作者BIASONICA (my desired happiness)
看板Hornets
標題[TimesPicayune] NO MORE MR. NICE GUY
時間Tue May 4 11:36:56 2004
http://www.nola.com/hornets/t-p/index.ssf?/base/sports-1/1083572789101960.xml
NO MORE MR. NICE GUY
Brown, Hornets fight back to extend playoff series vs. Heat
to a seventh game
Monday, May 03, 2004
By John Reid
Staff writer
Usually Hornets forward P.J. Brown is smiling and talkative
before games. On Sunday, he wasn't smiling or talkative.
It wasn't a time to be friendly. The Hornets were facing
first-round playoff elimination against the Miami Heat, and
starting summer vacation early wasn't an option. Brown came
to work at 7:30 a.m., inspired and intense with an objective
to force a Game 7 on Tuesday night in Miami.
Brown and the Hornets put their urgency to use in a resounding
89-83 victory in front of the first home sellout crowd in the
series, 17,297 at New Orleans Arena, to even the series at 3.
"I definitely think the stakes were raised today in an
elimination game with our backs against the wall," Brown said.
"For us to extend our season, we had to give everything."
Brown, who had a team-high nine rebounds, finished tied with
forward George Lynch for a team-high 16 points. All five Hornets
starters scored in double figures. And the Hornets' reserves
outscored the Heat's 18-4.
Brown talked back to the Heat's players a few times after he
scored. He pushed, bumped and chased after Heat forward Lamar
Odom for most of the game.
Odom, who entered as the Heat's leading scorer with a 17.8
average, didn't handle the challenge well. He was held to nine
points before fouling out with 2:20 remaining.
It wasn't only Brown playing aggressively and exchanging words
with Heat players. Physical play was the focal point of the game
from both teams, as was trash-talking.
Officials Sean Corbin and Blane Reichelt were left to control most
of it after crew member Joe Crawford had to leave the game in the
first quarter. He suffered a torn plantar fascia in his right foot
and did not return.
In the fourth quarter, Hornets forward Robert Traylor was ejected
after getting into a heated exchange with Heat players after he
knocked Eddie Jones to the floor after blocking his shot.
Earlier in the quarter another heated exchange escalated between
Hornets point guard Baron Davis and the Heat's Bimbo Coles, who is
not on the team's playoff roster but sat on the bench. No technicals
were given.
"I said after Game 1 that whoever walks out of this series will have
a big bruise," Hornets guard David Wesley said.
It appeared there wasn't much doubt about the Hornets making their
way back to Miami. A Davis jumper gave the Hornets their largest lead
at 65-46 with 3:45 remaining in the third quarter.
"We're angry at ourselves that we didn't play like we are capable,"
said Heat backup guard Rafer Alston, who was held to one point and
missed all four shots from the field. "We only played in spurts."
The Hornets did not trail, but they had some tense moments trying to
close out the game. They were forced to scramble after Dwyane Wade's
layup with 41.2 seconds left cut the lead to 87-83. But New Orleans
made four of six free throws in the final 50.9 seconds, and shut out
the Heat after Wade's layup.
In Games 1 and 5, Wade made crucial shots to turn the outcome in the
Heat's favor. He couldn't do it Sunday but finished with a game-high
27 points.
In the first quarter, the Hornets led 21-14 without Davis taking a
shot. Davis, who scored 15 points and had a game-high 12 assists,
didn't have to be a shooter, because Lynch scored six of the Hornets'
first eight points.
Lynch didn't stop there. The Heat hardly challenged his shots from
the perimeter. He made seven of 14 shots, including two of three
3-point attempts. In Game 5, Lynch missed nine of 10 shots and was
held to five points.
"I just need to make sure that if it's up to me to set the tone in
the beginning of the game, then I need to be there for our team to
get involved." Lynch said. "During the regular season, I sat back
and tried to fit in where the guys can be themselves. I just did my
role and was happy with that. But now the game is on the line."
The Hornets got back on defense quickly, allowing 12 fast-break points.
They held the Heat to 38.7 percent shooting. In the second quarter, the
Hornets held the Heat to 6-of-18 shooting, outscoring them 22-19, to
take a 43-33 halftime lead.
"Composure is everything, especially in this series," Davis said. "The
team that's been able to get stops at the end and hit big shots has
been the team to win."
. . . . . . .
John Reid can be reached at
[email protected] or (504) 826-3405.
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