Clippers take down Wade, Heat at home

After nearly a month of exemplary home play, Marcus Camby believes
the Los Angeles Clippers have made a bit of a breakthrough against
the inconsistency that has bedeviled this fairly talented team this
season.
Dwyane Wade has no similar feelings about his Jekyll-and-Hyde
Miami Heat after they showed up far too late to salvage another
game.
Chris Kaman had 22 points and 14 rebounds, Baron Davis had 11
points and 14 assists, and the revitalized Clippers surged to their
sixth straight home victory, 94-84 over the Heat on Sunday.
Not even a series of visits from the NBA's top shooting
guards has slowed down the Clippers, who haven't lost at home since
Dec. 13. Eric Gordon scored 17 points and Rasual Butler added 13
for the Clippers, who moved within one game of .500 with another
one-sided win in their impressive run at Staples Center.
"We're just in a good groove right now," said Camby, who had
17 rebounds. "People are communicating and covering for each other.
Guys are sharing the workload. We have balanced scoring and good
defense. It's a pretty good time."
Los Angeles jumped to a 19-point lead in the first half and
wasn't threatened by Miami despite 19 turnovers and a solid start
by Wade, who scored 24 points. The Heat have lost five of seven to
drop within one game of .500, and Wade emerged frustrated after
sitting out the final 8:21 with a game at Utah looming Monday
night.
"We've had two teams all year," Wade said. "We've had Miami,
and we've got the Heat, and this was Miami today. We came out the
wrong way. That team's been playing very well at home, and very
well of late, so you can't come out flat. We got behind the 8-ball
early and never could recover."
Although Miami won the opener of its six-game West Coast trip
in Phoenix on Friday, the Clippers mostly shut down Wade's
teammates. Except for Michael Beasley, who scored 15 of his 20
points in the first half, none of Wade's supporting cast had more
than Mario Chalmers' 11 points, which he scored entirely in the
final minutes of a blowout.
"D-Wade is a great player, so we definitely wanted to keep
everybody else down," Camby said.
The Clippers came out with another exhibition of their recent
home efficiency, taking a 41-22 lead in the second quarter with a
15-2 run. Los Angeles thrived with coach Mike Dunleavy's plan to
make Wade's teammates beat them: Quentin Richardson, Udonis Haslem,
Jermaine O'Neal, Dorell Wright and Rafer Alston were a combined 4
for 17 for nine points in the first half.
O'Neal finished with two points and didn't make a field goal,
while former Clippers guard Richardson had just four in more than
28 minutes. Wright had five points in 29 minutes on 2-for-9
shooting.
"This was disappointing, to have a game like this," Miami
coach Erik Spoelstra said. "It's not what we set out to do today,
and there's no excuses. The starting time of the game is no excuse.
We were never really in it, even from the beginning. It was just a
different level of energy."
With No. 1 draft pick Blake Griffin getting close to
rejoining his teammates in practice, the Clippers finally appear to
be playing up to their talent level -- at least in Los Angeles.
They haven't lost at home since Dec. 13, beating Boston, Portland
and the Lakers during the string before easily handling Miami to
extend their longest home winning streak since November 2006.
"We're beginning to establish an attitude and an identity,"
Davis said. "We're starting to trust each other on the floor, and
our chemistry is starting to get better. My best is yet to come,
and I know the team's best is yet to come."
Kobe Bryant, Brandon Roy, Ray Allen and Wade have visited
Staples Center during the streak, and the Clippers severely limited
each talented guard -- well, except Kobe, who scored 33 -- with
solid wing defense from Gordon and his shot-blocking big men Kaman
and Camby inside.
"We've really got better defensively," Gordon said. "We're
doing a lot of things right. We can still get better, but we're
putting it together."
Al Thornton scored also scored 13 points for the Clippers,
who have lost four straight road games heading into Tuesday's trip
to Memphis.
"We need to take this show on the road," Dunleavy said.
"We've been playing the best we have this year, but there is better
play to come."
Alston, who rejoined the Heat on Thursday after New Jersey
bought out his contract, scored just four points in 23 minutes in
his second game as Miami's starting point guard, but the Heat
struggled at every position in their second straight road loss to
the Clippers.
Chalmers played sparingly and didn't score until hitting a
3-pointer with 7:08 to play.
Notes: Clippers backup G Sebastian Telfair was
inactive with a sore groin. ... Heat F James Jones was inactive for
the second straight game. ... Actress Gabrielle Union watched the
game from courtside.
