Dirk, Mavs take down Thunder
Dirk Nowitzki and the Dallas Mavericks found a way to outshine even
Kevin Durant's new Creamsicle orange Nike sneakers.
Nowitzki scored 13 of his 35 points in the final 8 minutes
and the Mavericks used a late surge to spoil Durant's sneaker debut
and beat the Oklahoma City Thunder 100-86 Wednesday night for their
fifth straight win.
Durant broke out his new KD2 sneakers for the first time, and
most of his teammates joined him in wearing the new Nike shoes. But
Durant, the NBA's third-leading scorer, matched his lowest-scoring
total of the season with only 12 points on 4-for-18 shooting.
``We knew what we were getting into,'' Dallas coach Rick
Carlisle said. ``We knew this was a very big game for them, and
it's a big game for us too because they all count.''
Despite Durant's struggles, the Thunder led 75-71 after
holding the Mavs scoreless for the first 4 minutes of the fourth
quarter. Nowitzki, who was coming off a season-low 10 points
himself, broke the drought with a jumper from the left block and
Dallas took off from there.
J.J. Barea's jumper from the foul line gave the Mavs the lead
for good at 77-75 with 7:04 to play, and Nowitzki extended the lead
with jumpers on back-to-back possessions. He added a steal and
blocked James Harden's layup, then also found Erick Dampier under
the basket for a layup before banking in a 3-pointer to give Dallas
its first double-digit lead at 90-80 with 1:44 left.
Nowitzki also finished with 11 rebounds for his ninth
double-double of the season.
``I know you guys talk about Dirk's scoring, but I think it's
his defense that has got him going. ... People are always going to
talk about his offense, but I think right now his defense I think
has been the best that I've ever seen,'' Dallas point guard Jason
Kidd said.
Reserve Josh Howard had 15 points, Shawn Marion scored 12 and
Dampier finished with 10 for Dallas. Dampier also swatted Durant's
layup try in a 21-5 run that put the Mavs in control.
Russell Westbrook led Oklahoma City with 16 points. Jeff
Green added 15 points and 11 rebounds, and Harden had 12 points off
the bench. All wore Durant's new signature sneaker, brought out on
one of few national television appearances for the Thunder after
they won only 23 games a season ago.
``I was frustrated in myself but I was still cheering my
teammates on, trying to play hard on the defensive end,'' Durant
said. ``We fought all night. Sometimes you're going to have those
nights.''
Durant didn't hit his first 3-pointer until the final minute,
when the Thunder were down by 11. He had scored at least 25 points
in nine straight games, the longest streak in the NBA, before being
held to less than 20 points for only the fourth time this season.
``There's 82 games. You can't play well in all 82,'' Durant
said. ``That'd be nice, but I don't think that has ever happened.''
Durant said he tried to get his teammates involved early as
the Mavericks double-teamed him off screen-and-roll plays and
continued ``blitzing'' him.
``You have those nights, but it's all about bouncing back and
getting better the next day. That's what I'm about,'' Durant said.
Oklahoma City has lost three in a row for the second time
this season and fell back to .500 at 12-12.
Dallas withstood Oklahoma City's 9-for-11 shooting start and
rallied back from a 19-10 deficit to tie it at 24 on Jason Terry's
3-pointer in the closing seconds of the first quarter. The Thunder
kept Dallas at bay until midway through the third quarter, when
Nowitzki hit a 13-foot jumper in the lane to give the Mavs a 57-56
edge - their first lead since the opening minutes.
He had another jumper sandwiched between baskets by Howard as
the Mavericks scored six in a row to go up 66-60, and the lead
reached seven when Nowitzki stole the ball and hit a 3-pointer. But
Oklahoma City used a 13-2 charge to go back ahead. Serge Ibaka's
two-handed jam off an offensive rebound put the Thunder up 75-71
with 8:18 to play.
Notes: Even Ibaka and Etan Thomas, the two
Oklahoma City players who wear adidas shoes, picked out orange
ones. The Thunder also distributed orange rally towels to the
sellout crowd of 18,203 ... Howard continued his comeback from
offseason left ankle surgery with a season-high 29 minutes for the
second straight game. ``Having him off the bench, it's a plus for
us right now. His minutes have been inching up gradually. That's
probably good,'' Carlisle said. ... The Tulsa 66ers, Oklahoma
City's NBA Development League affiliate, signed former Virginia
Tech guard Zabian Dowdell on Wednesday and waived guard Mitch
Johnson.