NBA roundup: Monday's action on the boards

Published Tuesday January 13th, 2009

Paul Pierce's balky knee held up perfectly fine Monday night, and that was bad news for the Toronto Raptors.

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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/Charles Rex Arbogast
Chicago Bulls guard Derrick Rose calls a play during the second half of their NBA basketball game against the Portland Trail Blazers in Chicago, Monday, Jan. 12, 2009, Rose had 13 points and 10 assists in their 109-95 loss to the Trail Blazers.

Pierce scored nine of his season-high 39 points in overtime to lead Boston to a 115-109 win over Toronto as the Celtics beat the Raptors for the second time in as many nights.

Pierce played 49 minutes despite coach Doc Rivers' pre-game fears that the right knee he hurt in Sunday's 94-88 win at Toronto might sideline him.

"There's players who play the game. There's players who absolutely love the game," Rivers said. "Paul's one of those 'love' guys. ... He's tough as nails."

Kevin Garnett shut down Toronto superstar Chris Bosh much of the game, but he felt Pierce was Boston's star of the night and wasn't shy about showing it.

"Y'all need to start playing some of that "Superman" theme music in the building when he's going like that," Garnett said while sitting next to Pierce at a post-game news conference. "I'll be Batman. I'll be Robin. I'll be anybody you want me to be. I'll be the garbage man. But this is Clark Kent right here."

Andrea Bargnani, whose three-pointer with one second left sent the game into overtime tied at 93, led the Raptors with 23 points.

Elsewhere in the NBA it was: Milwaukee 97 Washington 91; New Jersey 103 Oklahoma City 99 (OT); New York 101 New Orleans 95; Portland 109 Chicago 95; and Utah 120 Indiana 113.

At Toronto, Pierce led a comeback from a 10-point deficit one day after Ray Allen's 36 points carried Boston in Toronto.

And he wasn't overly tired.

"Actually, I feel pretty good," Pierce said. "Could have played another quarter, I think."

He hurt his knee Sunday in a collision with teammate Brian Scalabrine, who scored eight clutch points in the third quarter in place of injured centre Kendrick Perkins.

"Hopefully, I don't hit it again so it can kind of heal," Pierce said. "Doc's been around long enough to know that it takes a lot to keep me off the court."

Pierce also had nine rebounds, while Garnett added 20 points and 12 rebounds and held Bosh to 1-of-4 shooting in 12 minutes of the fourth quarter and kept him from shooting in all five minutes of overtime.

"You work hard to get open, then he overplays you," said Bosh, who had 18 points and 11 rebounds. "And then he has help behind him."

The Celtics never trailed in overtime as Pierce scored the first basket, a three-pointer.

"Kevin kept the ball alive and we swung it and I was just open for the shot," he said. "In overtime, it wasn't really about my aggressiveness. The couple of shots I got were from ball movement."

After Anthony Parker sank a turnaround shot from the baseline, Pierce connected from the top of the key for a 98-95 lead. Boston led by at least three points the rest of the way.

"Ray Allen, except for a three (in overtime) didn't really didn't do anything," Toronto's Roko Ukic said, "but they're a deep team."

The Celtics are 4-0 this season against the Raptors and are starting to regain the rhythm that sparked them to a 27-2 record, the best 29-game start in NBA history. They are 4-7 since then.

Boston's 22 points set a club record for most in overtime, breaking the mark set on Jan. 2, 1963 when it outscored the San Francisco Warriors 21-6 in a 135-120 win.

On Monday, Boston led 105-99 with a minute to go, forcing Toronto to foul to stop the clock. The Celtics took advantage by going 8-for-8 from the line, with four points each from Pierce and Garnett, in the final 43 seconds.

Despite injuries that sidelined two of their top three scorers, Jermaine O'Neal and Jose Calderon, the Raptors never trailed throughout the second and third quarters. Boston finally went ahead on a three-pointer by Gabe Pruitt that made it 80-78 with 10:55 left in the fourth.

Pierce made one of two free throws with 14 seconds remaining, giving Boston a 93-90 lead, but the Celtics couldn't stop Bargnani's shot from the left corner that forced overtime.

"We were looking for AP (Parker)," Toronto coach Jay Triano said. "We put as many three-point shooters on the floor as we could."

Each team missed its first two shots of the extra period before Pierce made his three-pointer.

The Raptors came back behind Ukic, whose two driving layups cut the lead to 103-99 with 1:41 remaining. Parker hit a three-pointer to make it 113-109. The Raptors stole the inbounds pass, but Jason Kapono missed a three-pointer and Leon Powe ended the scoring with a dunk.

Bucks 97 Wizards 91

At Washington, Michael Redd scored 29 points, a healthy Andrew Bogut added 18 points and 10 rebounds, and the Wizards blew another fourth-quarter lead.

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Nets 103 Thunder 99 (OT)

At East Rutherford, N.J., rookie Brook Lopez scored a career-high 31 points and pulled down 13 rebounds.

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Knicks 101 Hornets 95

At New Orleans, David Lee scored 24 points and New York ended a three-game losing streak.

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Trail Blazers 109 Bulls 95

At Chicago, Travis Outlaw scored a season-high 33 points and Greg Oden had 17 points and 13 rebounds as Portland beat the Bulls.

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Jazz 120 Pacers 113

At Salt Lake City, Mehmet Okur scored a career-high 43 points and Utah held off a late Indiana rally.

 

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