Tuesday, March 6th, 2012 at 8:35 am  |  162 responses

Post Up: Mile High Miracle

The Wolves take down Lob City, OKC outlasts the Mavs and total craziness in Denver.

by Abe Schwadron | @abe_squad

Last night was just one big, never-ending #LeaguePassAlert. Let’s get it.

Magic 92, Raptors 88

Dwight Howard missed 8 of his 9 fourth quarter free throw attempts and the Raptors pulled within 2 points twice in the last 31 seconds, but JJ Redick drilled a corner 3-pointer with 9.7 seconds left and sank a pair of free throws with 5 seconds left as Orlando escaped Toronto to improve to 25-14 on the year. It was a slow-paced affair, as the teams combined for just 15 fast break points, and Howard finished with 36 points (16-20 FGs) and 13 rebounds but missed a total of 10 free throws. Ryan Anderson put up 19 points and 13 boards and Redick had 13 points for the Magic, winners of 9 of their last 12 games. The Raptors made a 9-0 run in the third quarter that briefly gave them a 2-point lead, before Howard ripped off 11 points—including one thunderous alley-oop finish via Redick—over the next 5 and a half minutes to put Orlando back in charge. DeMar Derozan scored 23 points to lead the Raps, Jerryd Bayless had 15 off the bench (plus 5 assists and 6 rebounds), James Johnson delivered a solid 13-7-7 line and even Aaron Gray deserves a mention, with his 11×11 double-double.

Warriors 120, Wizards 100

Poor John Wall. It’s nights like these I get really worked up about the kid—about him getting overlooked because his teammates are so awful, about him looking incredible but no one noticing, instead opting for the jokes about the team’s ineptitude and unfairly lumping him in with them. Wall racked up 20 points (on 7-10 shooting), 14 assists and 6 rebounds and only 2 turnovers, and he probably could have had a half-dozen more dimes if not for some horrific shooting nights from other Wizards, like Chris Singleton (1-7, 2 points), Jordan Crawford (2-13, 5 points) and Andray Blatche (2-6, 4 points). Nick Young’s 25 points came mostly on isolations, and Washington shot 56 percent from the free throw line, missing 16 freebies. As for Golden State, what better way to get back on track on a poor road trip than to play the Wiz? Over the first four games of their trip, the Warriors shot 18 percent from the 3-point line and scored about 78 points per game—last night they made 15 of 23 threes (65 percent) and scored 120 points. Monta Ellis scored 25 points (3 of which were assisted by Javale McGee) and sat out the fourth quarter, Klay Thompson added 18, and Stephen Curry made a surprise appearance off the bench to score 12 points in 9 minutes on 5-7 shooting, including one ridiculous 3-pointer with time running out in the third quarter.

Jazz 109, Cavaliers 100

Al Jefferson: 23 points, 12 rebounds, 7 assists, 3 blocks, 0 turnovers? Aight, I see you. The Jazz shot 50 percent from the field as a team, and fed Big Al the rock all night, and got a season-high 23 from Gordon Hayward, as they improved to 18-19 on the year and got just their 4th road win. Jefferson and the boys inside won the battle on the glass 46-30 (a season-low for the Cavs), and had 13 offensive rebounds. Cleveland’s leading scorers were Antawn Jamison and Kyrie Irving, with 22 apiece, but Jamison had more assists (6) than Irving (4) and the Cavs shot9-23 from 3-point range as they dropped their sixth straight and fourth in a row at home. Utah led by as many as 17, using a 22-8 run to end the first half to take a 15-point lead into the break. In that second quarter, the Cavs shot just 3-16 from the field. The Jazz bench outscored Cleveland’s 46-33, helping to snap a six-game road losing streak.

Bulls 92, Pacers 72

Think the Bulls wanted this one? Last time these two hooked up, Chicago took exception to the Pacers’ celebratory reaction to beating the MVP and company. This time, there would be no celebration for Indiana. The Bulls won their seventh straight game and snapped Indy’s 6-game winning streak behind 20 points from Luol Deng (despite 1-7 shooting in the first half), 13 points and 9 dimes from Derrick Rose and 17 rebounds from Joakim Noah. Chicago’s bigs dominated all night long, outrebounding the Pacers 60-32 and holding All-Star center Roy Hibbert to just 2 points. Paul George scored 21 points to lead Indiana, but the Pacers managed to score only 72 points, a season-low. The Bulls are still the NBA’s best at 32-8, and are now an incredible 11-2 on the second night of back-to-backs this year. The only shred of bad news for Chi-town was that Rip Hamilton left in the first quarter, citing his right shoulder.

Bucks 97, Sixers 93

Brandon Jennings scored 14 of the Bucks’ first 19 points and had 19 points in the first quarter, but Philly jumped out to a 10-point first-half lead. The Bucks slowly got back into the game, and then used a 15-0 run in the fourth quarter to take an 8-point lead late. In this back and forth affair, that wasn’t nearly enough to feel comfortable, as the Sixers stormed back behind 26 points from Lou Williams. Williams tied the game at 93 after Jennings fouled him on a 3-point attempt with one minute remaining, but Beno Udrih responded with a short jumper, and LouWill missed a runner with less than 10 seconds left that would have sent this one to overtime. The Bucks (15-23) scored 21 fast break points, to just 6 for Philadelphia, and were buoyed by Jennings’ monster 33-point, 7-assist game, plus big games from the frontcourt duo of Ersan Ilyasova (11 points, 18 rebounds) and Drew Gooden (25 and 10). The Sixers fall to 22-17, and have quietly been pretty bad lately—2-8 over their last 10, 0-7 in games decided by 4 points or less and now only 1.5 games up on Boston in the Atlantic division.

Thunder 95, Mavericks 91

Dirk Nowitzki hit a 3-pointer to give the Mavericks an 88-85 lead with 4 minutes left to play, but from there on in, the Thunder controlled the game in its clutch moments, getting a huge answer 3 from Russell Westbrook, forcing Dirk into a bad turnover with 1:20 to play, and then locking down on defense to take out the Champs and slide to 30-8 on the year. Dallas couldn’t get a shot off while down 92-91 with under 40 seconds to play, then looked totally confused on the game’s last possession (Jason Kidd and Jason Terry ran into each other on the baseline, and Dirk never got a touch). The already short-handed Mavs lost Brendan Hawyood seconds into the game, and looked out of sync outside of Nowitzki, who scored 27 points. Westbrook led the Thunder in scoring with 24 points, Kevin Durant added 22, Kendrick Perkins hauled down 16 rebounds and Serge Ibaka had another weirdly awesome Serge Ibaka line, with 8 points, 7 rebounds and 6 blocked shots. Ibaka also hit a pair of clutch free throws with under a minute left to help stave off the Mavs. OKC won despite shooting 38 percent from the field, aided in part by a 19-point advantage at the free throw line.

Timberwolves 95, Clippers 94

Chris Paul had a clean look at a 3-pointer with under a minute to play and the Clippers down 5, but it hit back iron. Luckily, he immediately redeemed himself with a steal at the other end, after which he was immediately fouled. With Lob Angeles trailing by just 3 with 29.1 to play after CP3′s free tosses, JJ Barea clanked a runner and the Clips took over. Somehow, unbelievably, Derrick Williams made the rookie mistake of fouling Paul on a three-point attempt with 2.7 seconds left in regulation, and the veteran PG stepped to the line with an opportunity to tie the game. One, cash. Two, cash. Three…short. And L.A. fell that one point short of sending this one to overtime, instead allowing Minnesota to win game No. 20 on the season. Kevin Love can take most of the credit for building the Timberwolves’ lead—he dropped a crazy 39-point, 17-board performance in his game-high 43 minutes.  But he got help in the form of 15 points and 9 rebounds from Williams and 13 points for Darko Milicic (who started in place of an injured Nikola Pekovic). Michael Beasley only had 9 points, but they all came in the fourth quarter, as the Wolves held off the Clippers (22-14) despite 26 points and 12 boards from Blake Griffin and an 18-5-4 line out of Paul.

Nuggets 119, Kings 116 (OT)

When Tyreke Evans hit a pair of free throws to give the Kings a 5-point lead with 28 seconds left in the fourth quarter, some Nuggets fans probably headed for the exits. When they found out what happened next, those fans have probably never regretted something so much in their lives. Arron Afflalo scored the final 8 points for Denver in regulation, including a 3-pointer with 9.7 seconds left to cut the deficit to 1, and then 3 clutch free throws with 0.6 seconds left to send the game to overtime after a boneheaded foul by Marcus Thornton. In overtime, his backcourt mate, Ty Lawson, had his own clutch moment, drilling a 3-pointer to break a 116-116 tie with 4 seconds left, lifting the Nuggs to the impossible win. Afflalo finished with a career-high 32 points, Lawson had 16 points and 13 assists, and don’t look now, but Denver is now 4-0 after the All-Star break. Plus, last night marked the returns of Danilo Gallinari and Nene, each of whom played less than 20 minutes and looked sluggish, but combined for 10 points and most importantly are back out there. Thornton and Evans each had 27 for Sacramento, who over and over again looked to have this game in the bag. But Lawson, Afflalo and the energy of rookie Kenneth Faried (career-high 20 points, game-high 12 rebounds) were too much for the Kings—er, so was basic basketball IQ, too. Just an insane basketball game. Totally freaking insane.

Trail Blazers 86, Hornets 74

Ahh, the classic late-night blowout. New Orleans had been frisky lately, but Portland held the Hornets to just 10 points in the third quarter en route to earning their first win post-All-Star break. Nicolas Batum led the Blazers in scoring with 19, while Ray Felton had 11 points and 10 assists and LaMarcus Aldridge chipped in 10 points and 11 boards. Portland shot just 6-22 from the three-point line, but locked down the Hornets at the other end—Jarrett Jack and Trevor Ariza shot a combined 2-10, Chris Kaman was 4-13 and only 3 NOLA players scored in double figures, led by Marco Belinelli’s 18. The Blazers’ win snapped a 3-game skid, as they led by as many as 26. Also, word to Marcus Camby, who had 16 rebounds. Does this dude age?

Line of the Night: Kevin Love — 39 points and 17 rebounds. Minnesota is now 3-0 vs. the Clippers this year.

Moment of the Night: Ty Lawson sinks the Kings in OT.

Dunk of the Night: Blake should have been a gymnast. Dwight don’t hurt ‘em.

Funny of the Night: Just read the title.

Tonight: A Tuesday night 6-pack with some intriguing matchups on deck, including Hawks-Pacers, Rockets-Celtics and Knicks-Mavericks. Plus, the Heat and Lakers are in action. See you back here in 24.

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  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    Ray Allen will be a free agent this summer, right?

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    And so will Nick Young and J.R. Smith. Clips need to make it happen.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Abe, does Javale McGee do something embarrassing every game now?

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Ray Allen’s contract expires. I think he’s getting traded.

  • http://slamonline.com AllBall

    I read that Boston are recieving calls for Allen. nbk, you normally seperate the rumours from the truth, chances clips get a 2 guard are?

  • http://www.reverbnation.com/tray24 T-Ray

    Who do the Clippers have that the Celtics want? Unless you through in some draft picks.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    like 85% AllBall. Which one I have no idea. And I would say 100% if it weren’t the Clippers.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    T-Ray, well depends on the Celtics plans for Rondo. Eric Bledsoe is a nice piece.

  • http://www.reverbnation.com/tray24 T-Ray

    Yea you’re right or maybe Mo Williams. Bledsoe is a nice piece though. These 9 days leading to the deadline shoudl be interesting.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    My thing is, Danny Ainge is so about his cap space, as i’ve been saying for a couple weeks, I don’t think he’d take back Mo Williams and his $8.5M Player Option for next season. I could be completely wrong, I haven’t talked to the guy since I was 8 years old, and at that point I had no grasp of any of this so….

  • http://www.reverbnation.com/tray24 T-Ray

    The way I see it is why not ride the season out and sign KG and Ray to smaller contracts possibly go after Howard. Honestly the core of that team has so much experience they could upset Chicago or Miami so I wouldn’t blow up the team.

  • Mike From Spain

    I am a huge Rubio fan, but his shooting is putrid and there is no real excuse. Do you think that he’d shoot better if the schedule was not so compressed? Will he shoot better as a sophomore? Will he attack the rim better if he gains some strength and quickness with the right conditioning in the off-season? Can he fix his shooting and hit at least 40%? Will he ever be considered an elite PG with this shooting? These are questions that pop in my mind.

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    I like Mike from Spain more ever time he comments.

  • Mike From Spain

    OTOH the Wolves also need a 2 guard. But I cannot see any trades happening. I read in Canis Hoopus some crazy talk about Ray Allen to the Wolves, is it even possible?

  • Mike From Spain

    Thanks Allenp, I have learned from yall… and also from League pass and some sleepless nights :)

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    KLove is putting up by far the best numbers for a PF this season but I still need to see a little bit more isolation/post-game scoring and effort on the defensive end before I crown him the best PF in the game.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    He just isn’t a very good shooter to be honest. His shot is flat, and he pushes his release more horizontal then forward. It’s fixable, but not going to happen during the season. He needs to lock himself in a gym for a couple weeks with a shooting gun and a shooting coach..

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    then vertical*

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Mike, Ray Allen to the Wolves is possible. But David Kahn is their GM, so it’s almost impossible to say what the wolves would be willing to give up. Ainge would have to consider say, Mike Beasley & Wes Johnson for Allen & Marquis Daniels, right?

  • Mike From Spain

    Beasley & Wes johnson for Ray Allen & Marquis Daniels is OK… Beasley’s contract is expiring too, and Wes Johnson… well, dunno if the Celtics want him, I think the Wolves sure don’t

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    The Celtics are hard to analyze. Danny Ainge is like Joe Dumars, in that you don’t really know what he is going to do, or even what direction he’s headed.

  • T-Money

    Marc (Phillly)
    Offensive sets at end of games are horribly primitive across the league. Rather than running plays, one guy dribbles and takes on the entire defense. LeBron is the one guy willing to pass in this situation and he gets grilled for it.
    David Thorpe (12:22 PM)
    I’m honestly a little sad for how the media handles Bron’s late game passing. And that’s all I have to say about that.

    It’s kinda crazy when you look at it like that. How many times does an NBA team get a clean, open look to win the game? And that’s supposed to be the wrong play?

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Thank you for copying and pasting Thorpedo T-Money. that guy is so spot on with most his analyses imo.

  • http://slamonline.com/ Abe Schwadron

    Yeah nbk, I’m done with Javale. Let him walk in FA, Young, too. Amnesty/cut/buyout Lewis and Blatche however necessary. Add Top 5 pick and some middle tier FAs. It’s the only way. Then again, with Ernie as GM, none of that will happen. Probably match a ridiculous McGee RFA contract, keep Blatche and tell the fans Rashard is starting again. SMH….

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    I feel for you man. You should just start watching Kentucky and pretend their jerseys say Wizards. I hope to goodness y’all get Anthony Davis.

  • http://www.reverbnation.com/tray24 T-Ray

    T-Money that’s what I’ve been saying to people at my school who bash him for doing it. One must ask has the media changed the perception of what is clutch and what is making the right play? Has sports media been so blinded by clutch plays/players that they are oblivious to the “right play”?

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    T-Ray, see Jordan, Michael.

  • T-Money

    what is messed up is the basketball environment today’s hs players are growing into. we’re telling them: if you’re the best player on your team, you should take every single shot in the last minute of a close game regardless of schemes and circumstances. that’s wild.

  • http://www.reverbnation.com/tray24 T-Ray

    True nbk but what I don’t understand is Jordan hit Steve Kerr for a game winner in the finals and Bron hit Bosh for a game winner in game 3 of the finals. Therefore I think Bron shouldn’t get bashed for it if the guy misses.

  • http://www.reverbnation.com/tray24 T-Ray

    On the other hand you have a guy like Kobe who will without a doubt take the last shot no matter how difficult it is(i.e Christmas day against the Bulls) but you don’t see ESPN having two segments dedicated to analyzing his stats in crunch time. I know he’s made a lot but that doesn’t deflect the issue that he takes questionable shots in crunch time.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Michael Jordan did that for his 5th title. LeBron did that in an inevitable loss. Once he wins one, he’ll get the Kobe treatment from people. There will still be those that hate him, but the love for him will be over whelming, everything he does will be defensible ONCE he wins. Honestly he should get some criticism for being passive at the end of games, but he shouldn’t get criticized every damn time.

  • http://www.reverbnation.com/tray24 T-Ray

    I agree that at times he should take the shot. I would live with a miss if he at least shot the damn ball.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    T-Money you read that chat I assume, you see that Thorpe said Love is making a case as the second best PLAYER in the whole league? See that’s where I really disagree with the guy.

  • http://nba.com GP23

    Anyone actually think LeBron will start to get better treatment from the media/fans once he wins a ring?? Or will the hate be piled on even more??

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Everyone is loved after they win.

  • http://www.twitter.com/TheDiesel Anton

    If you really think about it, a serious case can be made for Carlos Boozer as MVP.

  • T-Money

    nbk – i missed that! that’s laughable.

  • http://www.nesn.com/2012/02/kobe-bryant-says-hes-better-than-michael-jordan-second-to-wilt-chamberlain-as-best-nba-player-ever-v.html shutup

    Its gonna take at least two rings for people to respect it, look at Kobe without Shaq the first one was really proof but once he won that second one theres nothing to do but respect it. Look at Dirk he got one it really hasnt changed anyone’s mindset about him. @Heals I’m a little biased as a spurs fan but Tony P should be higher I see it as Lebron, Durant Parker, Kobe, Rose (Rose and Kobe can be interchangeable, but I gave Kobe the nod because The Bulls won without Rose for a stretch)

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    what are you talking, how has people perception of Dirk not changed? Who still calls Dirk soft? Who says you can’t win a championship with a team built around him anymore?

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    K-Love is the best PF, but on any given night he can have another 5 PF’s showing why they should be #1. Dirk is probably still better. Pau is still more skilled. Bosh is still a better defender and mid range jump shooter. Randolf is still a beast on the block. Griffin can still jump over anything, but with all that said K-Love still is outplaying every PF over the course of this year. Oh and as far as Ring=Respect goes… People still give Kobe ish for having Pau after Shaq and negate his 5 titles as being a coat tail rider. Haters gunna hate. LBJ will be more respected by me once he wins a ring in dominant fashion, but not all people will give him the respect he will deserve.

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    Dirk took 5 games off for “conditioning” reasons and no one questioned or criticized him. Come on now, everyone knows that once you win a ring, you get a free pass for the rest of your career.

  • http://slamonline.com Allenp

    Nobody gives Kobe ish.
    They just say that he didn’t win alone, or without great help.
    Which for some reason Kobe fans can’t stand.
    Those first three rings Kobe was not the alpha dog.
    The last two he was.
    Those are just facts.

  • http://cnbc.com JTaylor21

    The majority of people do.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    T-money did Thorpe work with Love? he tends to value the guys he’s worked with over everyone else. That might be the explanation for such an off-base comment.

  • http://www.slamonline.com Nick Tha Quick

    @ nbk Sorry for the change of topic. Was thinking about this the other day. Why are offensively challenged prospects labelled as “raw”, yet defensively challenged prospects evade it. For instance, Biyombo gets the label. I don’t dispute his meagre contributions on the offensive end but his defense is excellent for a rookie. Likewise with Serge when he came into the L. Jimmer is a horrible defender, Mccain could get drive past him, but he gets all the other superlatives even though his offense hasn’t really had an impact on the Kings season. Random thoughts.

  • http://www.nesn.com/2012/02/kobe-bryant-says-hes-better-than-michael-jordan-second-to-wilt-chamberlain-as-best-nba-player-ever-v.html shutup

    There have been so many negative comments about Dirk on this sight alone since the start of the season, many people consider that chip a fluke, a one-hit-wonder, he was lucky enough to win that one, and when they get bounced early from the playoffs this year all that soft ish will shows its ugly face even more so. Many people believe Lebron lost that championship not necessarily that Dirk won it. Check the media coverage after the Finals were done, the talk about the Mavs winning was minimal compared to the talk about the Heat’s failure. Pau has 2 rings and is still referred to as Gasoft .

  • http://caseyvaughn.com AlbertBarr

    @AllenP: I agree wholeheartedly, Paul Westphal was hurting this team. Maybe he was TRYING to get fired with all that he did to start the season. Keith Smart has been unexpectedly good and I think as he continues to learn how to use his players the way he wants we will see even more improvement. I was even shut up last night when he put in John Salmons after we had momentum going. I screamed “NO, not Salmons! He always kills our leads through chucking” and then he went out and gave us buckets whenever we had nothing going. So, great substitutions by Smart. And, yeah, THorton is a chucker and he needs to pass more but he is cold hearted and just plays with such a nastiness that I love. I think Isaiah THomas struggled last night because Lawson negated his speed advantage a bit. That hurt us a little. YOu know who is really shining under smart is Jason Thompson…I had given up on him sometime last year but he is making me think differently under the reign of Smart. Damn, does the LP preview end today? Well, I guess no more Kings games for a while then:(

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Gasol is labeled as soft because he let his off-the-court drama effect his play. And he admitted as much. Plus, he was not the best player on a championship team, Dirk was.
    .
    Reading random haters (or people like you who enjoy stirring the pot) complaining about Dirk doesn’t reflect popular opinion, at all. Most everyone’s perception of Dirk has changed. No person that actually pays attention thinks that was a fluke, or that Dallas didn’t earn that title.

  • http://slamonline.com LakeShow

    No they don’t say that. They say that Kobe is lucky. They say his numbers are inflated by playing in the triangle. They say his numbers are inflated by playing with a dominant post player. They say he is a bad team mate. They say he doesn’t pass the ball. He’s a ball hog. He wasn’t a good defender. He isn’t as clutch as people think. He hasn’t gone against the good defenses. His play is a result of the no hand checking rule……… Point being, people are going to downplay anyone they don’t personally like even if the accomplishments add up to one of the greatest players to ever play the game. LeBron will get his due from non-biased basketball minds, but some people will always have a asterisk next to everything he does because he “didn’t do it for his home town team” … “He hooked up with 2 of the best players in the L for a title.” “He didn’t have a killer mentality.” All these types of arguments will be brought up for eternity when speaking about the greats. People look to diminish as much as the prop up some players.

  • http://slamonline.com nbk

    Nick, imo it’s because of how people view defense to offense. typically offensive ability is considered a skill-set, while defensive ability is routinely considered an effort thing. I like you, don’t feel that is the case. Typically guys like Jimmer are just labeled as bad defenders their whole career and that part of their game is never really addressed again.

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