Pacers showcasing KO power, by George
Paul George keeps taking care of business.
Last week, he outplayed the NBA's second-leading scorer. On Monday night, George's encore against the league's top scorer was every bit as impressive.
The four-time All-Star scored 21 points, grabbed eight rebounds and rallied the Indiana Pacers from an 11-point halftime deficit to beat the Oklahoma City Thunder 93-90 for their seventh straight win.
"I thought the first half they brought the physicality. It took us until the second half to adjust to it," George said.
"I thought we played stronger defense (in the second half). We got stops - simple basketball."
Indiana's winning streak is its longest in nearly two years, and it has held four straight opponents under 100 points.
Along the way, the Pacers have won four straight at home and have beaten James Harden and Russell Westbrook with defense.
Westbrook was limited to two assists in the final two quarters on Monday.
George, meanwhile, scored 15 points in the second half and helped the Pacers break out of their first-half shooting funk. And when the defense ramped it up after the break, the weary Thunder broke down.
Westbrook had an inefficient 27 points, a season-high 18 rebounds and nine assists. He shot 10 of 27 from the field and 4 of 10 on 3-pointers, including two missed 3s in the final 7.6 seconds when he could have forced overtime.
"The first look Russell got was OK, the second was pretty good," coach Billy Donovan said. "The goal would be for our team to play the way we did in the first half, to try to have a complete game like that."
Instead, Oklahoma City struggled in the second half, giving away a 52-41 halftime lead by midway through the third quarter.
The Pacers then went on a 12-4 run to take a 79-72 advantage early in the fourth and never trailed again.
Indiana led 91-82 with 4:48 to go, but OKC scored eight straight and had a chance to take the lead with 1:39 to play. But Westbrook missed a layup, Steven Adams missed a tip and George answered with an 18-footer.
"He (Westbrook) might have gotten his numbers, but we got the win," Jeff Teague said after scoring 17 points.
The first and second halves were a complete reversal.
After shooting 46.7 percent in the first half, the Thunder shot 30.2 percent in the second half. Indiana shot 30.4 percent in the first half and made 46.3 percent of its shots in the second.
Perhaps the most mystifying stat of the night showed up in the rebounding column: Thunder 61, Pacers 37.
Those numbers usually spell doom for the team on the wrong end of the ledger. Coming into the game, OKC was 11-1 when holding a 10-rebound advantage against opponents. The Thunder only had a 19-15 scoring edge in second-chance points and committed 16 turnovers.
Indiana moved within one win of extending the NBA's longest active streak of consecutive winning seasons at home to 28. The Pacers are 14-4 since Jan 1.
(China Daily 02/08/2017 page24)