Monday, May 09, 2005

Spurs Rattle Sonics

SAN ANTONIO -- Shortly after losing two of their best players, the Seattle SuperSonics had all but lost the game. And it wasn't even halftime yet.


The San Antonio Spurs didn't have the same type of Game 1 letdown they had in the opening round, taking a big first-half lead and holding it the rest of the way in a 103-81 victory over Seattle on Sunday night in the opener of their second-round series.

In the span of less than a minute during the second quarter, the Sonics lost Ray Allen and Vladimir Radmanovic to ankle sprains. The Spurs then went on a 17-2 run to make it 58-28 with about two minutes remaining in the half.

Allen, an All-Star who averaged 32.4 points in the SuperSonics' first-round series win over Sacramento, sprained his right ankle while driving to the basket with about eight minutes left in the first half. Radmanovic rolled his right ankle while defending Brent Barry and had to be carried from the court by teammates. He was later seen being pushed in a wheelchair.

It was not immediately known if either would be able to play in Game 2 on Tuesday night.

Tony Parker matched his career playoff high with 29 points for the Spurs, who lost Game 1 of their first-round series at home against Denver after coming out slow and then shooting poorly in the fourth quarter. San Antonio then won the next four games to advance.

Tim Duncan added 22 points and nine rebounds for the Spurs, who shot 51 percent. Glenn Robinson added 16 points.

Rashard Lewis led Seattle with 19 points and Antonio Daniels scored 15.

Parker said before the series started he would attack the Sonics defense from the get-go, and he was true to his word.

He drove inside for San Antonio's first three baskets. Ten of the Spurs' 12 field goals in the first quarter were layups, and Duncan had a dunk.
Manu Ginobili hit a 3-pointer from the left wing to give San Antonio a 18-8 lead midway through the first quarter. Two layups by Allen and a short jumper by Lewis cut it to 19-14, but the Spurs then finished the period by outscoring Seattle 16-8.

San Antonio led by 13 when Radmanovic rolled his ankle. Radmanovic had suffered a stress fracture in his lower right leg in March and missed the final 19 games of the regular season. He played in all five first-round playoff games against the Kings, averaging 6.4 points and 3.6 rebounds.

Seattle, which trailed 62-35 at the break, finished the second quarter by shooting 3-for-13 after Allen's injury.

Notes
The Spurs are 5-0 in the Duncan era when hosting Game 1 of a Western Conference semifinal series. ... The Spurs' Robert Horry played in his 181st playoff game, moving past Dennis Johnson for ninth place all-time. ... Nate McMillan's playoff record is 5-5 as Seattle's coach. ... Nick Collison beat the third-quarter buzzer with a heave from the Spurs' free-throw line to make it 75-57.
Updated on Sunday,

Heat Overwhelms Wizards

MIAMI -- They gave away a 17-point lead, turned the ball over 15 times, missed 11 free throws and received nothing resembling dominance from either Shaquille O'Neal or Dwyane Wade.
Didn't matter. The Miami Heat still won with ease.

Wade overcame a poor start to score 20 points, O'Neal added 19 points in 26 foul-plagued minutes and the Heat defeated Washington 105-86 Sunday in Game 1 of their Eastern Conference semifinal series.

``I think it was just being out of our rhythm,'' Wade said. ``We didn't go for the jugular.''

The Heat's depth was a key factor, with Miami's reserves outscoring Washington's 36-5.

Keyon Dooling had 15 points, Eddie Jones scored 12 and Damon Jones 10 for the Heat, who've won five straight playoff games for the first time in franchise history and are 5-0 against Washington this season.

``Everybody's main focus is Dwyane and Shaq anyway,'' said Dooling, who was 6-for-9 on his 25th birthday and is 20-for-26 in his last four games. ``So there's going to be shots and opportunities for everyone else.''

Deadpanned Wizards coach Eddie Jordan: ``We gave them a run for their money, 36-5. We always have an 'X' factor. Today we had a 'Z' factor -- zero.''

Gilbert Arenas had 25 points on 8-for-21 shooting for Washington. Larry Hughes added 23, Antawn Jamison had 13 before leaving in the fourth quarter with a sore right knee, and Jared Jeffries and Brendan Haywood added 10 apiece. Etan Thomas, with five points, was the only Washington reserve to score.

Game 2 is Tuesday night, with the Wizards looking to snap a nine-game losing streak against the Heat.

``We have a locker room of guys that love the challenge,'' Hughes said. ``We've been down. We don't feel like we're out. We feel like we can win a basketball game any given day we step out there.''

For a while, it seemed this might be one of those winning days for the Wizards.

Miami's 17-point lead was trimmed to one early in the third quarter, but the Heat never lost the lead -- and Wade got rolling just in time. He had 11 points and four assists in the third quarter and keyed a 14-3 run to end the period that pushed Miami's lead to 82-64.

``I look at the first half and the second half as two different games,'' said Wade, who had five points and four turnovers in the first half, 15 points and no turnovers in the second half. ``The first half was the first game. I didn't do well. The second half, I came out and tried to be a little more aggressive.''

Despite Wade's early struggles, the Heat -- who hadn't played since finishing off a first-round sweep of New Jersey last Sunday -- started strong.

Washington missed 17 of 19 shots during one early stretch, finishing the first quarter 5-for-23 to trail 26-18. In the quarter, Miami was 0-for-4 from 3-point range and 2-for-5 from the line. O'Neal missed a dunk and Wade -- who missed eight of his first 10 shots -- managed only four points.

Miami hit five of its first seven shots in the second quarter and seemed poised to turn the game into a rout. Rasual Butler's 3-pointer from the right wing with 7:27 left in the half capped a 9-0 run that pushed Miami's lead to 39-22.

Jordan called a timeout, and whatever he said worked.

Washington scored the next 11 points, including a pair of tough shots around the basket by Jamison and a 3-pointer by Arenas. The Wizards turned Miami's seven second-quarter turnovers into 11 points and ended the half on a 6-0 spurt, pulling to 49-47 at the break.

``Washington made a lot of comebacks throughout the year,'' Heat coach Stan Van Gundy said. ``Eddie does a great job when things are going bad. They change their defenses, the pick up their energy level. ... Against a team like Washington, you've really got to stay the course. You need a 48-minute effort.''

Haywood's three-point play with 11:15 left in the third quarter drew Washington to 51-50, but the Wizards never took the lead. Miami soon pulled away again, this time for good.

``We've just got to make shots,'' Haywood said. ``You can't work 40 percent and beat the Heat.''

Seven straight Miami points -- a 3-pointer and layup from Damon Jones sandwiched around a jumper by Eddie Jones -- pushed the lead to 58-50. The Wizards never made another serious run.

``There's one thing that's guaranteed,'' Jordan said. ``We've got two games here, and two in Washington. We'll see where it goes.''

Notes
O'Neal did not speak with reporters after the game. ... Wizards F Michael Ruffin played 19 minutes, fouled out, and didn't take a single shot. ... The arena was evacuated five hours before tip-off following the spotting of a suspicious package. The package held lighting equipment stolen from a TV crew and was detonated by police, Heat officials said. Arena operations were normal before gates opened. ... Jamison's knee is ``a concern right now for us,'' Jordan said. ... It took 89 seconds for fans to start chanting ``M-V-P'' to O'Neal after tip-off. Phoenix's Steve Nash was named the league's Most Valuable Player on Sunday.