Nowitzki returns to hit three, Mavs top Wizards
With his Dallas Mavericks locked in a tight fourth quarter, Dirk Nowitzki twisted his left ankle by accidentally stepping on an opponent's foot, then fell to the court.
Moments later, Nowitzki was limping off to the locker room to get his ankle taped.
And minutes after that, he was back in the game, delivering a key basket.
Nowitzki's 3-pointer with 80 seconds left sealed a fifth consecutive victory for Dallas, 105-102 over the Washington Wizards, after Monta Ellis scored 24 of his 34 points in the first half Wednesday night.
"It was a close game, so if I can walk, I want to be out there. And it actually felt OK, once it loosened up," said Nowitzki, who on Monday became the fourth NBA player to reach 27,000 points with one franchise.
"Just rolled (the ankle) a little bit, like I've done a million times in my career. Just had to walk it off coming back here, re-taped it and came right back out," Nowitzki said, before adding with a laugh: "Popped some pills."
Nowitzki went down with about eight minutes left after getting tangled with Kris Humphries. But the German came back with 3 1/2 minutes to go and Dallas trailing by a point.
After sinking his important 3 to put the Mavs ahead 102-97 -- part of a 13-point night on 4-for-12 shooting -- Nowitzki held out three fingers on one hand and slammed it against his other palm.
"Monster shot," Dallas coach Rick Carlisle said. "And even though he didn't have a great night shooting the ball or scoring, his ability to make timely plays and change the dimensions of the court show what his impact is."
Washington lost at home for the first time this season, despite Bradley Beal's first action following left wrist surgery.
Beal was terrific, too, leading Washington with 21 points, and even drawing a charge on Ellis with about 30 seconds to go. But with a chance to tie the game, John Wall missed a 3-pointer at the other end. Ellis then made two free throws to push Dallas' edge to five points.
Over the first two quarters, Ellis made seven of 10 shots, including a 3-pointer, and nine of 10 free throws.
"Nobody else on their team touched the ball," Wizards coach Randy Wittman said. "And I was fine with that."
Later, though, reserves J.J. Barea and Brandan Wright got involved, each scoring 14 points for Dallas, which leads the NBA in scoring.
Wittman criticized his players for getting discouraged after a poor start to the third quarter.
"We've got to grow up from an emotional standpoint," Wittman said, adding: "We quit playing, is the way I term it."