Lakers in 0-2 hole...

big in vegas

MuscleChemistry Registered Member
OKLAHOMA CITY -- Kevin Durant scored 22 points and rattled in the go-ahead basket on a baseline runner with 18 seconds left, and the Oklahoma City Thunder scored the final nine points to rally for a 77-75 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 2 of the best-of-seven Western Conference semifinal series on Wednesday night.

Oklahoma City trailed by seven with two minutes left before surging back with a series of defensive stops by its stars to take a 2-0 lead.
Game 3 is Friday night in Los Angeles.

Kobe Bryant and Andrew Bynum scored 20 points apiece for the Lakers, who came up empty on their last six possessions after Bynum's hook shot made it 75-68 with 2:09 remaining.

After struggling throughout the second half, the Thunder suddenly came alive after Scott Brooks called timeout after Bynum's basket that gave Los Angeles its largest lead of the game.

James Harden drove for a layup before Durant used his height advantage to reach up and tip away a pass from Bryant, whom he was guarding.

Durant ran out for a right-handed dunk at the other end before Russell Westbrook forced another turnover by aggressively challenging an outlet pass to Bryant along the sideline.

Harden made the next stop, blocking Bryant's jumper on the next Lakers possession and getting a layup in transition to cut the deficit to one in the final minute.

Bryant couldn't connect again, this time on a 3-pointer, to give the Thunder the ball back with the chance to take the lead and Durant was able to make it happen.

Steve Blake missed a 3-pointer from the right side with about five seconds left after Metta World Peace couldn't get the ball to Bryant on the inbounds play. Durant was then fouled with 0.3 seconds left and made his first try before missing the second on purpose -- failing to hit the backboard or rim for a violation.

The Lakers got a desperation try, but World Peace's long pass for Bynum was intercepted by Harden.

Westbrook added 15 points for Oklahoma City, which matched its lowest scoring total of the season but still won.

Historically, the loss makes a huge difference. Los Angeles is 29-12 when splitting the first two games of a seven-game series and has lost 17 of 19 when falling into a 2-0 hole. The Lakers' last comeback was in the 2004 West semifinals against San Antonio.

The Thunder have won all nine of their series after leading 2-0, dating back to the franchise's days in Seattle.

In a game that was nip and tuck throughout, the Lakers started inching away early in the fourth quarter while Westbrook was on the bench.

Bryant drilled a jumper from the left wing and Blake followed with a 3-pointer before World Peace hit one of two free throws for a 69-63 advantage with 7:27 remaining -- the Lakers' largest lead to that point.

Westbrook returned then but provided only the briefest of sparks for the struggling Oklahoma City offense, and Bynum's second straight basket -- on a left-handed hook shot at the left block -- made it 75-68 with 2:09 to play.

Until that point, Oklahoma City had made only 7 of 27 shots in the second half while committing eight turnovers.

After getting ripped apart by the Thunder's pick-and-roll attack and giving up 119 points in Game 1, the Lakers made it an emphasis to put up more resistance in the rematch and it showed. Matt Barnes shuffled back and forth around three Nick Collison screens to contest Harden's jumper and preserve the Lakers' 22-21 lead after one quarter.

The Lakers' defense was at its best just after halftime as they got out of a 48-45 deficit by holding Oklahoma City scoreless for the first four minutes and allowing just two baskets in the first eight minutes. But Los Angeles still couldn't create any sort of a cushion, and Westbrook's wide-open 3-pointer from the left corner -- after World Peace airballed a similar shot on the opposite end -- had the Thunder back within 57-56 with 3:31 left in the third.

Game notes
The NBA on Wednesday fined Devin Ebanks $25,000 for actions related to his Game 1 ejection and Bynum $15,000 for failing to speak to reporters on Tuesday. Bynum, who has had recent disciplinary issues within the team, talked at the Lakers' morning shootaround Wednesday and called it a makeup for skipping the previous day. "I think he's learning. Is he going to be a perfect citizen the rest of his career? I don't know," coach Mike Brown said. "He's bound to make mistakes. I think everybody makes mistakes." ... World Peace has said he supported Scott Brooks to become Sacramento's coach back in 2007, when Brooks had been an assistant under Eric Musselman. "Little does he know, if I would have got the job, I was going to ask for him to be traded," Brooks joked. He then called World Peace, or Ron Artest at the time, the third-best two-way player at the time behind Bryant and Kevin Garnett. ... Harden caught World Peace with an inadvertent elbow to the face in the first quarter.
 
If Bynum wasn't such a little BIATCH they might have had a chance! He's unstoppable when he has his mind right and OKC doesn't have a center on top of that. They have a shot blocker but not a true low post defender. It would have taken a perfectly played 4 games by LA to have won this series. OKC and SA is going to be a great series; exciting youthful up tempo vs older slower pace methodica!!!!
 
Being a Boston fan, I love seeing the Lakers in trouble like this, but I know that the Celtics are getting old and don't have much as far as a true contending team goes, but they still have talent to compete in the conference finals. I just don't think they have a team capable of winning an NBA championship
 
Kobe and Gersol whine like little bitches. Is it just me or does it seem like the refs are favoring LA? I think they want the series to
go longer for the $$ and have LA advance for more viewers. Looks dirty to me.
 
They are where the Spurs were last year- they are getting older and they can't keep running up and down the court with OKC who is younger and faster...
 
I agree with MMX, they're just not the team they once were. I think they are missing Derek Fisher more than ever right now. He knew how to control the tempo and help them in difficult times like this. I believe they have some re-structuring to do within this team, first order of business needs to be dropping Ron Artest
 
And I've noticed that the refs always seem to pull for the teams that can bring the best audience and attendance. This has always been the case in the NBA, but it seems to be getting more noticeable as of late
 
And I've noticed that the refs always seem to pull for the teams that can bring the best audience and attendance. This has always been the case in the NBA, but it seems to be getting more noticeable as of late

Couldn't agree more., game 3 showed some distinct favoritism for the Lakers I thought..
 
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