and give the Pistons their first lead of the game, 47-46.

    Wallace, perhaps fired up after he was T'd up in the final seconds of the first half, hit two more 3s that whipped a 14-point deficit all the way around to a 60-53 lead.

    "I believe in the guys who are in our locker room,'' Billups said.

    Wallace was 5-for-12 from the field, but sank all three 3s in the third. Billups' 4-for-16 was an afterthought compared to his nine-point, three-assist quarter. Prince was, of course, a perfect 3-for-3.

    "Once Sheed got going from the outside, things really started to work in our favor,'' Prince said.

    The Pistons picked up the defensive pressure and forced seven turnovers in the third. Detroit played like the 76ers did in Game 3, with active hands in the lane and pressure up top that rattled the upstart home team.

    "The game turned just like that,'' 76ers coach Maurice Cheeks said. "We gave them life and we gave them life in the third quarter.''

    The Sixers pumped up the crowd when they played season highlights set to Journey's "Don't Stop Believin'.'' Then Detroit guaranteed its season won't unexpectedly cut-to-black.

    All the euphoria the Sixers created after a 20-point win in Game 3 only grew as they raced to a 14-point first-half lead. The younger, faster, confident Sixers were taking it to the aging, slumping Pistons yet again.

    Then the real Pistons showed up in the third quarter, not the ones who tossed in the towel on Friday.

    They haven't reached five straight Eastern Conference finals by losing two straight road games to the seventh seed in the first round.

    "It doesn't matter what round it is, when you go down 3-1, you put yourselves in a tough situation,'' Prince said.

    Wallace finished with 20 points and 10 rebounds, and Richard Hamilton bounced back from a 1-for-10 first half to finish with 18 points. Billups also scored 18 points.

    Antonio McDyess did not start but scored 10 points a day after he had surgery to repair a broken nose. He never thought about sitting out and wore a mask to protect the nose broken in the third quarter of Game 3.

    Nothing can protect Andre Iguodala from more criticism about his awful playoff series.

    Cheeks was peppered with more questions about the pressing need for the slumping forward to start scoring big baskets. Iguodala showed early promise and made his first three shots, then collapsed again and finished with only 12 points.

    Unlike the Pistons stars, Iguodala never got untracked in the second half. He missed 10 of his final 11 shots and misfired on several wild attempts when he tried to seemingly take a 3-1 series lead all by himself.

    "We've got to work harder on the game plan and I've got to be shooting better shots,'' Iguodala said.

    Samuel Dalembert had 12 points and 12 rebounds. Andre Miller and Willie Green each scored 13 points.

    Iguodala appeared to have ended his slump when he faked Jarvis Hayes, spun away from his fallen defender and buried the jumper for his prettiest bucket of the series. The play was nothing more than a brief flash of his regular-season self and he dropped to 11-for-49 from the floor in the first four games.

    "I'm not going to go out and put pressure on him that he has to score 25, 30 points for us to win,'' Cheeks said.

    Rodney Carney drilled a 3 and Miller's layup made it 45-31 for Philly's largest lead of the half.

    Wallace, whose jumper early in the first matched his point total for Game 3, screamed at the official after he was called for an offensive foul and was quickly whistled for a technical. Wallace continued to bark at the refs even as his teammates tried to block him out on the bench and prevent a possible ejection.

    The Pistons trailed 46-36 at the break, but perhaps the tone was set to take off in the second half.

    Notes:Jason Maxiell started for McDyess. ... Injured Phillies SS Jimmy Rollins was at the game and waved his rally towel. First baseman Ryan Howard sent a videotaped message of support. ... Wallace cracked up when the 76ers showed a "separated at birth'' timeout video comparing an open mouth shot of him next to Jimmie Walker's "JJ'' character from "Good Times.''

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  • Bryant, Lakers Hold Off Jazz, Reach West Finals

    LA Lakers 108, Utah 105

    SALT LAKE CITY, May 16 (AP) - Kobe Bryant has some time to rest his back. Not that he appears to need it.

    Bryant scored 34 points, 12 in the fourth quarter, and Los Angeles held off a furious rally by the Utah Jazz for a 108-105 victory Friday night in Game 6, putting the Lakers in the Western Conference finals for the first time in four years.

    It was the only win by the visiting team in the series and kept the Lakers from having to host a Game 7 on Monday.

    "It's a big step for us,'' said Bryant, who also had eight rebounds and six assists. "It shows a lot of character on our part to come in here and come out of here with a victory.''

    Utah trailed by 19 points at halftime and 16 after three quarters, but got within two in the final minute.

    "We ran out of gas a little bit in the second half as they played with a frenzy and intensity,'' Lakers coach Phil Jackson said. "I had confidence that we'd make the right plays at the end of the game.''

    The Lakers will host the winner of Monday's Game 7 between San Antonio and New Orleans when the Western Conference finals begin next week.

    Whether he needs it or not, Bryant has a few days off as the Lakers wait and see who they play in their first Western Conference finals since 2004.

    Bryant said his back was feeling fine, less than a week after it seized up on him early in Game 4 on Sunday when the Jazz tied the series at 2-2. Bryant was OK to play in Game 5 as the Lakers won at home, then on Friday was back to his MVP self.

    The Lakers are 8-2 in the playoffs.

    "It's been a great journey and we want to keep it rolling,'' Bryant said. "It's a great accomplishment to get to the conference finals, but we believe we can accomplish much more.''

    Pau Gasol finished with 17 points and 13 rebounds and teamed up with Lamar Odom to shut down Utah in the lane for most of the first three quarters. Gasol had four blocks and Odom had another as the Lakers flustered the Jazz early and built a lead that was too big for the Jazz to overcome.

    Utah was 5-for-8 on 3-pointers in the fourth quarter and had a chance to tie it just before the buzzer, but Mehmet Okur and Deron Williams both missed from beyond the arc in the final seconds and Utah's season was over.

    Williams led Utah with 21 points and 14 assists. Carlos Boozer had 12 points and 14 rebounds, and Okur had 16 points and 10 boards, hitting two 3-pointers in the fourth quarter during Utah's comeback.

    "The same thing that hurt us in L.A., hurt us again. We had to play from behind and we could never get over the hump,'' Williams said. "We gave them a little pressure in the second half and they got a little bit frantic. We should have been doing that the whole game.''

    Los Angeles stopped Utah's pick-and-roll and just about everything else the Jazz tried inside until the fourth. The Jazz started hurrying outside shots, which weren't going in and the rebounds seemed to always bounce Gasol's way. Nine of his 11 rebounds in the first half were defensive.

    Utah finally started hitting from the perimeter and getting inside the lane for points in the fourth, but Bryant kept the Lakers from blowing the lead. Bryant made all seven of his foul shots in the fourth and finished the game 9-for-19 from the floor.

    Odom finished with 13 points and made both his foul shots in the fourth quarter, after struggling from the line earlier in the series. The Lakers took 13 more free throws than the Jazz, getting sent to the line repeatedly as the Jazz tried to make up the deficit. They finished 31-for-38.

    "They made it difficult for us from the start in stopping us from trying to do what we wanted to do,'' Utah coach Jerry Sloan said. "That's what experience can do. They got in our face a little bit and gave us trouble right from the start.''

    Reserve Paul Millsap added 15 points for Utah and led the Jazz on a 14-5 run early in the fourth quarter that set up the thrilling finish.

    Williams made a reverse layup to cut it to 91-80, then the Lakers turned it over again when Boozer stepped in front of Gasol to deflect a pass and start another break for Utah, which Millsap finished with another dunk to make it 91-82. It was the first time the lead was single digits since the Lakers led 20-12.

    "I was excited all night and I felt if we could get a little run going I thought we'd get back into the game but we just couldn't get settled down until the end,'' Sloan said.

    After a timeout by the Lakers, Bryant was called for an offensive foul for an elbow to Matt Harpring. Harpring drew another foul on Bryant at the other end and made both free throws to get Utah within 93-86, but Bryant answered with a 3-pointer to put the Lakers back up by 10 and slow Utah's run.

    The Lakers led 101-91 with about two minutes left when the Jazz made their last-gasp push. Okur hit two 3-pointers, then Andrei Kirilenko hit another to cut the lead to 103-100 after Millsap blocked a layup by Bryant. Odom hit two free throws, followed by another 3 by Kirilenko, then Bryant hit two more from the line to make it 107-103 with 15.5 seconds left.

    The Jazz went for a quick two points and scored on a dunk by Williams, then got a break when Derek Fisher went 1-for-2 from the line. Utah just needed a 3-pointer and got two off, but missed both and the buzzer sounded.

    The Utah fans, who were loud all night and alternated between booing the Lakers and the officials, cheered the Jazz loudly as they left the floor for the final time.

    "You know we had a valiant effort,'' Boozer said. "We just fell a little short.''

    Notes: The Lakers improved to 36-1 when winning first two games of best-of-seven series. ... Utah was 37-4 at home this season and 4-2 in the playoffs. ... Boozer fouled out with 4:34 left in the game. ... Fisher, who played in Utah last season, and Williams hugged after the final horn.

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  • Bryant Scores 38 as Lakers Bounce Jazz from Game 1
  • Sunday, May 25, 2008

    Bryant Scores 38 as Lakers Bounce Jazz from Game 1

    L.A. Lakers 109, Utah 98

    LOS ANGELES, May 4 (AP) -- Kobe Bryant made most of the shots that mattered, which he didn't view as any great accomplishment.

    That's because there was nary a hand in his face when he took them.

    Bryant, celebrating what's expected to be his first NBA MVP award, converted six of his franchise playoff-record 21 foul shots in the fourth quarter, and the Los Angeles Lakers held off the Utah Jazz 109-98 Sunday to begin the second round of the playoffs.

    Bryant finished with 38 points, six rebounds and seven assists, and the Lakers made it five straight victories to begin the postseason after winning eight of their last nine regular-season games to earn the No. 1 seed in the Western Conference.

    "You've got to be able to knock those free throws down. They're open looks," said Bryant, who made his first 18 foul shots before missing two of his last five to finish 21-of-23. "It's my responsibility to knock them down."

    The Lakers shot 38-of-46 from the foul line, while the Jazz went 22-of-30. The teams spent most of the final period going from one foul line to the other, with Los Angeles going 14-of-19 from the line and Utah 10-of-12. Twenty-four of the 60 personal fouls were called in the last 12 minutes.

    "It's an incredible night to have 23 foul shots," Lakers coach Phil Jackson said. "I know that Utah's not going to be happy about it. We'll probably see about half that in the next game, if not less. So for him to do that, it was our biggest scoring threat of the night right there."

    Utah coach Jerry Sloan said he didn't have a problem with Bryant's many trips to the foul line.

    "They called them, he shot them, that's fine," Sloan said. "I can't do anything about that."

    Regarding his team's defense, Sloan said: "It was very, very poor at best. (Fouls) are what you do when you try and bail out. I'd say that's very poor defense."

    There were some other unexpected numbers. For one, the Jazz outrebounded the Lakers 58-41, with 25 of their rebounds at the offensive end. For another, Utah attempted 95 shots to match its regular-season high, but converted only 36 (37.9 percent).

    "We had open shots, we couldn't make them," Sloan said.

    "A lot of it was just their defense," said Deron Williams, who shot 5-for-18. "They pushed us outside farther than we wanted to go with our offense."

    Derek Fisher, who played with the Jazz last season, guarded Williams for the most part and had a career playoff-high six steals to go with five points and six assists.

    "I think probably what confused him was how old I am," the 33-year-old Fisher said, laughing. "When he fakes, I don't go for it because I can't react that fast so I end up stealing it from him."

    Game 2 will be played Wednesday night before the best-of-seven series shifts to Utah for Games 3 and 4.

    Word leaked late Friday that Bryant had won his first Most Valuable Player award and he expressed his joy on Saturday. The NBA has declined comment, but Bryant is expected to receive the MVP trophy from commissioner David Stern before Game 2.

    The "MVP! MVP!" chants from the capacity crowd of 18,997 at Staples Center began before the opening tip, with the volume increasing significantly when Bryant was introduced with the other Los Angeles starters.

    Bryant, who shot 8-for-16 from the field, scored 24 points to help the Lakers take a 54-41 halftime lead, and although they were on top the rest of the way, there were some anxious moments down the stretch.

    Pau Gasol added 18 points, 10 rebounds and five assists, Lamar Odom had 16 points and nine rebounds before fouling out with 45 seconds to play, and Sasha Vujacic scored a career playoff-high 15 for the Lakers.

    Forward Luke Walton, who shot 22-for-31 and averaged 14 points in the Lakers' sweep of Denver in the first round, played despite an upper respiratory infection and wasn't at his best, getting five points and three rebounds in 13 minutes.

    Mehmet Okur had 21 points and a career playoff-high 19 rebounds for the Jazz. Carlos Boozer had 15 points, 14 rebounds and four assists before fouling out with 3:28 left, and Williams added 14 points, nine assists and nine rebounds.

    The Lakers went ahead for good late in the first quarter and led 68-49 early in the third period before the Jazz outscored them 15-3 to get back in the game. It was 91-82 before a 3-pointer by Kyle Korver and a jumper by Ronnie Brewer made it 91-87 with 4:44 remaining.

    That's as close as the Jazz would get.

    A basket by Odom and a foul shot by Bryant made it 94-87 with 3:28 to go. The Jazz drew within five points on two free throws by Williams, but three baskets by Gasol in a span of 68 seconds put the game out of reach.

    Notes: The Lakers have a 51-7 all-time record when winning the opener of a seven-game series. ... The teams are meeting in the postseason for the fourth time. The Lakers won 4-3 in a second-round series in 1988 -- a year before Sloan was hired. The Jazz won 4-1 in the second round in 1997 and swept the Lakers 4-0 the following year in the conference finals. The Jazz reached the NBA finals in 1997 and 1998, but lost to the Chicago Bulls 4-2 each time. Jackson was the Bulls' coach at that time. ... Boozer had seven of his team's 13 turnovers. The Lakers also turned the ball over 13 times.

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  • Nowitzki, Terry Pull Mavs Back into Series

    Dallas 97, New Orleans 87 (F)

    DALLAS, April 25 (AP) Even with Jason Terry guarding him, the crowd booing him and Dirk Nowitzki setting the tone for a renewed intensity among the Dallas Mavericks, Chris Paul insisted being on the road in the playoffs wasn't much different than being at home.

    Well, except for that whole thing about him and his New Orleans Hornets teammates putting the ball in the basket with ease.

    "I think we got a lot of shots we wanted,'' Paul said. "We just missed them.''

    With 13 of Paul's first 16 shots falling out instead of in, and fellow All-Star David West clanging 11 of his first 14, the Hornets couldn't get into a groove until it was too late. Nowitzki and Terry came up big on both ends of the court, pulling Dallas right back into this first-round series with a 97-87 victory in Game 3 on Friday night.

    Nowitzki had 32 points, 19 rebounds and six assists to get the Mavericks within 2-1. Game 4 is Sunday night in Dallas, where the Hornets haven't won since January 1998.

    "We wanted to make sure we made it a series and win this first one,'' Nowitzki said. "They're going to keep coming. It's going to take the same effort, the same intensity.''

    And, very likely, the same new lineup.

    Terry replaced Jerry Stackhouse as a starter and replaced Jason Kidd as Paul's primary defender. The MVP candidate went from ringing up consecutive games with at least 30 points and 10 assists - something nobody had ever done in his first two playoff games - to having 16 points and 10 assists.

    Terry cut off Paul's first step early and the speedster seemed a lot more content running the offense from the 3-point line. He kept getting the ball to West in hopes he would find his touch, but that didn't work either.

    "Jet had a lot of energy. It takes lot energy to guard Paul,'' Dallas coach Avery Johnson said.

    Paul finished 4-of-18 and West was 6-of-20 for 14 points. His late surge helped New Orleans cut a 17-point deficit to 90-83 with 2 minutes left, but the Hornets couldn't close the gap.

    "We can't have the type of stretches I had to start the game off,'' West said. "That really put us in a hole.''

    New Orleans' only consistent scorer was Jannero Pargo, who had 30 points, his most of the season and most ever in a playoff game. Peja Stojakovic was the only other double-digit scorer with 13. The Hornets shot just 38 percent.

    "They came out with a Game 7 mentality, we came out with a Game 3 mentality,'' New Orleans coach Byron Scott said. "From the start, they outworked us. They were more physical, more aggressive.''

    Terry gave the offense a lift, too, with 22 points, including a 3-pointer with 1:39 left to help hold off the Hornets' final surge. He had six assists. Kidd had eight points, 11 rebounds and five assists.

    Josh Howard scored 18 points for Dallas, but was only 5-of-16.

    With all their playoff experience, the Mavs opened the series with two strong quarters. Then came six poor ones, which happened to coincide with the six best for the Hornets. Dallas players insisted they'd be better simply by being home - and they were right.

    The Mavericks led by 11 points in the first quarter and were up by seven at halftime. Then came a third quarter that might get NBA conspiracy theorists going.

    Dallas took 22 free throws in the period, compared to just seven for New Orleans. Yes, the Mavericks went to the rim harder than the Hornets. They also were aided by getting into the bonus just 3:17 into the quarter.

    "They shot more in one quarter than we did for the game,'' Paul said - accurately. The Hornets took only 13 free throws, making them all. Dallas made 15 in the third quarter alone.

    The game, and series, nearly turned midway through the third quarter. With Dallas up 62-54, Nowitzki was conked from behind by Tyson Chandler, then run into by Pargo. He was sprawled on the court, the crowd silenced.

    Then last season's MVP got up and hit four straight free throws, then a jumper.

    "You could tell from the start he was really into it,'' Scott said.

    So, how did Paul's first road game and his first playoff loss change his mind-set?

    "Now we're trying to win it in five games,'' he said. "This is fun. I love this. We lost tonight, but we get to see them again Sunday. This isn't the end of the road.''

    Notes: Dallas won for only the third time in its last 13 playoff games. ... Paul missed shots at the end of the first two quarters, then couldn't get one off at the end of the third, with a bump by Kidd helping prevent it. ... Pargo's first miss came with 3:21 left in the third quarter. His second miss came a half-minute later. ... Johnson was tightlipped about lineup changes before the game, joking that Juwan Howard would be at point guard. Told about it, Howard grinned and bragged about his point-forward skills.

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  • Suns Scorch Spurs to Stave Off Sweep

    Phoenix 105, San Antonio 86

    PHOENIX, April 27 (AP) -- A Frenchman put Phoenix on the brink of elimination, another brought the Suns back to life.

    Boris Diaw fell two assists shy of a triple-double Sunday and the Suns avoided a first-round sweep at the hands of San Antonio with a 105-86 rout of the Spurs.

    Diaw, starting in place of injured Grant Hill, had 20 points, 10 rebounds and eight assists in one of the best playoff performances of his career.

    "I trust him. I always have," Suns coach Mike D'Antoni said. "I think he's a heck of a basketball player. He's been maligned here a little bit, but he can play. He stepped up big."

    Diaw also played tough defense on his good friend and fellow Frenchman Tony Parker, who scored 18 points after a career-high 41 in San Antonio's 115-99 victory Friday night in Game 3.

    "I think they kind of relaxed being up 3-0," Diaw said, "but we came out and played, too. We didn't come out like the series was over. We came out fired up."

    No one was more aggressive than Raja Bell, who scored 21 of his 27 points in a dominant first half to help Phoenix bring a one-sided end to the defending NBA champions' nine-game playoff winning streak. The Suns were 11-0 in the regular season when Bell scored at least 20.

    "I was really embarrassed by my play and the team's play after the last game," Bell said. "It was hard to sleep. I was restless. I couldn't put it to bed."

    Phoenix still trails the first-round series 3-1, with Game 5 on Tuesday night in San Antonio. No NBA team has come back from 0-3 to win a series, a fact that wasn't lost on the Spurs' Tim Duncan.

    "We didn't expect to sweep these guys," Duncan said. "We're excited in the situation we're in, up 3-1. We've got to win one more game, and we get to go home and try to win it there. Those are a lot of things that are in our favor."

    The Suns won in a blowout even though Amare Stoudemire scored just seven points and Steve Nash had four assists.

    Nash and Leandro Barbosa scored 15 apiece for the Suns. Shaquille O'Neal had 14 points and 12 rebounds.

    D'Antoni drew two technicals and was ejected with 3:38 to play and his team up 104-80.

    "I don't know where the sense of humor has gone," D'Antoni said. "There's no use commenting on it. It was kind of silly."

    Bell figured it was a good sign that everybody was emotionally into it for Phoenix.

    "We were fired up from the beginning. We were fired up yesterday," he said. "It was good to see Mike get fired up, too."

    Duncan scored 14 and Manu Ginobili 10 for the Spurs. Parker shot 7-of-17 and committed five turnovers, then said Diaw's defense was nothing special.

    "They always think that's going to bother me but I had my shots," he said. "It didn't bother me at all, I just missed my shots."

    Spurs coach Gregg Popovich threw in the towel by benching his three stars late in the third quarter.

    "You lose by two and you play all those minutes, or you lose by 20 and you get some time to rest," Duncan said. "I guess you can find a positive there. You don't want to lose any games like this, but it happens and we'll be ready to go the next one."

    Popovich had little to say afterward.

    "Both teams want to play hard, both teams want to win just as badly as the other," he said. "They played better than we did, and they were more aggressive right out of the gate."

    After watching the Spurs play to near-perfection Friday, the Suns were the aggressors from the start on Sunday. Phoenix led by 21 after one quarter, by as many as 24 in the second and by 30 in the third.

    Nash's 15-footer gave the Suns a 79-49 lead with 5:50 left in the third quarter. With Parker and Duncan on the bench, San Antonio cut it to 22 late in the quarter, but it was 93-65 entering the fourth.

    Bell shot 6-of-7, 3-for-4 on 3-pointers to lead Phoenix to a 65-43 halftime lead. Diaw scored 10 points in the half.

    The Suns never led in Game 3, but built big advantages early in the first two games, only to lose at the end. Their first-quarter start Sunday was their best yet.

    Diaw's shot over Ginobili inside made it 11-1, and it was 20-9 after Barbosa's driving layup with 5:41 left in the first. It was 34-13 after one.

    San Antonio was 4-for-19 shooting with six turnovers in the first two quarters.

    The Spurs cut it to 12 three times in the second quarter, the last at 49-37 on Ginobili's 15-foot bank shot with 4:55 to go. Phoenix, though, scored the next 12 -- six on free throws by Bell -- to go up 61-37 on Diaw's layup with 1:33 left in the half.

    Notes: Hill sat after being slowed by a sore right groin in the first three games. ... The 22-point lead was the largest in any playoff game this year. ... San Antonio shot 38 percent in the first half (16-of-42). ... Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski and Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim were in the crowd. Krzyzewski is head coach of the U.S. Olympic basketball team. Boeheim and D'Antoni are assistants. ... Phoenix had two turnovers in the first half, while San Antonio had nine.

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  • Cavs Cruise to Game 3 Win, Send Celts to 0-4 Playoff Road Record

    Cleveland 108, Boston 84

    CLEVELAND, May 10 (AP) -- While his famous daddy got dressed after the game, 3-year-old LeBron James Jr. practiced writing his letters and numbers on a dry-erase board inside the Cavaliers' locker room.

    First, he drew an L. Then, a 2.

    "Put up a 2 and 3 for me," No. 23 told his little namesake.

    Maybe a 2 and 1 would have been more appropriate. The Cavaliers have trimmed Boston's lead in half.

    The shots didn't drop again for James, and it hardly mattered. His teammates made most of theirs.

    James scored 21 points on another off-shooting night, but Delonte West scored 21, Joe Smith had 17 and the Cavaliers raced to a large, early lead in Game 3 in a 108-84 victory Saturday night over the road-challenged Boston Celtics to pull within 2-1 in their playoff series.

    West, who spent three seasons wearing Celtic green and white, carried the scoring load for the Cavaliers, who are attempting to become the 14th team in NBA history to come back from an 0-2 deficit and win a best-of-seven series.

    They've had practice at it.

    Last year, the Cavaliers lost the first two games of the Eastern Conference finals to Detroit before beating the Pistons four in a row to advance to the finals for the first time. After dropping Games 1 and 2 in Boston, Cleveland needed James (8-of-42 in the losses) to shoot his way out of a slump.

    James was only 5-of-16 from the floor, but his teammates stepped it up, going a combined 32-of-54 (59 percent). Cleveland roared to a 32-13 lead after one quarter, led by 17 at half, 16 after three and easily withstood a few Boston counter punches.

    "We came out, jumped on them and didn't give it back," West said.

    James' 22.4 field goal percentage in the first three games is the worst of any three-game stretch in playoff history since the 1977-78 ABA-NBA merger. Still, he was only concerned about one thing.

    "The win is all that matters," he said. "I can't worry about how I'm shooting the ball."

    The Celtics remain lost on the road, and Game 4 is Monday night in Cleveland.

    They've yet to win outside of Massachusetts during this postseason, not an encouraging sign for a team with its sights on a 17th league title. The Celtics, who went a league-best 31-10 in away games during the regular season, dropped all three in Atlanta during the first round as the Hawks averaged 100.7 points and shot 47.6 percent in three home games.

    "On the road it's going to take a little bit more ... we've got to learn our lesson pretty soon," an agitated Paul Pierce said. "We took our bumps. Hopefully, the guys are mad at the way we played because I'm totally upset at the way we played, especially with a great opportunity in front of us."

    Kevin Garnett scored 17 points, Pierce 14 and Ray Allen 10 as Boston's three superstars combined for 41 points.

    But the trio was no match for Cleveland's Fab Four of West, Wally Szczerbiak, Smith and Ben Wallace -- all acquired in deals at the Feb. 21 trading deadline -- who totaled 63 points, 20 rebounds and six 3-pointers. West made four 3s, Smith went 7-of-8 and Wallace, who wasn't expected to play because of an inner ear infection, gave Cleveland an inside presence while guarding Garnett.

    "Big Ben" added nine points and nine rebounds.

    "He gave us a big lift every second that he was on the floor," Cavs coach Mike Brown said.

    The Cavs played a nearly flawless first quarter. They shot 65 percent (13-of-20), had 11 assists on those field goals and didn't commit a turnover. Beyond that, Cleveland didn't rely on James to carry them, as six other Cavs combined for 27 of the club's 32 points.

    "Can you ask a team to play better than that?" James said. "That was unbelievable."

    At halftime, James only had seven points but the Cavs were shooting 66 percent (19-of-29) and moving the ball on offense, something coach Brown has insisted is key if his team plans to advance past the league's best defensive squad.

    While the Cavs got help from their bench, Boston's reserves didn't do much. James Posey scored 11 but Sam Cassell, who has given the Celtics lift, went 0-for-6 and scored one point in 18 minutes.

    "It's probably the worst game we've played since I've been a part of the Celtics," said Cassell, who joined the team in March. "Unfortunately, it came at the wrong time. We've got to regroup and get our swagger back, get going in the first quarter, this is the second night in a row they came out blasting us in the first quarter."

    Before the game, James said a few "easy baskets" might help him get started.

    His first one was both simple -- and strong.

    With the Cavs leading 10-4, James poked the ball away from Pierce near the free throw line and broke free for a two-handed, stare-at-the-rim dunk that sent Cleveland's hyped crowd into a frenzy. Wallace scored twice underneath and Szczerbiak's two free throws put the Cavaliers up 18-6.

    James' next basket was a 3-pointer during a 9-0 spurt that Cleveland a 27-8 lead on its way to a 19-point advantage after one.

    The Cavaliers were leading 39-17 in the second quarter when this series had its first moment of tension.

    As he was driving to the basket, James was grabbed around the neck by Posey and fell awkwardly in the lane. He laid face down on the floor as both teams exchanged angry words and Anderson Varejao and Posey earned technicals for their exuberance.

    The officials huddled and gave Posey a flagrant-1 for the hard foul, which seemed to deter the teams from more rough stuff.

    Cleveland maintained its double-digit lead throughout the second half, and closed out a game it had to have. No team has ever overcome an 0-3 deficit, something the Cavs don't have to worry about now.

    Notes: Varejao, who would have started if Wallace couldn't go, left in the second quarter with a bruised right knee. He came back and played 2 1/2 minutes in the third. ... There's no doubt about Garnett's passion on the hoop court, but Cavs 7-foot-3 C Zydrunas Ilgauskas has his doubts about the Boston superstar's love of soccer. Ilgauskas is a big fan -- literally -- of powerful Manchester United, which is battling Chelsea for the English Premier League title. The teams will also meet on May 21 in Moscow in the Champions League final. Ilgauskas was told Garnett was a Chelsea supporter. "He's a fake fan," Ilgauskas laughed. "What, did he become a fan when he went to London?"

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  • Friday, May 23, 2008

    Lewis Helps Magic Take 3-1 Lead Over Raptors

    Orlando 106, Toronto 94

    TORONTO, April 26 (AP) -- Challenged by his coach to show more aggression, Jameer Nelson responded with a furious fourth quarter.

    Nelson scored 12 of his 19 points in the final period, including 10 straight at one stretch, and the Orlando Magic beat the Toronto Raptors 106-94 on Saturday to take a 3-1 lead in their first-round playoff series.

    "As a player, sometimes you start to feel it and I started to feel it in the fourth quarter,'' Nelson said. "I hit a couple of big shots and my teammates started looking for me. When you make shots, your confidence rises.''

    Rashard Lewis added 27 points and 13 rebounds, and Dwight Howard added 19 points, 16 boards and eight blocks for the third-seeded Magic, who host Game 5 of this first-round series Monday night.

    Chris Bosh set a career playoff-high with 39 points and added 15 rebounds for the Raptors, while T.J. Ford had 12 points and 13 assists.

    Toronto must win Monday to stop Orlando from advancing beyond the first-round for the first time since 1996.

    "It's not over yet,'' Ford said. "It's the first one to four. We got ourselves in a hole and we just have to continue to stay positive.''

    With Orlando down 76-73 after three quarters, Magic coach Stan Van Gundy took Nelson aside and told him to take more shots in the fourth.

    "(Point guard) is a very difficult job,'' Van Gundy said. "There's such a balance between trying to get other guys involved and being aggressive in looking for your shot. It's the hardest job in basketball, and he played great in the fourth quarter.''

    Nelson started his run with a pull-up jumper, then followed Jason Kapono's 3-pointer with one of his own, keeping the score tied. Another pull-up jumper and 3-pointer followed, and the Magic never trailed again.

    "He made a couple of easy shots and then, by that time, I guess the basket looked a little bigger to him,'' Bosh said.

    Nelson, who played almost 35 minutes Saturday, had back spasms after Game 3 and had to lie down in the hallway as he walked to the locker room after the game. So how did he cure his sore muscles?

    "I had Dwight walk on my back,'' Nelson said, laughing.

    In truth, ice and pills took care of the injury, which didn't bother Nelson much anyway.

    "It kind of came and went,'' he said. "Obviously, when you're making shots it's going to go away.''

    Toronto stayed close until back-to-back 3-pointers by Hedo Turkoglu and Lewis gave the Magic a 100-92 lead with 1:31 remaining.

    Turkoglu had 18 points and nine rebounds. Keith Bogans scored 12 points for Orlando.

    "It seems like any time they penetrate our defense, something good happens for them,'' Toronto coach Sam Mitchell said. "We've got to do a better job of stopping their dribble penetration.''

    Lewis went 10-for-19 from the field. The Magic made four 3-pointers in the fourth quarter and finished 11-for-29 from beyond the arc.

    Van Gundy said Lewis was "outstanding.''

    "He stepped up big today,'' Van Gundy said. "It's not just scoring, that was his best rebounding game, maybe of the year.''

    Kapono and Anthony Parker each scored 12 for the Raptors, who were just 2-for-15 from 3-point range. Bosh finished 16-for-26.

    "In the second half, we shot the 3 well, and that's big for us,'' Van Gundy said. "Obviously, it's a big thing for them, too, and they didn't shoot it well today.''

    Orlando used big first quarters to win Games 1 and 2, while Toronto fed off the energy of its home crowd to build a big lead in the opening half of its Game 3 win. This time, however, neither team was able to pull away early.

    Howard continued to dominate inside, posting 12 points and seven rebounds in the first as Orlando built a 29-21 lead. A three-point play by Jamario Moon and a breakaway dunk by Bosh helped Toronto trim the gap to 31-26 after 12 minutes.

    Howard didn't score again before the half, but Bosh followed a 10-point first with an 11-point second and the Raptors went 11-for-20 from the field, outscoring Orlando 27-17 to open a 53-48 edge at intermission.

    Moon strained his groin when he slipped while trying to catch a fast-break pass from Ford in the third. Moon stayed in the game, clutching the area with his hand until the Magic called timeout and he was replaced by Kapono. After taking him to the locker room for examination, the training staff declared Moon fit to return, but he did not play again.

    Notes: Orlando got its first playoff road win since April 20, 2003, at Detroit. ... Howard finished 1-for-6 from the free throw line and has gone 9-for-23 since a 9-for-11 showing in Game 1. ... Actress Mila Kunis attended the game.

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  • Inner Ear Infection Keeps 'Big Ben' Doubtful for Celts-Cavs' Game 3

    INDEPENDENCE, Ohio (AP) -- Cavaliers starting forward Ben Wallace is doubtful for Game 3 of Cleveland's playoff series against the Boston Celtics because of allergies and a left inner ear infection.

    Wallace started but played less than four minutes in Thursday night's game before he became dizzy and asked to come out. He staggered to the bench and had to be assisted by his teammates before the Cavs' training staff stepped in.

    Wallace underwent a series of tests at the Cleveland Clinic on Friday. The team said the defensive stopper could be upgraded but it was "best case, 50-50'' that Wallace would play Saturday in Game 3.

    Cavs coach Mike Brown said if Wallace can't go, Anderson Varejao would likely start up front alongside LeBron James and Zydrunas Ilgauskas as Cleveland tries to climb back from an 0-2 deficit in the best-of-seven series.

    Wallace joined the Cavaliers in a trade from Chicago in February. He missed several regular-season games because of back spasms.

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  • Thursday, May 22, 2008

    Celtics Shut Down James, Beat Cavs in Game 1

    Boston 76, Cleveland 72

    BOSTON, May 6 (AP) - LeBron James drove to the basket, the lane surprising clear. He reached out toward the rim, rolled the ball off his fingertips ...

    And missed.

    Again and again (and one more time, when it was too late anyway), James' shots went awry in the final minute, completing one of the worst nights of his career and giving the Boston Celtics a 76-72 victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers on Tuesday night in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference semifinals.

    Game 2 is Thursday night in Boston.

    "This was two heavyweights, just body-punching,'' said Kevin Garnett, who scored 28 points to make up for an off night for the rest of Boston's Big Three. "There was no finesse, no jabs, just an all-out, beat-down, defensive fight.''

    Boston held James to 12 points on 2-for-18 shooting; only once in his career has he made fewer baskets. He missed three drives and a 3-pointer in the final minute, including the potential game-tying finger roll with 8.5 seconds left.

    "I missed a lot of shots I know I can make,'' James said, staring at the stat sheet incredulously after scoring just two points in the second half and missing his last six shots in all. "I missed layups. Those layups I've made my whole life.''

    Paul Pierce and Ray Allen of the Celtics weren't doing any bragging, either. Pierce scored four points on 2-for-14 shooting; combined with Allen's 0-for-4 from the field for his first scoreless performance in his last 852 games since 1997. They matched the dud James put out there miss-for-miss.

    "Me and Ray, we figure if we play him to a standstill ... we give ourselves the best chance,'' Pierce said. "He is not going to go 2-for-18 every game but, hey, we're going to do our best to try to make him.''

    At least Pierce could smile about it.

    Despite the worst offensive playoff performance of his career, he drew two charging fouls against James and the Celtics protected the home-court advantage that helped win their first-round series against Atlanta in seven games and could take them all the way to their NBA-record 17th championship.

    They can thank their MVP candidate, Garnett, who finished third in the voting announced Tuesday, behind winner Kobe Bryant and runner-up Chris Paul. James finished fourth.

    "That is why we have three superstars,'' said Celtics center Kendrick Perkins, who had 12 rebounds.

    And Cleveland only has one.

    Only once has James made fewer than two baskets - in a Dec. 29, 2004 game against Houston when he missed all five shots in just 17 minutes. "I fractured my cheekbone,'' he said immediately when asked about it.

    He'll remember this one, too.

    James scored Cleveland's first basket and then missed his next 10 shots before driving for a layup that cut Boston's lead to 66-65 with 5:34 left. He finished with nine rebounds, nine assists and 10 turnovers.

    "He had a tough night, and he is entitled to it,'' Cavaliers coach Mike Brown said. "Knowing him, he will definitely bounce back in Game 2.''

    Zydrunas Ilgauskas had 22 points and 12 rebounds for the Cavaliers, who shot 31 percent and couldn't make a basket at the end of the game.

    Boston led 68-65 when Daniel Gibson hit a 3-pointer to tie it with 3:18 left.

    Ilgauskas made a jumper on a feed from James with 90 seconds left, then Garnett hit a fallaway to make it 70-all. James drove against Pierce and flopped to the court while throwing up a desperation layup that wasn't close.

    Sam Cassell made two free throws to tie it 72-72; James missed again, but this time Ilgauskas was there to tip it in and tie the game. Garnett moved across the lane to give Boston back the lead, 74-72 as Cleveland called a timeout with 22 seconds left.

    James dribbled at the point before finding a lane to the basket, but his shot wouldn't fall and James Posey was fouled after grabbing the rebound. He hit both free throws.

    James missed a long but meaningless jumper to punctuate his night.

    Notes: "I just thought that LeBron should have been higher,'' Celtics coach Doc Rivers said of the MVP voting, pausing for effect. "We're playing Cleveland, right? As a matter of fact, I thought he should have won.'' ... Cleveland shot 18 of the game's first 22 free throws. ... Cassell was called for a flagrant foul when he kept James from a free throw with 5 1/2 minutes left in the half. The replay seemed to indicate that James enhanced the damage, and the Boston fans let him know they were on to him. ... Cleveland's Wally Szczerbiak missed his first five shots before going to the bench in the first quarter. ... Boston's Rajon Rondo had all of his 15 points in the first half.

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  • Chicago Bulls Win No. 1 Pick in NBA Draft Lottery

    SECAUCUS, N.J., May 20 (AP) -- The Chicago Bulls won the NBA's draft lottery Tuesday night, giving them the right to choose between star freshmen Michael Beasley and Derrick Rose.

    Coming off a miserable season and still without a coach, the Bulls vaulted from the No. 9 spot, where they had just a 1.7 percent chance of landing the top choice.

    They will almost certainly choose between Beasley, the Kansas State forward who averaged 26.5 points and an NCAA-best 12.5 rebounds, or Rose, the point guard who carried Memphis within minutes of the national title.

    "After this season, we needed a break and I think we just got one tonight,'' said Steve Schanwald, the Bulls' executive vice president of business operations who represented them on the podium.

    The Miami Heat, who had a 25 percent chance of landing the top pick thanks to their NBA-worst 15-67 record, fell to second. The Minnesota Timberwolves will go third.

    The NBA draft will be held June 26 in New York.

    Chicago came into the season with high expectations after reaching the Eastern Conference semifinals last season. But the Bulls never recovered from a dismal start and finished 33-49. They fired coach Scott Skiles on Christmas Eve and have already decided not to retain interim coach Jim Boylan.

    The Bulls failed to land the coach they wanted, Mike D'Antoni, but the position became much more appealing Tuesday. They could turn to hometown star Rose, who D'Antoni said was like Jason Kidd with a jump shot.

    The Seattle SuperSonics, who moved up to No. 2 last year to pick Rookie of the Year Kevin Durant, fell from second to fourth. Memphis will pick fifth, followed by New York, the Los Angeles Clippers, Milwaukee, Charlotte and New Jersey.

    Indiana has the 11th pick, followed by Sacramento, Portland and Golden State. The lottery settled the top three spots. The remainder of the first 14 picks are determined inverse order of their record.

    Chicago got the No. 2 and 9 picks the last two years from New York as a result of the trade for Eddy Curry. Schanwald gave a fist pump early on when he realized he would move up, then took a deep breath and pumped both fists after beating out the Heat, represented by All-Star guard Dwyane Wade.

    Only twice have teams with the worst record won the lottery since the current format began in 1994.

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  • Tuesday, May 20, 2008

    Lakers Sweep Nuggets, Advance to Second Round

    L.A. Lakers 107, Denver 101 (F)

    DENVER, April 28 (AP) -- The Denver Nuggets finally gave the Los Angeles Lakers a good fight.

    No surrender on this night. No frustration fouls filling up the fourth quarter of another blowout.

    No matter. The Lakers dispatched the tempestuous Nuggets anyway.

    Kobe Bryant scored 14 of his 31 points over the final 5 1/2 minutes Monday night, leading the Lakers to a 107-101 victory and a sweep of their first-round series.

    "He is unbelievable," Luke Walton said of Bryant, his teammates and one of the MVP favorites. "It's always so comforting knowing you have the best closer in basketball. They were making huge plays down the stretch, but Kobe came right back to do whatever it took: huge plays, steals or an incredible shots like that fadeaway over Kenyon Martin from the top of the key. He wanted it badly tonight and we followed his lead."

    Pau Gasol added 21 points in the Lakers' first sweep of a playoff series since whitewashing New Jersey in the 2002 NBA finals, the last time they won it all.

    The Lakers will meet the winner of the Utah-Houston series, which the Jazz lead 3-1, in the Western Conference semifinals.

    The Nuggets won 50 games this season for the first time in two decades, and they did it in the power-packed Western Conference. But they were no match for the top-seeded Lakers, who are 25-5 with Gasol in the lineup.

    Gasol led the way early, scoring 18 first-half points, and Bryant took over in the waning minutes, scoring nine straight points in every way -- a turnaround jumper, a 3-pointer, a driving layup and a 15-foot floater -- to give the Lakers a 97-96 lead.

    "It feels good to win the way that we won today," Bryant said.

    When Walton made a wide-open 3 from the right corner, the Lakers went ahead 100-96 with 2:37 left, and Martin and Carmelo Anthony soon fouled out. Bryant made three free throws and a jumper after that.

    Anthony accused his team of quitting in Game 3 and he insisted he wasn't going to let that happen Monday night. He was right. The Nuggets didn't lay down, even when they fell behind by 13 points in the first half. They stormed back to make it a seesaw game in the second half.

    But again, Los Angeles had the answers and sent the Nuggets to their first-ever sweep in a seven-game series.

    "My wish would be that we had four games like tonight and we all could have been happier," said Nuggets coach George Karl, who lost a seven-game series for the first time in his 20-year NBA coaching career. "I've said all along, when they play the right way, they're fun guys to coach."

    Anthony fouled out with 1:19 left and Bryant made one free throw for a 101-96 lead. After Nene's slam dunk, Bryant's running bank shot make it 103-98.

    Marcus Camby's first points since the series shifted to Denver came on a 3-pointer from the left corner with 33 seconds left, cutting the Lakers' lead to 103-101, but Gasol maneuvered underneath for a dunk, and Bryant added two free throws with 18 seconds left.

    Lamar Odom had 14 points and 12 rebounds for Los Angeles and Vladimir Radmanovic scored 12 points.

    J.R. Smith led the Nuggets with 26 points, while Allen Iverson had 22 and Anthony 21.

    The Nuggets were bounced in the first round for the fifth straight season -- only this time, they didn't even win their customary one game, suffering their first sweep since San Antonio beat them 3-0 in 1995, when the first round was best-of-five.

    "That's disappointing," Anthony said. "I don't know what else to say about that. All you got to do is try to come back next year and try to start all over again."

    The Nuggets have great players who just don't play great together.

    "They have a lot of talent," Bryant said. "But a lot of times it's not necessarily the amount of talent you have on a team but it's the chemistry within that talent and how well you play together.

    "I'm very fortunate to be on a team where everybody just meshes. We all jell together. We all work well with one another. And that's really the key."

    The Nuggets couldn't keep Los Angeles out of the lane for easy layups and dunks and they made the silly mistakes that the Lakers avoided, like the missed dunks by Nene and Anthony, who blew an alley-oop rim-rattler that bounced out of bounds at halfcourt in the third quarter.

    Anthony trotted back downcourt, laughing all the way.

    "I don't know what I did wrong," Anthony said. "I just bounced it off the rim. It was one of those dunks that wouldn't go down."

    Moments later, he picked up his fourth foul, and it looked like the Nuggets were ready to surrender for the summer.

    Then, out of nowhere, they made a game of it, taking their first lead of the night on Linas Kleiza's step-back 11-footer that put Denver ahead 73-71, igniting the crowd.

    The Lakers righted themselves and took a 79-77 lead into the back-and-forth fourth quarter, which ended with the Nuggets walking dejectedly off the court, including Nene, who overcame testicular cancer, and Martin, who resurrected his career by becoming the first professional athlete to return to stardom after microfracture surgery on both knees.

    "There's a lot of good stories," Karl said.

    And another one walking across the court.

    As Karl walked off, he embraced his son, Coby Karl, a rookie reserve guard on the Lakers who, like his dad, overcame cancer in recent years.

    "Coby playing in the NBA is the best gift that has ever happened to me in my life," George Karl said. "And hopefully, I'll make him feel miserable one day."

    Game notes: Gasol entered this series with an 0-12 playoff mark, all the games with Memphis. ... Iverson picked up the Nuggets' eighth technical foul of the series in the third quarter. ... Camby had 17 rebounds. ... The Lakers went 7-0 against Denver this season.

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  •