MINNEAPOLIS – Kevin Garnett was criticized in the playoffs last year for not being selfish enough. On Tuesday night, he showed he take over a game in the fourth quarter.
Garnett had 35 points and 20 rebounds, and he made four of his five field-goal attempts in the final period as the Minnesota Timberwolves defeated the Los Angeles Lakers 119-91 to even their first-round series at one game each.
Troy Hudson added 37 points for Minnesota, which was eliminated in the first round the past six seasons.
A somber Shaquille O’Neal, who spent a day and a half in South Carolina for his grandfather’s funeral, showed up about 90 minutes before tipoff and wasn’t much of a factor, despite getting 27 points and 14 rebounds.
Kobe Bryant, the other half of the Lakers’ dominant duo, had 27 points on 9-of-28 shooting – far below his sensational 39-point performance in Sunday’s opener, when the Lakers won 117-98 to swipe home-court advantage from the Timberwolves.
Hudson’s 37 points set a franchise record for a playoff game. He averaged only 14.2 points during the regular season, and his best effort was 31.
The Lakers had their most lopsided postseason loss since 2000, when the Indiana Pacers beat them 120-87 in Game 5 of the NBA Finals.
Minnesota, which had never won a postseason game by more than nine points, led by as many as 24 in the third quarter but let the Lakers creep back into it in the fourth.
Los Angeles got to 96-83 on a free throw by O’Neal, but Garnett made two jumpers, sandwiched around two free throws by Hudson to push the lead back to 19.
Garnett’s last basket – a jumper from 12 feet – elicited a thunderous chant of “MVP” from the crowd.
His teammates were only 4-for-16 from the field in the final period, and all the baskets came in garbage time.
Wally Szczerbiak had 21 points, and Marc Jackson had 12 off the bench for the Timberwolves, who shot 55.6 percent from the field. Minnesota shot 50 percent in Game 1 and still lost by 19, which made Tuesday night’s result all the more surprising.
Bucks 88, Nets 85
EAST RUTHERFORD,
N.J. – The Milwaukee Bucks fixed all their Game 1 mistakes, except for their free throw shooting. That one flaw made for some anxious final moments, but the Bucks still came away with a win.
Gary Payton had 22 points, Sam Cassell added 21 and the Bucks overcame three missed free throws in the final 10.4 seconds and 11 botched foul shots overall to defeat the New Jersey Nets 88-85 Tuesday night to tie their first-round series at one game apiece.
Payton and everyone around him had a much better game than they did in the series opener, when Milwaukee fell behind by as many as 31. This time, it was the Bucks who thrived on the fast break and played determined defense.
Milwaukee finished just 9-of-20 at the line after shooting only 50 percent in Game 1. The Bucks were outrebounded 45-34, but Payton and Cassell more than made up for it by carrying Milwaukee’s offense in a game in which neither team led by more than four points.
The Bucks still couldn’t stop Kenyon Martin, who had 22 points and 12 rebounds, but they prevented Jason Kidd from dominating the point guard matchup, as he did in Game 1. Milwaukee also limited the Nets to just nine fast-break points.
Martin scored on a putback with 11.1 seconds left to cut the Bucks’ lead to 86-85, and Jason Collins fouled Cassell before the Bucks inbounded the ball. Cassell made the free throw, and Milwaukee retained possession.
Tim Thomas was fouled intentionally with 10.4 seconds left, but he missed both free throws. A 78-percent foul shooter during the regular season, Thomas went just 3-for-8 from the line.
The Nets inbounded to Kidd, who dribbled right, spun left and tried an 18-footer that hit the rim and missed. Desmond Mason grabbed the rebound and was fouled, missing the first and then making the second to keep New Jersey in it. But on the final play, Rodney Rogers tripped while running to catch Lucious Harris’ inbounds pass. The Bucks picked up the loose ball as the final buzzer sounded.
Payton let everyone know right away that he wouldn’t have a repeat of his offensive struggles in Game 1, when he was held scoreless for the first 43 minutes. Payton connected on his first three shots – a jumper, a runner and a turnaround – as Milwaukee stayed right with the Nets from the beginning.
The Bucks found a way to repeatedly get Kidd to switch to Thomas in the low post, and Thomas used his height advantage to score three consecutive times over Kidd. The first quarter ended in a 26-26 tie, with Payton scoring 10 and Kidd committing four turnovers.
With Milwaukee taking away the fast break, Kidd didn’t get untracked offensively until late in the second quarter. He weaved through three defenders to feed Aaron Williams for a dunk at the end of the second quarter to produce a 49-49 deadlock at halftime.
The Nets took their first lead of the fourth quarter with 5:26 left, on Martin’s jump hook. New Jersey held the lead until Thomas hit a 3-pointer with 2:57 left to put the Bucks up 82-81. Toni Kukoc followed with a steal, leading to a breakaway layup by Cassell.
Kidd’s jumper with 2:24 left made it a one-point game, but Kukoc answered with a post-up basket, and the Nets had two turnovers and two missed shots among their next four possessions.
Notes: Kidd landed on top of his 4-year-old son, T.J., while chasing a ball out of bounds late in the fourth quarter. T.J. was reduced to tears, but he was OK by the time New York Giants tight end Jeremy Shockey checked on him a few minutes later during a timeout. … Nets reserve C Dikembe Mutombo played only eight minutes, sitting out the entire second half. … Thomas and Joel Przybilla replaced rookie Marcus Haislip and Ervin Johnson in Milwaukee’s starting lineup.
AP-ES-04-22-03 2203EDT
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