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OT: magic beat heat in comeback win
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babyKnicks
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3/3/2011  11:13 PM
MIAMI -- This time, the Orlando Magic started their comeback in plenty of time to beat the Miami Heat.

Down by 24 in the third quarter, the Magic went on an unbelievable 40-9 run over the next 15 minutes and shocked the Heat 99-96 on Thursday night -- Orlando's biggest comeback win of the season, by far.

Jason Richardson scored 24 points for Orlando, 11 of them to kick start the epic burst. Jameer Nelson scored 12 of his 16 in the second half and Dwight Howard finished with 14 points and 18 rebounds for the Magic, who trailed 73-49 after a dunk by LeBron James with 8:57 remaining in the third quarter.

They outscored Miami 50-23 the rest of the way.

Orlando nearly rallied from a 23-point deficit in the final 7.5 minutes when the teams last met early last month, missing a potential game-tying shot in the final seconds that night on its home floor.

So on Thursday, the Magic started rallying much sooner. Miami missed 17-of-22 shots from the field -- and a alarming 7-of-8 from the line -- during Orlando's run, during which Richardson scored 17 points and made all five of his tries from 3-point range.

Ryan Anderson scored 15 and Gilbert Arenas added 11, including a pair of big 3-pointers in the fourth.

James scored 29 and Dwyane Wade had 28 for Miami, which trailed 97-96 with 9.6 seconds left. J.J. Redick pushed the lead to three with a pair of free throws, and Chris Bosh and James missed 3-pointers in the final seconds.

Mike Miller made a 70-footer for Miami moments after the halftime buzzer, something that looked inconsequential when the Heat were leading by 18 at the time.

The final margin? Three points.

And given how the first half went, the loss was nothing short of stunning.

Orlando closed the third quarter on a 22-7 run, pulling to a very manageable 80-71 going into the fourth. The Magic made four 3-pointers in the final 8:40 of the period, three of those by Richardson.

He and the Magic were just getting started, ripping off an 18-2 burst to open the fourth.

In all, over a 15-minute stretch, the Magic made twice as many 3-pointers (eight) than the Heat had field goals of any sort (four). And the Heat, who made their first 17 foul shots of the night, then couldn't get anything to go down.

James made his first 11 shots when the teams last met in Orlando a month ago, so the Magic were quite possibly relieved when his first attempt Thursday bounced harmlessly away.

Ah, a mere temporary blip for the two-time MVP.

James and Wade could have played two-on-five in the first half, and it might not have mattered. The score after 24 minutes: Miami's two biggest stars 47, Magic 45. James wound up making nine straight shots after that first miss -- his streak stretched all the way to the midpoint of the third quarter -- and Wade was 10-for-12 from the field by halftime, as the Heat took a 63-45 edge into the locker room.

And it could have been worse. Miami's lead was 22 before Anderson hit a pair of 3-pointers late in the half, and then Miller swished his desperation shot that didn't count.

The lead reached 73-49 in the third, and the Magic looked anything but interested.

Appearances couldn't have been more deceiving.

As has been the case so many times with Miami this season, things took a quick -- and in this case, downright stunning -- turn.

In the last Heat home game, they wasted a 15-point lead before losing to the New York Knicks. At Orlando a month ago, Miami was up by 23 with 7:40 left before surviving a white-knuckle finish. A 23-point lead in Indiana was all but squandered a couple weeks ago, and there was the stunning 22-point collapse in a home loss to Utah in November.

This might have been the worst of all.

Game notes

The teams split the season series, each going 1-1 at home. ... James was charged with a turnover midway through the third, but the play hurt Bosh more. He inadvertently walked into James' passing lane and took a ball off the face, the pass rolling out of bounds toward the Orlando bench. ... Orlando's biggest comeback this season was a 16-point deficit before beating Dallas.

Let's go Knicks. That's amare
AUTOADVERT
babyKnicks
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3/3/2011  11:14 PM
Maybe beating the heat isn't such a high accolade?
Let's go Knicks. That's amare
nixluva
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3/3/2011  11:24 PM
The Heat have serious issues closing good teams out. I watched the game and the Magic did to them what they did to us. It was a sudden burst of offense and energy and the sustained it long enough to get the win. It was close tho and like our game a play executed here or there and the Magic could've lost. Still for Miami it's a very bad omen for the playoffs, cuz they simply can't beat good teams.

It seems that crazy high level of D they play to start off is good enough to beat down bad teams, but they can't sustain it for 48 minutes against the good teams. Good teams have the ability to adjust and change attack and I think that's part of why the Heat lose. They come out swinging and at 1st they stun you, but good teams are able to weather that early shock and awe and come back in the later rounds. Then the Heat fold. They don't have another gear to go to.

knickstorrents
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3/4/2011  12:10 AM
The Heat don't have a lot of depth... in a 7 game playoff series it will be hard for them to match up to any deep team. They can't really give opposing defenses different looks, so teams can lock down and get comfortable defending them.

Also, they have at least 1 person on the floor who has 0 offensive ability at all times, so defenses can have the person guarding him be a roamer on help defense at all times.

Rose is not the answer.
crzymdups
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3/4/2011  1:14 AM
knickstorrents wrote:The Heat don't have a lot of depth... in a 7 game playoff series it will be hard for them to match up to any deep team. They can't really give opposing defenses different looks, so teams can lock down and get comfortable defending them.

Also, they have at least 1 person on the floor who has 0 offensive ability at all times, so defenses can have the person guarding him be a roamer on help defense at all times.

The Heat and the Knicks are VERY similar teams. Three stars, shallow bench, forced to play defensive specialists with no real offensive ability. I think the Knicks bench is slightly better than the Heat and the Heat stars are slightly better than the Knicks stars. It's a real close matchup. Would make for a fascinating playoffs series.

It does feel like this is where it's all headed - Knicks v Heat Round 1.

¿ △ ?
mreinman
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3/4/2011  1:36 AM
Agree. Definitely close.

I think the Heat are better penetrators and the Knicks have the better low post players - the latter is more suitable for the playoffs.

It would be nice if Jefferies can give us a little of what Joel Anthony brings to the Heat.

so here is what phil is thinking ....
OasisBU
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3/4/2011  8:18 AM
I think the magic have exposed the Heat and the Knicks lack of depth and shown their own resilience. They came from behind against 2 tough teams - both have flaws but it's still impressive. I think the Magic will be in the ECF if they keep this type of play up. I don't like them but I respect what they have.
"If at first you don't succeed, then maybe you just SUCK." Kenny Powers
SlimChin
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3/4/2011  9:41 AM    LAST EDITED: 3/4/2011  9:42 AM
nixluva wrote:The Heat have serious issues closing good teams out. I watched the game and the Magic did to them what they did to us. It was a sudden burst of offense and energy and the sustained it long enough to get the win. It was close tho and like our game a play executed here or there and the Magic could've lost. Still for Miami it's a very bad omen for the playoffs, cuz they simply can't beat good teams.

It seems that crazy high level of D they play to start off is good enough to beat down bad teams, but they can't sustain it for 48 minutes against the good teams. Good teams have the ability to adjust and change attack and I think that's part of why the Heat lose. They come out swinging and at 1st they stun you, but good teams are able to weather that early shock and awe and come back in the later rounds. Then the Heat fold. They don't have another gear to go to.

i think i read somewhere that they're like 5-24 when the score was within 5pts or less. and have they beat any of the elite teams yet? their defense seems to break down when they play against teams with quick pt guards that can score.

Paladin55
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3/6/2011  6:01 PM
Lost to Chicago today after being up by as much as 10 pts. I think James missed the final shot again.

Supposedly 2 players were shedding tears in the locker room, and James made some statement about not letting the team down anymore.

From Twitter:

Surya Fernandez: Spoelstra: "A couple of guys are crying in the locker room." 2 hours ago

Brian Windhorst: Spoelstra said some Heat players are crying in the locker room at the moment. 2 hours ago

From another sport, but now applicable to the Heat:

No man is happy without a delusion of some kind. Delusions are as necessary to our happiness as realities- C.N. Bovee
JrZyHuStLa
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3/6/2011  6:09 PM
Miami has serious issues closing out games, and the Knicks have serious issues playing defense.

I wonder which one would prevail. Would be interesting.

OT: magic beat heat in comeback win

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