Nelson, Magic outlast Bobcats in OT
The way it turned out, blowing a big lead, missing a key free throw
and allowing the tying layup was just what the Orlando Magic
needed.
When overtime arrived, the Magic looked a lot like that
hard-to-beat team of last season. They sent a little message to the
once-surging Charlotte Bobcats, too.
Jameer Nelson scored six of his 21 points after regulation,
Vince Carter also scored 21 and helped shut down Gerald Wallace,
and the Magic beat the Bobcats 106-95 on Saturday night for their
third straight victory.
"I would have rather closed it out in the fourth quarter and
finished better than we did," Magic coach Stan Van Gundy said. "But
in retrospect, now after the game, that was a great game for us to
have.
"We hadn't been to overtime all year. We sort of got a second
chance."
After Stephen Jackson's layup with 1.2 seconds left in
regulation completed Charlotte's comeback from a 16-point
third-quarter deficit, Nelson hit a jumper, two free throws and a
runner in an 11-0 run to start OT.
It put a quick end to Charlotte's nine-game home winning
streak. And while the rest of the NBA is 3-18 in Charlotte, the
Magic are 2-0.
D.J. Augustin scored 22 points for Charlotte, which starts a
six-game West Coast trip on a two-game losing streak and back at
.500 after its impressive start to the month.
"Nice comeback, but it wasn't enough," Jackson said. "We
needed to win this game."
With Carter looking stronger as he recovers from a shoulder
injury and with Dwight Howard grabbing 20 rebounds and blocking
seven shots, don't count out the Magic in the Eastern Conference
just yet despite an ugly stretch of seven losses in nine games
earlier this month.
"In the overtime, that's the best 5 minutes of defense we've
played all year," Van Gundy said. "A lot of times people just miss
shots, it's not really our defense. I thought in the overtime it
was our defense. I thought they had trouble even getting a good
look at the basket."
Wallace did all game. Hounded by Carter and Rashard Lewis,
the All-Star candidate missed his first seven shots. He ended with
nine points on 2-of-11 shooting. Jackson shot 6-for-18 and scored
15.
It was Augustin who led Charlotte's comeback with three key
3-pointers to set up a frantic final minute of regulation.
Raymond Felton, playing on a sore ankle, buried a 3 with 7.8
seconds left before Carter was fouled. He hit only one free throw
to give Orlando a 92-90 lead before Charlotte called timeout and
moved the ball to the frontcourt with 6.9 seconds left.
Felton then drove to the basket and at the last moment handed
off to Jackson, whose rushed, two-handed layup went straight in
without hitting the glass.
The Bobcats then missed their first six shots of overtime and
were outscored 14-3.
"We had some bad matchups in overtime and they did a great
job," Charlotte coach Larry Brown said. "Jameer got them started."
It was NASCAR night, with several drivers helping the Bobcats
collect money to help the Haiti earthquake relief efforts. Sprint
Cup champion Jimmie Johnson was honored at halftime, and the
Bobcats wore their road blue uniforms with a checkered flag stripe
down each side.
They quickly fell a lap down.
Orlando led by as many as nine points in the second quarter
behind Carter's hot shooting and nifty drives. But his most
impressive performance may have been on defense.
Carter used his long arms to disrupt Wallace from the outside
and was able to cut off his driving lanes.
After committing two turnovers in the first half, Charlotte
had seven in the third quarter as the Magic went on a 20-6 run.
Lewis, who started 1 for 8 from the field, hit consecutive
3-pointers as the Magic took a 69-53 lead.
Carter, who hit 8 of 16 shots, said he told players and
coaches "I owe them a couple weeks" after struggling with his shot
amid shoulder pain.
After his missed free throw helped extend the game, Carter
was proud of his teammates.
"Just the resiliency of this team and everybody really
stepping it up," he said. "We were really defending and we got the
job done."
Notes: Carter, who played at North Carolina, still
gets plenty of cheers here. "It's always fun," he said. ... Magic G
J.J. Redick, who played at Duke, was booed throughout. ...
Nationwide Series driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr. won a pregame skills
competition that included dribbling, foul shooting, passing and
layups. He beat a group that included the layup-challenged Michael
Waltrip and Brad Keselowski, who kept air-balling free throws. "I
was pretty nervous," Stenhouse said.