Paul George
had just wrapped up his brilliant night, scoring 41 points to keep
the Los Angeles Clippers’ season alive. He shared some hugs and
fist bumps with teammates and assistant coaches before he finally
got to head coach Tyronn Lue.
There were
some words of encouragement. They were also apparently too hot for
TV.
“I can’t
share that,” George said with a grin, recalling the conversation.
“Bleep this and bleep that.”
George set
his playoff-career-high in scoring, Reggie Jackson added 23 and the
feisty Clippers staved off elimination by beating the Phoenix Suns
116-102 on Monday night in Game 5 of the Western Conference
Finals.
The Clippers
have been counted out multiple times in this postseason. That
continues to be a mistake.
“The group of
guys we’ve got, I love those guys. They compete every single night
no matter who is on the floor,” Lue said. “The work’s not done, but
we came into a hostile environment and got a gritty win.
“We’ve got to
do it again two more times.”
The series
moves back to LA with the Suns holding a 3-2 advantage. Game 6 is
Wednesday.
The
short-handed Clippers were playing without two-time NBA Finals MVP
Kawhi Leonard and center Ivica Zubac, who missed his first game of
the season with an MCL sprain in his right knee. They’ve already
fought through two grueling series wins in these playoffs, coming
back from 2-0 deficits to beat both the Dallas Mavericks and Utah
Jazz.
Now they’re
trying to claw back against the Suns. Game 5 was a good start.
George was
fantastic after a tough shooting night in Game 4, pouring in 20
points in the third quarter. He finished 15 of 20 from the field,
including 3 of 6 from 3-point range and added 13 rebounds and six
assists.
“If they were
going to finish this series, they were going to have to work for
it,” George said. “That’s just the mentality we had. We weren’t
going to back down. We weren’t going to throw in the towel. The
fact of the matter is they’ve got to beat us.”
Marcus Morris
Sr., who played for Phoenix earlier in his career, added 22 points
on 9-of-16 shooting.
The Suns
trailed by as many as 15 points during the first half but took
their first advantage in the third when Chris Paul knocked down a
16-foot jumper for a 62-61 lead. The Clippers responded with the
next 10 points and then started sinking 3-pointers. George hit
back-to-back 3s and Patrick Beverley added one to push LA ahead
82-70, gesturing to the Suns crowd as he jogged back down the
court.
It was the
common theme of the night: Every time the Suns got some momentum,
the Clippers were there to squash it in a hurry.
The Clippers
took a 91-78 lead into the fourth. The Suns pulled within 98-94
with 6:58 left but LA responded with a 10-2 run and pulled away for
the win.
Devin Booker
led the Suns with 31 points. Paul — who is trying to go to the NBA
Finals for the first time in his 16-year career — added 22 points
and eight assists. Deandre Ayton had 10 points and 11 rebounds.
“We’ve got to
be better,” Paul said. ”They came out and they were the aggressors.
They looked like us in Game 4. They hit us, they were too
comfortable and we’ve got to be better.”
The Clippers
played inspired basketball in the first half, jumping out to an
20-5 lead by halfway through the first quarter. Jackson threw down
a huge one-handed jam during the run and LA hit nine of its first
11 shots.
“It is just
unacceptable the way we started the game,” Suns coach Monty
Williams said. “It was a big hole for us. It is pretty obvious that
we can’t play with the show-up mentality. We showed up in the first
quarter and they played with desperation.”
Morris was 6
of 7 in the first and Jackson made a layup at the buzzer to give
the Clippers a 36-26 advantage going into the second.
The Suns cut
the advantage to 44-42 midway through the second but the Clippers
rallied again to push ahead by 10. Booker hit a 3-pointer at the
halftime buzzer to cut the Clippers’ advantage 59-52.
Morris had 20
points in the first half.
The Suns are
trying to make their first NBA Finals since 1993. The Clippers have
never been this far in the postseason.
TIP-INS
Clippers:
DeMarcus Cousins had 10 points in just six minutes in the first
half. He made 5 of 9 shots, putting a shot on the rim once every 40
seconds on average. ... Leonard missed his seventh straight game.
... This was the Clippers’ sixth double-digit win when trailing in
a series this postseason. That is the most such wins in a single
postseason in NBA history.
Suns: F Abdel
Nader played in his second straight game after missing several
weeks with a knee injury. He scored two points. ... Phoenix
announced a sellout crowd of 16,664.
MISSING ZUBAC
The 7-foot
Zubac has been an ironman for Los Angeles and this was the first
game he’s missed for two years. Coach Tyronn Lue admitted the
Clippers were down during morning shootaround after hearing that
Zubac wouldn’t play.
Zubac moved
into a more prominent role in these Western Conference finals,
averaging 12.8 points and 11 rebounds in the first four games. He’s
also been important on defense as a rim protector.
The Clippers
went small to replace Zubac in the starting lineup, going with the
6-foot-5 Terance Mann.