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05/19/13 12:10:00
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05/19 00:04 CDT Anthony blocked in 4th as Knicks knocked out
Anthony blocked in 4th as Knicks knocked out
By CLIFF BRUNT
Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- Carmelo Anthony was nearly unstoppable for three quarters.
He faltered in the fourth, and now New York's season is over.
Roy Hibbert's block of Anthony's dunk attempt midway through the fourth quarter
spurred an 11-2 run that rallied the Indiana Pacers to a 106-99 victory over
the Knicks in Game 6 of their second-round series, sending them into their
first Eastern Conference final since 2004.
Anthony finished with 39 points and seven rebounds. He mercilessly attacked
Indiana's Paul George, one of the NBA's best perimeter defenders, scoring 15
points in the third quarter while helping the Knicks erase a 12-point deficit.
The Knicks led 92-90 before Hibbert's stuff.
"That block, that spearheaded that momentum run that they made," Anthony said.
That was the way the quarter went for the NBA's regular-season scoring
champion. He made 2 of 7 shots in the final 12 minutes, scored four points and
committed three turnovers.
"I don't think it was fatigue," Anthony said. "I don't think they made any
adjustments. I know it was one shot, a couple shots that I felt like the ball
was almost in."
New York native Lance Stephenson scored nine points in the run for the Pacers,
finishing with a playoff career-high 25.
With players from both teams standing on the court as the final seconds ticked
off and Pacers fans roaring in appreciation, the sellout crowd wasted little
time breaking into chants of "Beat The Heat!"
For Indiana, it sets up a postseason rematch with the defending NBA champs, the
team that eliminated them last May after the Pacers had taken a 2-1 lead in the
best-of-seven semifinals. The Heat wound up winning Game 4 at Indiana and
followed that with two more wins as Danny Granger struggled with a knee injury.
Indiana used the lessons from that series as motivation to improve this season
and wound up beating the Heat twice at home before losing the third game of the
season series at Miami. The Pacers will return to South Florida for Game 1 on
Wednesday night.
With Granger missing all but five games this season because of the lingering
knee injury, the Pacers put an even greater emphasis on playing defense and it
showed.
Indiana led the league in rebounding, defensive field goal percentage and
defensive 3-point percentage while finishing second in points allowed per game
during the regular season. It was no different in the playoffs, as the Knicks
found out.
New York had another subpar shooting night Saturday, making just 40 percent of
its shots, and again wound up on the wrong side of a 43-36 rebounding
discrepancy. In the paint, New York was outscored 52-20, and Anthony, who
finished with 39 points, scored just four points in the final 12 minutes when
he went 2 of 7 from the field.
Iman Shumpert added 19 points, hitting five 3-pointers, and J.R. Smith scored
15. Nobody else was in double figures.
The combination, as it had been in the previous three losses to Indiana,
produced the same frustrating result.
"They have a hell of a defense. They hold down the paint. They do a great job,
do a hell of a job of controlling the paint, closing it down, making it tough
for guys," Anthony said. "You've got to give them guys credit, especially when
they got a chance to set. Roy Hibbert gets to sit in the paint, causes havoc."
It's not just that.
The biggest question coming into Saturday's game was whether starting point
guard George Hill would play. He took part in the team's morning shootaround,
was cleared by the team doctors and wound up returning two days after missing
Game 5 with a concussion. His return gave the Pacers a big boost.
Hill finished with just 12 points on 2-of-10 shooting but had five rebounds and
four assists, and kept the Pacers composed enough to commit only nine turnovers
_ 10 fewer than Thursday night's loss in New York.
The results showed up everywhere on the floor.
George had 23 points, five rebounds and four assists. David West added 17
points, five rebounds and four assists, and Hibbert finished with 21 points, 12
rebounds and five blocks, none bigger than the stuff on Anthony that changed
the game. Stephenson had 10 rebounds and three assists in his best postseason
game ever.
The reason: He wanted to avoid a trip home.
"I just didn't want to go back to New York and play Game 7," Stephenson said.
"Just get it done with now and I'd do whatever it takes to do that today. It
showed tonight."
The New York native made sure of it.
After George grabbed the rebound off of Hibbert's block, Stephenson took a pass
from West and scored on a layup to tie the score at 92 with 4:51 left in the
game. Stephenson followed that with a steal and drove in for a layup, drawing a
foul and completing a three-point play. After grabbing another rebound and
making two more free throws, West tipped in a miss and Stephenson closed the
decisive spurt with another layup. Suddenly, the Pacers led 101-94 with 1:53 to
go.
New York never got another chance to tie the score or take the lead again
despite making a far more typical 13 of 30 from 3-point range.
"It's tough to go out this way," coach Mike Woodson said. "I didn't make it
happen for us and that's what's disappointing."
The Pacers have a far different goal now as they get ready to face LeBron
James, Dwyane Wade and Miami.
"We're not satisfied with where we're at," coach Frank Vogel said. "We feel
like there's no ceiling on this team this year."
Notes: New York failed to become the ninth team to rally from a 3-1 deficit.
... Indianapolis 500 pole winner Ed Carpenter made the short trip from the
track to Bankers Life Fieldhouse, where he is a regular attendee. ... Colts
coach Chuck Pagano also attended the game. ... The Knicks were 18 of 18 from
the free throw line.
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