Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Miami snaps nine game losing streak to send Washington back under .500 again.
Michael Jordan hip checks Vladamir Stepania in the chest to create more space.
by Fred Schiebel, Head Writer


MIAMI -- The Life of (Pat) Riley ain't what it used to be.

Riding the worst stretch in his coaching career, his Miami Heat pulled out of their collision course with the bottom of the Eastern Conference, if only for a night, defeating the Washington Wizards 90-85 in front of a crowd of 20,118 at the American Airlines Arena, finally putting an end to their neverending nine game losing streak. It was only their fourth win in fifteen tries.

"Finally," Riley said. "We've deserved to win a couple other times before this, but the ball didn't bounce our way. Hopefully this will give us some momentum to start digging ourselves out of this deep hole."

"If you have anything in you, you just continue to fight," Heat forward LaPhonso Ellis said, who had 19 points and seven rebounds in the victory. "You won't see any white flags. There is a sense of urgency to get things going in the right direction."

The Wizards appeared to be wanting to reverse their course back to the wrong one. Basking in the glow of reaching .500 last game against Philly, they came out with another half-hearted attempt at playing defense, letting the offensively-challenged Heat shoot 71 percent in the first quarter.

"They're one of the worst teams in the league on that end," Doug Collins fumed. "But we'll make any team look like a dynasty, for at least a quarter or two."

Riley decided to double team Michael Jordan from the opening tip. Judging from his first basket it appeared the strategy would have no effect, as he hit his first fadeaway jumper with Eddie Jones and Malik Allen draped over him on the baseline. At the end of the period however he had only hit one of five from the field, and the Wizards found themselves down five, 26-21.

The Heat lead extended to nine by the end of the second quarter half, 48-39. Richard Hamilton had 12 points at the break, Jordan 10. Eddie Jones had them both beat, with 14. Ellis, Jordan's man, had 12 points -- hitting all five of his shots.

The Wizards then decided to try to give defense a chance, holding Miami to 33 percent from the field in the second half. Still, the Heat were resilient and held onto most of their advantage, despite Washington shooting 59 percent in the third period. Down the stretch in the fourth quarter the Wizards came close to catching them. Jordan hit two fadeaways in a row -- one on the baseline over Ellis as the shot clock expired, the other on a fastbreak over a scrambling Ellis and Allen defensive gangup, to cut the deficit to a single point, 81-80.

Jordan missed his next two jumpers, and Jones hit a turnaround shot over Hamilton to extend the lead to three. Jordan penetrated to score, but on the other end couldn't keep Ellis in front of him, and was forced to foul with 55.3 seconds left in regulation. Ellis hit both free throws, dimming the Wizards' prospects considerably.

After a timeout, Hamilton missed a jumper, but rookie Kwame Brown got the offensive rebound, passing it to Chris Whitney, who missed the three pointer. Miami took possession, with Jones scoring on a 24 foot right wing three to increase their buffer to six, 88-82, with 16.1 seconds left, sealing the deal.

Jones finished with 29 points, hitting 11 of 18 shots, outdueling Jordan despite no one playing up this particular matchup. Jordan was still solid, leading the Wizards with 24 points. Hamilton scored 20 points.

"They're a real hungry team at the moment, and a hungry team is a dangerous team," Jordan said. "We've channeled that same hunger ourselves. I tried to communicate that to our guys, but it seemed to fall on deaf ears."

Maybe they're deaf from all the yelling he did during their own six game losing streak.

Was-MiaG15Box

Final1st2nd3rd4thTotal
Washington2118242285
Miami2622212190

WashingtonREBOUNDS 
PLAYERMINFGFT3PTOFFTOTASTPFSTTOPTS
Michael Jordan3811-242-20-204352124
Christian Laettner384-102-30-006314110
Jahidi White340-00-00-02604010
Richard Hamilton3610-170-00-003231220
Chris Whitney356-110-02-500334214
Brendan Haywood150-20-00-01351000
Courtney Alexander122-60-00-01411004
Hubert Davis133-40-01-11382017
Popeye Jones40-00-00-01100010
Kwame Brown163-50-00-01312006
Tyronn LueDNP - Coach's Decision
Etan ThomasDNP - Coach's Decision
Totals24039-794-53-8630262211985
Percentages: FG - .456, FT - .800, 3PT - .375. Team rebounds: 7. Blocked shots: 2 (J. White 1, K. Brown 1). Technicals: 1 (B. Haywood 1).

MiamiREBOUNDS 
PLAYERMINFGFT3PTOFFTOTASTPFSTTOPTS
Malik Allen332-52-20-04641026
LaPhonso Ellis357-125-60-147011319
Alonzo Mourning354-84-60-0111000112
Anthony Carter301-60-00-10050252
Eddie Jones3611-185-62-339211129
Vladimir Stepania131-10-00-00200002
Eddie House121-80-01-51410003
Chris Gatling152-40-00-00201004
Rod Strickland184-92-20-111300110
Tang HamiltonDNP - Coach's Decision
Sean MarksDNP - Coach's Decision
Sam Mack131-31-20-10111102
Totals24034-7419-243-12144316551390
Percentages: FG - .459, FT - .792, 3PT - .250. Team rebounds: 9. Blocked shots: 3 (M. Allen 2, V. Stepania 1). Technicals: 2 (E. House 1, Head Coach Riley).

Officials: Ron Garretson, Ron Olesiak, Jason Phillips.
Attendance: 20,118. Time: 2:03.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Six-time MVP Jordan gets the upper hand in first duel with current reigning MVP Iverson, as Washington beats Philly to inch up to .500.
Matt Harpring couldn't find a way to stop Michael Jordan,, even with help.

by Fred Schiebel, Head Writer


PHILADELPHIA -- Another young star, another victim.

Michael Jordan once again walked into a showdown and got the better of his opponent, leading the Washington Wizards to victory over MVP Allen Iverson and Eastern Conference champions the Philadelphia 76ers on their home floor on Sunday, 88-73. The win boosted Washington's record to 7-7 -- impressive, considering their difficult 0-6 start to the season.

"You people [reporters] are idiots," Philadelphia coach Larry Brown said."Here is a guy that hasn't played in three years and he completely controled the game. Because the team hadn't won people put the finger on him. I don't see them putting the finger on a lot of other guys who's teams are winning. I can't imagine anyone taking three years off and playing at his level.”

At first it looked like the battle might end up being an embarrassment, the kind of display that many Jordan fans feared when he announced his latest comeback. Iverson came out with guns blazing, hitting four of his first six shots for ten immediate points, raining jumpers from everywhere on the court. Jordan tried to answer back, but connected on a mere one of his first seven attempts.

"He [Iverson} definitely was looking to prove himself," coach Doug Collins said. "It felt like he was going to score 50 on us."

The real shock: Sixer small forward Matt Harpring -- i.e. the man Jordan was supposed to be guarding -- had ten points too, abusing him with what appeared to be a huge speed advantage, something that may have been due to the Wizards playing the 2nd game of a back-to-back.

"In all honesty, I am a little worn down," Jordan said. "But give him credit, he's a lot faster than most people probably assume, even me."

Up by seven, Sixer guard Aaron McKie hit a three pointer at the buzzer to extend the lead to double digits at the end of the first twelve minutes, 27-17.

Jordan located his shot in the second stanza, hitting four of six field shots. The Wizards recovered mostly due to their bench, however. Tyronn Lue, fresh off the injured list showed no signs of rust, scoring ten points in the second period. His benchmate, Courtney Alexander, also had ten points, missing only one of his five attempt. By halftime the deficit was cut to three, 48-45, Jordan scoring 10 points for the cause, while Iverson had 16 points for the enemy.

The Wizards sprung ahead in the third, holding Philadelphia to a mere 11 points and only a 25 percent shooting mark. Iverson, who had made half of his shots in the first 24 minutes (while Jordan was 5 of 13), was much less effective making only two of nine. Jordan hit three of four, and Washington found itself in the driver's seat, 65-59.

In a surprising development, Lue did not guard Iverson in the second quarter, but instead was placed on another Sixer speedster, backup point guard Speedy Claxton. Lue got the tougher assignment in the fourth, at least at the beginning. More surprisingly, he got the better of Iverson himself, who appeared fatigued, as Lue blew by him a couple times for layups, adding another eight points for a total of 18 in his first game back.

Then, a key stretch: Collins subbed Richard Hamilton in to take Iverson, but not before pounding his finger into Hamilton's chest telling him to focus everything he had to stop the league's MVP. The next play, with the Wizards up 78-71, Iverson drove lane. Hamilton stayed attached, disrupting the shot for a miss. On the fastbreak to the other end, Hamilton found Iverson on him and took advantage of the mismatch making the layup and getting hacked to up Washington's lead to ten.

The next play, Jordan sealed the deal. Hamilton missed a twenty foot jumper, but Wizard forward Christian Laettner got the offensive rebound. He found Jordan alone, set up for a corner three. Although he had only made one of his first eight attempts from behind the line so far this season, he swished this one, giving the Wizards a near insurmountable 84-71 advantage.

"I've been practicing since I missed that one in Indiana," Jordan said, smiling, referring to his last second three point attempt that would've been the gamewinner if it had went in.

The invidual battle between Iverson and Jordan was close, but most would probably say the 38 year old was slightly better, despite Iverson scoring more (28 points, to Jordan's 23) and grabbing 10 rebounds. Jordan shot better and was a key performer in the fourth quarter when it mattered most.

Perhaps the real MVP was the Wizards' defense -- they held the Sixers to a scant 25 points in the second half, 73 points total -- their best showing on that end of the court this year.

"We really wanted this game badly, as a unit," Jordan said. "Knowing how good of a defensive team they are, we knew that we had to bring a lot of effort to match their intensity. Hopefully we can do this every night, not just when we have an opportunity to get back to .500. I'm really proud of our progress."

Wins starting to pile up for what was a serial loser of a team. The current MVP, outplayed. Suddenly his latest comeback is not only looking respectable, he may just somehow find a way to top himself yet again.

Was-PhiG14Box

Final1st2nd3rd4thTotal
Washington1728202388
Philadelphia2721111473

WashingtonREBOUNDS 
PLAYERMINFGFT3PTOFFTOTASTPFSTTOPTS
Michael Jordan3711-220-01-116422423
Christian Laettner310-21-20-041421001
Jahidi White191-30-00-03630002
Chris Whitney204-61-21-200102110
Richard Hamilton337-192-20-017122116
Tyronn Lue238-130-02-401011018
Brendan Haywood241-10-00-00512112
Hubert Davis132-80-00-50031004
Popeye Jones220-40-00-03921110
Kwame Brown10-00-00-00100000
Courtney Alexander185-72-20-012210112
Etan ThomasDNP - Coach's Decision
Tyrone NesbyDNP - Coach's Decision
Totals24039-856-84-12125119119988
Percentages: FG - .456, FT - .750, 3PT - .333. Team rebounds: 3. Blocked shots: 1 (C. Laettner ). Technicals: 1 (Whitney Philadelphia - Iverson.).

PhiladelphiaREBOUNDS 
PLAYERMINFGFT3PTOFFTOTASTPFSTTOPTS
Matt Harpring328-140-00-204011016
Derrick Coleman364-110-00-11612218
Dikembe Mutombo420-60-00-031211020
Aaron McKie313-91-21-30080038
Allen Iverson4812-282-22-4310321128
Raja Bell172-40-00-01311004
Corie Blount112-20-00-01300004
Speedy Claxton172-50-00-00020024
Damone Brown60-21-20-00000100
Vonteego CummingsDNP - Coach's Decision
Tim JamesDNP - Coach's Decision
Totals24033-814-63-109381674973
Percentages: FG - .407, FT - .667, 3PT - .300. Team rebounds: 8. Blocked shots: 3 (D. Coleman 1, A. McKie 1, C. Blount 1).

Officials: Hue Hollins, ,.
Attendance: 20,931. Time: 2:23.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

After allowing Cleveland to score 34 points in the first quarter, Washington holds them to 58 for the final three, capturing their sixth win in their last seven games.
Michael Jordan was ready to spring into action again against the Cavs.

by Fred Schiebel, Head Writer


CLEVELAND - He's won just about every time he's played here, and Tuesday wasn't any different.

Michael Jordan was back in town (and in uniform) once again, doling out his latest slice of misery to the area, as the Washington Wizards toppled the Cleveland Cavaliers 96-92 in front of a sellout crowd at Gund Arena -- knocking the Cavs back down under .500, sending them back to the place in standings hell that they've seen way too much of the past few years.

"I've always enjoyed playing here, and tonight was no exception," said Jordan, who was in vintage form for the matchup, scoring 33 points, grabbing six rebounds, and dishing out seven assists. "We haven't been playing well on the road, and we were determined to change that."

Cleveland fans appeared more encouraging to Jordan this time around. When he swished his signature fadeaway a little bit past the free throw line for his first shot of the game, the crowd cheered.

"I don't blame them," Cavs coach John Lucas said. "It's a beautiful shot. Although when I'm playing against him, I find it a lot more beautiful when he misses."

He didn't miss much in the first quarter, scoring nine points on four of six field goal attempts. The Cavs as a whole however were even better, shooting a whopping 76% from the field. Cleveland starters Andre Miller, Wesley Person, Lamond Murray, and Chris Mihm all had six points each, to take an early 34-21 advantage.

"I'm surprised I didn't pull all my hair out," Wizards coach Doug Collins said. "Just a completely lackadaisical effort. Luckily we woke up and strapped it on."

The Wizards held the Cavs to a 35 percent mark in the 2nd, but only shaved three points off the deficit, ending up going into halftime down 55-45. Jordan had 15 points at that point. Cavs forwards Jumaine Jones and Murray had 10 points and three rebounds each.

Washington made its big move in the third. In the opening minutes they exploded out of the gates with an 8-0 run to narrow the score to 55-53. Alas Cleveland retaliated, going back up by eight again just a couple minutes later. Backed by Jordan, who scored 13 points in the period, the Wizards whittled down the deficit once more. A Brendan Haywood jumper from the free throw line with the shot clock expiring (his first basket of his NBA career) sliced the lead to a point, and the Wizards found themselves heading into the fourth only down three, 69-66.

Finally Washington caught up with them in the fourth on a three pointer by Hubert Davis. A couple of minutes later Jordan screened and dished to Davis again for another to take their first lead of the game, 82-81. Miller couldn't convert on a drive to the hoop, and Davis then hit a fifteen footer from the free throw line in transition to boost the lead to three. An eventual Miller jumper sliced the lead back to one.

Wizard Richard Hamilton then got fouled on a drive, making the score 88-85. After a stop, Jordan hit an 18 foot baseline jumper to bump the lead to five, with 2:12 remaining on the clock. Cleveland appeared to lose their composure at this point, hoisting up a wild shot then looking scattered getting back on defense. Hamilton took advantage of the disarray, gliding in for an easy layup, upping Washington's lead to seven, 92-85, with less than two minutes to go

As is often the case, the Wizards got in their own way once more, as Popeye Jones fouled Jumaine Jones on a three point shot. Jones made two of the three free throws, and Cleveland launched an aggressive trap afterwards. Jordan broke it, cutting to the hole for the basket and the foul, but failed to convert the three point play, leaving the score at a still rather comfortable 94-87 with a little over a minute to play.

Things got much tighter when Jumaine Jones hit a three to cut the deficit to only four seconds later.

"Yeah, I was worried we were about to give this one away," Jordan said. "I told the team, fight with everything you've got, we're still in the driver's seat. It was still our game to win or lose."

Jordan found Davis for a jumper on the other end, extending the lead to six. Hamilton then fouled Person on another 3 point attempt with 24.3 seconds to go, sending Collins screaming to his knees. Person only hit two at the charity stripe, meaning the Cavs would need at least two possessions to tie or win the game, essentially killing the Cavs' chances at that point with so little time left.

"I think I'm going to have to dedicate an entire practice to just defending last-second jumpers," Collins said. "Golly. We probably would've already broken the record for fouls on jump shots for a season, if they ever kept that stat."

It's probably not the worst fault this young team has. If it is, the future looks rosy indeed.

Was-CleG13Box

Final1st2nd3rd4thTotal
Washington2124213096
Cleveland3421142392

WashingtonREBOUNDS 
PLAYERMINFGFT3PTOFFTOTASTPFSTTOPTS
Michael Jordan3814-285-70-216720233
Christian Laettner272-63-40-01702027
Jahidi White180-10-00-02300000
Richard Hamilton304-105-60-016520113
Chris Whitney193-40-01-10220127
Popeye Jones232-60-00-02722014
Hubert Davis306-90-03-401921115
Kwame Brown50-00-00-00200000
Courtney Alexander185-120-00-113110110
Brendan Haywood241-11-20-01804003
Etan ThomasDNP - Coach's Decision
Tyrone Nesby102-50-10-00110004
Totals24039-8214-204-8946271521096
Percentages: FG - .476, FT - .700, 3PT - .500. Team rebounds: 14. Blocked shots: 6 (B. Haywood 2, J. White 1, M. Jordan 1, K. Brown 1, P. Jones 1).

ClevelandREBOUNDS 
PLAYERMINFGFT3PTOFFTOTASTPFSTTOPTS
Jumaine Jones349-192-51-1412031121
Lamond Murray435-173-41-314214014
Chris Mihm314-80-00-02501008
Andre Miller407-130-00-0011421214
Wesley Person357-152-30-305132016
Michael Doleac153-62-40-03901008
Brian Skinner151-20-00-02621002
Ricky Davis182-71-20-00212005
Trajan Langdon91-52-20-20000004
Jeff TrepagnierDNP - Coach's Decision
DeSagana DiopDNP - Coach's Decision
Bimbo ColesDNP - Coach's Decision
Totals24039-9212-202-9124420148392
Percentages: FG - .424, FT - .600, 3PT - .220. Team rebounds: 6. Blocked shots: 2 (L. Murray 2).

Officials: Jim Capers, Gary Benson, Bernie Fryer.
Attendance: 20,562. Time: 1:54.

Friday, November 25, 2011

Washington dismantles 1st place Boston on their home turf, handing them only their 2nd loss of the season; the Pierce-Jordan rematch thrills much more than their first showdown, but falls a bit short of a classic.


Michael Jordan and the Wizarda were intensely focused against the Celtics Saturday night.
by Fred Schiebel, Head Writer
 
WASHINGTON - If the Wizards do end up winning enough games to snag one of the lower-tiered playoff spots, they might already know which of the best teams they would like to face in the first round.


The Wizards got their revenge against the Boston Celtics last night at the MCI Center, doling out a 97-82 beatdown to the top team in the Eastern Conference. Unlike their last bout, which the Celtics barely held on to win at home, this time there was an absolute clear-cut winner.

"We definitely remembered what happened up there, it hasn't been that long," Michael Jordan said. "That particular loss hurt a lot, and obviously we wanted to get one back on them."

Jordan had 18 points on 8 of 14 shooting from the field in only 31 minutes, due to the one-sidedness of the contest. Although a bit close to call, he also got the best of his individual matchup with young rival Paul Pierce, who scored 20 points (10-22 FGs), working only 27 minutes himself. While it may have been nice if they could've played a full game (not to mention one that was closer), the battle was much more entertaining than their previous encounter.

The home crowd was with Jordan from the get-go, and went absolutely insane midway through the first quarter when he swatted a Pierce jumper. A Jordan fadeaway in the key not too long after kept the momentum going. At the end of the period the Wizards were up by four when point guard Hubert Davis, who realized he had taken too much time walking the ball up on the final possession, had to hurry into the frontcourt to get a shot up. His three pointer swished at the buzzer, extending Washington's advantage to seven.

"That's when I got the feeling it was their night," Pierce said. "I knew it was going to take a lot to beat them."

Jordan hit three of four of his shot attempts in the first twelve minutes, scoring six points. Pierce hit on only two of seven, for four.

While the Wizards extended their lead at the half to nine points, by that time Pierce had the edge. He poured in ten points in the second quarter, totaling 16 points in the first 24 minutes. Jordan had 10 points, but had only shot six times, and had yet to visit the free throw line.

"Our offense as a whole was being very effective," Jordan said. "I didn't want to get caught up in any individual battles. The team didn't need me to score, so I didn't force the issue."

In the third quarter Jordan's veteran wiles provided the keys to the team and individual matchup victory. At the 10:43 mark, Pierce got tagged with his third foul of the game. Taking note of this, Jordan drove hard on the next possession, goading Pierce into a fourth personal, and a seat on the bench for awhile.

"What can I say, he got me," Pierce said. "Next time, I can tell you without a doubt, he definitely won't get me again."

With Pierce out of the game, Jordan picked apart his replacement, young Kedrick Brown, scoring eight points. The Celtic offense struggled -- rookie Joe Johnson did his best to stem the tide, scoring nine points himself. But by the start of the fourth quarter the score was 79-64, as the game got still further away from Boston.

The Wizard bench put together another impressive couple of minutes, and that was all that was needed. Courtney Alexander drove and got fouled, converting two free throws. Hubert Davis then hit two three pointers in a row. Suddenly Washington's lead was 20, and what was left of the wind in Boston's sails was not amounting to a whole lot. From that point they never again threatened to make a serious run..

Top draft pick Kwame Brown got his most extensive playing time minutes of the season, 17 minutes -- but only attempted one shot.

"We're not looking for a whole lot of offense out of Kwame," coach Doug Collins said. "We want him to chase down loose balls, give us some good defense. I liked how he played tonight."

Washington's bench outscored Boston's, 53-14. Four Wizard reserves ended up in double figures: Courtney Alexander (14 points), Chris Whitney (12 points), Hubert Davis finished with 11, and Popeye Jones had 10. Boston's other superstar, forward Antoine Walker, was held to only twelve points, connecting on a mere 3 of 19 shots.

"This was a fantastic game for us, without a doubt," Collins said. "To beat one of the best teams in the league AND get Michael some rest? It couldn't have gone much better even if I was allowed to write the script."

Let's hope Paul Pierce doesn't get the pen next time.

Bos-WasG12Box

Final1st2nd3rd4thTotal
Boston2220221882
Washington2922281897



td>



BostonREBOUNDS 
PLAYERMINFGFT3PTOFFTOTASTPFSTTOPTS
Paul Pierce2710-220-00-159150220
Antoine Walker373-196-60-546231112
Tony Battie361-42-20-06871004
Kenny Anderson377-150-00-101711014
Joe Johnson337-113-31-215013018
Eric Williams71-20-00-00100002
Erick Strickland150-110-00-51200010
Vitaly Potapenko162-80-00-03401214
Mark Blount50-00-00-00000000
Walter McCarty92-30-00-02301004
Kedrick Brown142-50-00-02510214
Joeseph Forte40-10-00-00000100
Totals
24035-10111-111-142444111310682
Percentages: FG - .347, FT - 1.000, 3PT - .071. Team rebounds: 7. Blocked shots: 9 (K. Brown 3, V. Potapenko 2, P. Pierce 1, J. Johnson 1, K. Anderson 1). Technicals: 1 (Defensive Three).

WashingtonREBOUNDS 
PLAYERMINFGFT3PTOFFTOTASTPFSTTOPTS
Michael Jordan318-142-20-115502218
Christian Laettner314-40-10-041120018
Jahidi White130-10-00-01200000
Richard Hamilton298-212-20-005320118
Chris Whitney295-80-02-2011122212
Popeye Jones145-70-00-013010110
Hubert Davis194-70-03-400530511
Kwame Brown170-10-00-01603130
Courtney Alexander206-122-20-014300014
Bobby Simmons10-10-00-00000000
Tyrone Nesby162-40-00-00111014
Etan Thomas211-20-10-03601002
Totals24043-826-95-71244301351697
Percentages: FG - .524, FT - .667, 3PT - .714. Team rebounds: 4. Blocked shots: 8 (M. Jordan 3, E. Thomas 2, C. Laettner 1, C. Alexander 1, H. Davis 1).

Officials: .
Attendance: 20,674. Time: 2:01.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Jordan misses shot at buzzer that would've delivered the win; rookie Jamaal Tinsley sets Indiana record in assists.

The real star: Jamaal Tinsley goes up for one of his rare shot attempts against Chris Whitney.  He had a franchise record 25 assists.

by Fred Schiebel, Head Writer


INDIANAPOLIS -- It felt like one of those magic moments he's so famous for delivering in, time and time again.

This time Michael Jordan wasn't able to come through to add another to his collection, missing a 24-foot three point attempt with 1.4 seconds to go that would've given the Wizards the victory over the Indiana Pacers Thursday night. Instead they fell, 98-96, in front of a crowd of over 18,000 Pacer fans that afterward almost sounded as if they were depressed they didn't lose.

"Our hearts were in our throats when he got it up... we thought for sure it was going in," Indiana coach Isiah Thomas said. "But it was a shot we'd like to have him take if he's got to take one, and lucky for us he missed."

"I got a pretty good look, but I had to rush it to beat the clock," Jordan said. "What can I say, it didn't go down. I haven't made every last-second shot I've attempted, and there will probably be others that I miss in the future."

He may have been too tired to take it. The Pacers upped the tempo even higher than most Washington opponents have tried to play at, a tatic applied specifically to wear Jordan down. They took 109 shots as a team, running and pushing the ball whenever they could. Looking at Jordan's stat line, the strategy didn't appear too effective -- he scored 28 points on 13 of 28 shooting, although he did have five turnovers, a category he's been struggling with so far this young season.

One of those turnovers came late in the game, as a group of Pacers ganged up on him, stealing the ball and delivering it to Jermaine O' Neal on the other end for a hook shot in the post to tie the game back up at 94-94. Jordan came right back with a drive and fade around the basket, giving the Wizards the edge again, 96-94, with 30.7 seconds left in regulation. O'Neal came through in the clutch once more however, hitting a fifteen foot jumper to tie the game.

The Wizards couldn't score on their next possession, as Courtney Alexander tried to complete a hero drive and took a terrible shot as he was swarmed in traffic. Then, on the other end, O' Neal got fouled by Popeye Jones with 1.4 seconds to go, and he converted the two free throws that ended up deciding the game.

"No, I didn't have too much of a problem with that play," Wizard coach Doug Collins said. "Unlike about all the other fouls we've given in the last seconds of close games this year, this one wasn't on a jump shot. I thought it was a little ticky-tack myself, but what can you do."

The Wizards had a terrible first half, shooting a horrid 29 percent from the field and only scoring 33 points. On the plus side, they did hold Indiana to only 42. Hamilton found himself dealing with the same shooting woes that plagued him earlier in the season, going only 2 for 15 from the field in the first 24 minutes.

Most media painted this contest as Michael vs. Reggie. It turned out Jalen Rose was a much bigger factor, scoring 21 points before halftime, finishing with a dominant 38 points and 9 rebounds, getting the best of his matchup at small forward with Jordan.

"I was here in '98 too," Rose said, referring to the Pacers loss in seven games to the Bulls in the conference finals that year. I wasn't the player I am now, but I was here. That loss might've been the toughest of my career to deal with, even worse than the Finals because it was so close. So I wanted to show him [Jordan] how much I've grown since the last time we played against each other."

Reggie Miller had a slow start, making only 2 of 12 shots in the first half, but had compiled 27 points by game's end. O'Neal had 13 points and 10 rebounds. Lost in the glare of the MJ spotlight: rookie Jamaal Tinsley had 25 assists, breaking the Pacers' franchise record of 20 set by Don Buse in 1976, and tying the record for an NBA rookie held by Ernie DiGregorio and Nate McMillan. Even he couldn't keep the focus on himself.

"I'll never forget this," Tinsley said. "I don't know how to say the words. To play against one of the best players to ever play the game ... I just tried to play hard."*

For the Wizards reserve Courtney Alexander had one of his best games since the season opener, scoring 18 points in 18 minutes of playing time. Hamilton only finished with nine points on 4 of 17 shooting.

"We didn't play too well, but they're one of the best teams in the league right now, excelling at a real high level at the moment," Jordan said. "All in all it was a tough loss, but it's better that we competed with them for 48 minutes rather than fall back in the fourth quarter like we have done in the past."

Jinx?



* - Tinsley actually did break the Pacer record in this game (with 23, not 25 assists); his quote is what he actually said.

Was-IndG11 Box

Final1st2nd3rd4thTotal
Washington1716263796
Indiana2418253198

WashingtonREBOUNDS 
PLAYERMINFGFT3PTOFFTOTASTPFSTTOPTS
Michael Jordan3913-282-20-108201528
Christian Laettner364-110-00-011012218
Jahidi White210-20-00-03501000
Richard Hamilton324-171-20-02423009
Chris Whitney254-110-01-30071239
Popeye Jones173-40-10-02431006
Hubert Davis234-101-11-300520210
Kwame Brown82-20-10-02501004
Etan Thomas140-10-00-01600000
Courtney Alexander188-122-20-013210118
Tyrone Nesby82-30-00-02410104
Bobby SimmonsDNP - Coach's Decision
Totals24044-1016-92-61451231261296
Percentages: FG - .436, FT - .667, 3PT - .333. Team rebounds: 3. Blocked shots: 9 (M. Jordan 3, C. Laettner 2, E. Thomas 1, H. Davis 1, K. Brown 1, P. Jones 1).

IndianaREBOUNDS 
PLAYERMINFGFT3PTOFFTOTASTPFSTTOPTS
Jermaine O'Neal395-123-40-0610221113
Jalen Rose4018-351-21-249002138
Jeff Foster353-50-20-041411106
Reggie Miller4612-352-21-4313013027
Jamaal Tinsley381-90-00-111252242
Austin Croshere93-40-00-00101006
Primoz Brezec131-30-00-01611012
Jonathan Bender83-40-00-00101006
Jamison Brewer120-20-00-00021000
Al HarringtonDNP - Sprained Right Ankle
Carlos RogersDNP - Coach's Decision
Bruno SundovDNP - Coach's Decision
Totals24043-1096-102-7195732109798
Percentages: FG - .394, FT - .600, 3PT - .286. Team rebounds: 4. Blocked shots: 4 (J. O'Neal 2, J. Rose 1, J. Foster 1).

Officials: Ken Mauer, Hue Hollins, Phil Robinson.
Attendance: 18,345. Time: 2:14.