Associated Press
Associated Press
HOUSTON — Los Angeles coach Mike D’Antoni paid a lot of attention to former Lakers center Dwight Howard down the stretch.
He needed to get the ball out of the hands of Houston Rockets guard James Harden and figured the best way to do that was with the “Hack-a-Howard” defense.
The strategy worked perfectly with Howard missing seven late free throws to allow the Lakers to keep it close before Steve Blake hit a wide-open 3-pointer with 1.3 seconds remaining to lift them to a 99-98 victory Thursday night.
“I think it went real well because we took Harden out of the game,” D’Antoni said.
Howard spurned the Lakers to sign an $88 million deal with Houston, joining Harden and a team that made the playoffs last season for the first time since 2009.
A somber Howard called his free throw shooting “terrible,” but wouldn’t concede that this loss was more difficult because it was against his former team.
“Every loss hurts,” said Howard, who had 15 points and 14 rebounds. “Nobody likes to lose. It’s very upsetting that we lost the way we did.”
D’Antoni’s decision to foul Howard was surprising because last season he said that the hack-a-whoever defense was bad for the game.
“That doesn’t mean you’re not going to use it, if it’s out there,” he said. “I’m not crazy.”
Houston led by two points before Blake took the inbounds pass from Jodie Meeks and made the game-winning shot.
The Rockets were disappointed they let Blake get free for the winning basket.
“Guys just kind of messed up on the play,” Howard said. “It happens.”
The Rockets had a chance to win it, but Patrick Beverley’s 3-point attempt at the buzzer bounced off the backboard.
“I was in a rhythm and then they started fouling Dwight,” said Harden, who scored 35 points. “It kind of slows us down. It slows our pace down and what we like to do. Good coaching.”
The Rockets took their first lead since the first quarter on a dunk by Chandler Parsons following a steal by Harden that made it 93-91 with about 4 minutes left. Parsons left his arms outstretched as he came down from the dunk to wild applause from the home crowd. Harden had tied it up about a minute earlier on a 3-pointer.
The Lakers started fouling Howard every time he touched the ball after that, sending him to the line 12 times, but he made just five.
Meeks, who led the Lakers with 18 points, made a 3-pointer with less than 2 minutes remaining to cut the lead to two.
The Lakers struggled all last season amid reports that Howard and Kobe Bryant didn’t get along, and were swept in the first round of the playoffs. Los Angeles could have offered him a 5-year contract worth $118 million, but he chose to make the move to Houston with a four-year deal.
“He made his choice, which is good,” D’Antoni said of Howard. “You’ve got to respect that. He’s fine and they’re going to have a great team. You’re just happy for everybody because we won.”
The Lakers extended their lead to 14 points on a jump shot by Chris Kaman with about 8 minutes left in the third quarter. Houston finally got its offense going after that, going on a 15-3 run to get within 74-72 with 3 minutes left in the quarter.
A highlight in that span came when Howard bobbled a bad pass from Harden before getting a handle on it and spinning around to finish with a dunk. The Rockets got eight points from Jeremy Lin during that run and the Lakers had three turnovers.
Wesley Johnson made a 3-pointer to cool off the Rockets, but a 3-pointer by Harden just near the end of the quarter cut the lead to 81-77.
Houston shot just under 35 percent and made just two of 13 3-point attempts in the first half. But the Rockets stayed in the game by making 18 of 27 free throws — 25 in the second quarter alone — before halftime. The Lakers didn’t share in Houston’s long-range shooting woes in the first half, hitting 11 of 14 3-point attempts.
The Lakers led by 17 points early in the second quarter before Houston used a 13-5 spurt capped by seven points from Harden to cut the lead to 45-36 about 7 1-2 minutes before halftime.
Harden’s seven points came in just 35 seconds. He made the second of two free throws before hitting a 3-pointer seconds later. Howard got a rebound on the other end and Harden made a layup. He was fouled on the shot and made the free throw.
Harden made five more free throws in the last 1:19 of the first half, but 3-pointers by Steve Nash and Meeks extended the Lakers lead to 64-50 at halftime.
HEAT 102, CLIPPERS 97
MIAMI — Dwyane Wade scored 11 of his 29 points in the fourth quarter and Miami held off the Clippers.
LeBron James added 18 points for the Heat (4-2), who won their third straight and extended their club record by scoring at least 100 points in a sixth consecutive game to start the season. Chris Bosh, playing for the first time since his wife delivered a baby earlier this week, finished with 12 points for Miami.
Blake Griffin had 27 points and 14 rebounds for the Clippers (3-3). His dunk with 31 seconds left got the Clippers within four, but Griffin allowed about 15 seconds to run off the clock without fouling James on the ensuing possession.
James made one free throw to push Miami’s lead to five, and that closed the scoring.
J.J. Redick scored 15 points, Jamal Crawford added 14, Chris Paul finished with 11 points and 12 assists, and DeAndre Jordan had 11 points and 14 rebounds for the Clippers.
Ray Allen scored 12 points for Miami, which got 10 from Chris Andersen.
NUGGETS 109, HAWKS 107
DENVER — Ty Lawson had 23 points and eight assists and Denver held on to give new head coach Brian Shaw his first win.
Nate Robinson added 15 points and JaVale McGee had 14 for Denver (1-3), which rallied from eight points down in the fourth quarter before surviving a late Atlanta rally.
The win leaves Utah (0-5) as the NBA’s only winless team.
Paul Millsap scored a season-high 29 points and grabbed 10 rebounds for the Hawks but missed a short jumper that would have tied the game with 1.9 seconds left. Al Horford, who had 21 points, grabbed the rebound but his shot was off as time expired.