MILWAUKEE -- Humility has never been Reggie Miller's strong suit. After
his latest playoff performance, it's easy to see why.
Miller scored 34 points with a vintage barrage of outside shots as the
Indiana Pacers beat the Milwaukee Bucks 109-96 Saturday night to take a 2-1
lead in their confrontational playoff series.
"It was going to take a Superman-type effort for us to get a victory,"
Miller said. "I was feeling Supermannish."
With a sellout Bradley Center crowd booing his every move, Miller turned in
yet another amazing postseason effort. Almost singlehandedly, he staved off a
fired-up Milwaukee team aching for its first home playoff win in a decade.
Miller, who was largely shut down by Ray Allen in the series' first two
games in Indianapolis, scored 16 points in the third quarter as the Pacers
turned a 12-point deficit into a three-point lead in less than six minutes.
"That's Reggie just saying, `We're going to win,"' said Jalen Rose, who
had 27 points. "That's him telling us to get our act together and start acting
like the best team in the East."
Indiana, the Eastern Conference's top seed, can clinch the series with
another road victory in Game 4 on Monday night.
The game was marred by the ejections of Milwaukee's Sam Cassell and
Indiana's Dale Davis with six minutes to play. The players confronted each
other and received double technical fouls for the second time in another
intensely physical game between bitter rivals.
After Milwaukee pulled within 87-85 with eight minutes to play, Miller and
Rose keyed a 13-2 run that sealed the victory. Rose finished with 27 points,
hitting three straight long shots during the deciding sequence.
As impressive as Miller's game was, it could have been even better. He was
just 4-of-14 on 3-pointers, most of which were wide open as Milwaukee's
on-and-off defense was decidedly off again.
"I'm still upset with myself because I had so many open 3s tonight,"
Miller said. "I should have finished with 50 points."
When Rose hit a deep 3-pointer with 2:45 left to put Indiana up 100-87,
normally unemotional Indiana coach Larry Bird pumped his first and screamed
"Yes!" at the heckling Milwaukee crowd.
"If we worked hard on defense, we were going to win the ballgame," Bird
said. "We all stayed focused much more than we did earlier in the series."
Indiana's Travis Best scored 11 of his 18 points in the fourth quarter,
including a 3-pointer with 1:32 left that made it 105-91.
Allen and Glenn Robinson each scored 26 points to lead Milwaukee, but they
had just five points apiece in the fourth quarter as Indiana pulled away.
Cassell had 13 points and 12 assists, but the Bucks floundered on offense when
their point guard was ejected.
"They played a lot harder than they did in Game 2 (a 104-91 Bucks
victory)," Allen said. "They took some tough shots and they made them.
(Miller) made some shots that didn't fall last time."
Center Rik Smits watched the game from the Pacers' hotel while serving a
one-game suspension for elbowing Ervin Johnson in Game 2. Austin Croshere
started in Smits' place, but only after Bird wrote Zan Tabak's name on the
lineup card and then crossed it out.
Croshere, who had 10 points and 11 rebounds, and Johnson waged a fierce
battle under the boards in a game that had an old-fashioned mean-spiritedness
to it. The two ejections were only the capper of a night filled with shoves,
smacks and hard fouls.
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| Reggie Miller silenced the Milwaukee fans with his 3-point marksmanship.(AP) | |
Cassell and Davis were assessed technicals for a brief confrontation in the
third quarter in which harsh words were exchanged but little else. Davis
appeared to shove the ball into Cassell's stomach when Cassell was trying to
take the ball out of bounds, and they were separated by Johnson.
The two briefly confronted each other again with six minutes left in the
game, and the resulting technicals meant both were ejected. Both benches
thought the whistles and the technicals were undeserved.
"It's incredible to me why you would take two All-Star players off the
court when it's not necessary," Milwaukee coach George Karl said. "There was
nothing done there."
Seconds after the ejections, someone in the crowd threw a giveaway T-shirt
on the court, and someone else nearly hit referee Mark Wunderlich with a pack
of gum.
The Bucks led 71-59 on Allen's jumper with 7:10 left in the third. Miller
then went to work, scoring 14 of Indiana's next 18 points and reclaiming the
lead for the Pacers in just six minutes of play.
The Bradley Center, normally among the NBA's quietest arenas, was nothing
short of electric for the Bucks' most meaningful game in a decade. Fans arrived
downtown hours before tipoff, some sporting purple-and-green body paint or
full-body deer costumes complete with horns.
The Bucks, who had the worst home record of the 16 playoff teams, almost
seemed taken aback by their sudden homecourt advantage and their screaming,
towel-waving fans.
Notes
- Milwaukee's George Karl coached his 100th playoff game.
- Milwaukee
didn't shoot a free throw until 10:27 of the second quarter.
- Darvin Ham,
the Bucks' sparkplug forward, bricked two critical free throws with 7:29 to
play. Ham is frequently removed from the Bucks' lineup at the end of games
because of his inept free-throw shooting.
- The Bucks are trying to become
just the third eighth-seeded team to beat a No. 1 seed. Denver beat Seattle in
1994, and the Knicks knocked off Miami last season.
- After Cassell and Davis
were ejected, Robinson and Best yapped at each other for nearly a minute while
their teammates separated them.
- Rose exchanged words with a heckler when he
came back on the court to do a postgame interview. "The price of your ticket
don't pay for you to talk stupid to me!" Rose yelled.
AP NEWS
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