LOS ANGELES - Kobe Bryant said it was simply a matter of effort. The Phoenix
Suns agreed. Bryant scored 15 of his 45 points in the fourth quarter, Kwame
Brown added a career playoff-high 19 points, and the Lakers rallied to beat the
Suns 95-89 Thursday night, cutting Phoenix's lead to 2-1 in the best-of-seven
series.
Los Angeles Lakers' Kobe Bryant celebrates a basket against
the Phoenix Suns during the first half of their Western Conference playoff
basketball game in Los Angeles, Thursday, April 26, 2007. [AP]
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"When you have that hustle, when
you play really hard, particularly on the defensive end, you give yourself a
chance to win," Bryant said.
"I thought they played harder than we did," Suns star Steve Nash said.
Game 4 will be played Sunday at Staples Center, with the fifth game Wednesday
night in Phoenix, where the Suns embarrassed the Lakers 126-98 in Game 2.
The odds remain against the Lakers, since only 11 of 193 teams in NBA history
have come back from an 0-2 deficit to win a seven-game series. But an NBA team
has never won a best-of-seven series after losing the first three games, so this
was a victory they had to have.
That didn't seem likely after the Suns took a 31-14 lead in the first
quarter, but the Lakers made it a game in the second, and won by scoring the
game's last six points.
"They were a desperate team," Phoenix's Raja Bell said. "They played with a
lot of desperation and we didn't treat it the same way. This was one team
wanting to win more than the other one did."
In other playoff action Thursday night, the Detroit Pistons beat Orlando
93-77 to take a 3-0 lead over the Magic in their first-round series, and the
Utah Jazz topped Houston 81-67 to cut the Rockets' lead to 2-1.
Bryant's layup with 3 1/2 minutes remaining gave the Lakers an 89-84 lead,
but two foul shots by Amare Stoudemire and a 3-pointer by Leandro Barbosa tied
the game with 2:03 left. But the Suns wouldn't score again.
Lamer Odom's layup with 1:45 remaining put the Lakers ahead for good, and
Bryant scored the game's final four points.
"This was the first time in a long time that we took the other team's best
punch, and after we did that we were able to recover," said Odom, who had 18
points and 16 rebounds.
Stoudemire led the Suns with 24 points and 10 rebounds. Barbosa scored 20
points, Nash had 10 points and 13 assists and Shawn Marion also scored 10 for
Phoenix.
"They probably can't play better, but we definitely have to in order to win,"
Stoudemire said. "We definitely let one slip away. We had a chance to put them
away. They shot the ball well, Kobe was on fire.
"Game 4 will be a different story — we've got to be the aggressor."
Bryant shot 1-of-10 in the fourth quarter of Game 1, when the Suns outscored
the Lakers 21-10 for a 95-87 victory. He was much better in the final period of
this game, shooting 5-of-11 and making all four free throws he attempted.
"You've got to give them credit," Suns coach Mike D'Antoni said. "Things were
so easy at the beginning. Human nature took over. Kobe down the stretch was too
much to handle. They got 19 offensive rebounds — that was the game."
Brown, hampered by a sprained left ankle for nearly four months, scored eight
more points than his combined total in the first two games.
"He played well from the beginning of the game," Bryant said. "He didn't get
discouraged when he didn't finish plays."
Brown looked like he might be finished in this game when he rolled his right
ankle with 4 1/2 minutes left in the third quarter. But not only did Brown stay
in the game, he scored nine points during the remainder of the period.
"I was like 'Oh no, not again.' But it's OK," Brown said. "It's swelling up a
little bit, but I'll be OK.
The Lakers won the game at the foul line, shooting 22-of-28 to Phoenix's
8-of-12. Los Angeles outrebounded the Suns 44-35.
"We're just going to have to keep the intensity up and try to keep the ball
out of Nash's hands," Brown said. "You know he's their engine."
Nash committed five of his team's 15 turnovers.
"We were a step slow," he said. "We weren't in the right spots. They trapped
the pick and roll. We didn't make them pay, for whatever reason."
Pistons 93, Magic 77
Tayshaun Prince scored 23 points and Chauncey Billups added 21 to help
visiting Detroit a 3-0 series lead. The victory ended a postseason trend for the
Pistons — they had lost their last six Game 3s when leading 2-0 — and left them
one victory from advancing to the second round.
Jameer Nelson scored 27 points and Dwight Howard had 11 points and 12
rebounds for the Magic.
Jazz 81, Rockets 67
At Salt Lake City, Carlos Boozer had 22 points and 12 rebounds, and Utah held
Houston without a field goal for 10 minutes in the second half.
Matt Harpring scored 13 points and Deron Williams added 11 points and eight
assists for the Jazz.
Yao Ming had 26 points and 14 rebounds and Tracy McGrady scored 24 points for
the Rockets. Shane Battier, who scored 11, and Rafer Alston, who added six, were
the only other players to score for Houston.