Nets beat Clippers, end latest skid

The crowd was on its feet and clapping. The players were standing
near midcourt, happily waiting for the final buzzer to sound.
It was like so many others Nets' games this season, except it
was the New Jersey fans cheering, the home team running out the
clock and the Los Angeles Clippers walking off the court as losers.
Yes, the Nets won for only the fourth time in 44 games this
season and ended a 29-game losing streak against Western Conference
opponents.
Kris Humphries scored a career-high 25 points and the Nets
avoided the worst 44-game start in NBA history with a 103-87
victory over the Clippers on Wednesday night, snapping an 11-game
losing streak.
"Man getting a win feels great, especially against a team we
just lost to last week " Humphries said after the Nets won for the
first time in 2010.
"Did we need this?" center Brook Lopez said after chipping in
19 points and nine rebounds. "Are you kidding me? I mean we were
3-40. That's not a tough question to answer."
The Nets were tied with the 1993-94 Dallas Mavericks for the
NBA's worst record after 43 games and all they had to do was lose
another to secure another mark in this miserable season that opened
with a league-record 18 straight losses.
It didn't happen although the Nets managed to blow a 16-point
first-half lead in the third quarter before ending their third
double-digit losing streak of the season.
"I know I definitely needed it, especially coming off the
last road trip which I said was the worst of my life," said veteran
guard Keyon Dooling, who scored 10 of 18 points in the fourth
quarter. "I still believe that. We responded well."
Chris Kaman had 24 points and 11 rebounds for the Clippers.
Craig Smith added 18 points and eight rebounds.
"Words can't even describe this," said veteran Clippers guard
Baron Davis, who was limited to six points in 29 minutes, with only
two coming in the fourth quarter.
"We're fighting for a playoff spot and we lost to a team
that's not even close to making the playoffs," he added. "It's
tough man."
Nets public address announcer Gary Sussman entertained the
crowd of 9,220 with "Nets WIN! Nets WIN!" seconds after the final
buzzer and the Izod Arena speakers blared "Celebration."
And the Nets won without their starting backcourt. Devin
Harris (sprained wrist) and Courtney Lee (oral surgery) both sat
out.
The key for the Nets was coming back after the Clippers
rallied to tie the game early in the third quarter at 53.
Instead of folding, New Jersey countered with a 14-4 spurt
that featured nine points by Humphries, who eclipsed his previous
career high of 21 points set last week against the Clippers.
"Getting the win is more important," Humphries said,
downplaying his point total. "Nobody remembers who averaged what on
a bad team. It's just about winning. It doesn't mean anything to
put up numbers on a bad team."
New Jersey led 71-64 entering the fourth quarter and they
never let the Clippers get closer than 73-70 on a 3-pointer by
Rasual Butler (14 points).
Lopez hit a long 2-point set shot and Humphries drove the
lane for a dunk for a 77-70 lead.
The margin was 79-74 when Dooling sandwiched a drive and a
jumper around a steal and two free throws by Jarvis Hayes for an
85-74 lead and Los Angeles never threatened.
"The easy thing for us to do as a team has been to sulk and
point a finger," Dooling said. "We kind of fell victim to that.
Tonight we came out of that and we can build from that."
Humphries and Chris Quinn, who were acquired in trades last
month, helped the Nets build a 16-point second quarter lead,
combining for 14 points in a 20-8 run. Humphries had eight and
Quinn nailed two 3-pointers.
The Clippers, who looked sluggish most of the first half, cut
New Jersey's lead to 51-41 at the half and then opened the third
quarter with a 12-2 spurt, tying the game when Kaman hit the first
of two free throws.
The Nets then responded -- for the first time in a while.
Notes: The Nets 10-point halftime lead marked only
the second time they were up by double digits at the half. They led
Minnesota by 12 in the season opener. ... Starting guard Eric
Gordon returned to the Clippers' lineup after missing three games
with a sprained big left toe. ... Clippers center Marcus Camby only
played seven minutes because of bruised ribs. ...The Nets posted
their first double digit lead since beating the Knicks on Dec. 30.
... Bobby Brown had eight points in his first game for the
Clippers.
