RECAP | BOX SCORE | GAME FLOW MIAMI (AP) By the third quarter, frustrated fans were booing
the home team. Early in the fourth quarter, they were streaming for
the exits. And as the game ended, the Charlotte Hornets celebrated.
| | Charlotte players, from left, Eddie Robinson, Baron Davis and Elden Campbell, can't be any more happy now that they're 2-0 and heading home.
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It was all an improbable repeat of Game 1 Monday night as
Charlotte earned another 26-point victory over the hapless Miami
Heat, winning 102-76 for a 2-0 lead in the best-of-five series.
Jamal Mashburn again tormented his former team and fans, trading
barbs with Tim Hardaway and Dan Majerle, sticking out his tongue at
hecklers in the crowd and scoring 22 points. David Wesley added 18
and Baron Davis 17.
"Everybody else has been a little surprised; we haven't,"
Mashburn said. "We're a loose bunch and a close-knit group. That
comes alive in the playoffs."
Charlotte broke open the 106-80 victory Saturday with a 20-2 run
to start the second half. This time it was a 24-5 run after
halftime to make the score 78-57.
Charlotte held Miami to seven points in the third quarter -- a
franchise playoff record for both teams.
In successive games, the Heat have endured their two most
lopsided setbacks of the season and their two most lopsided home
playoff defeats.
"Are we really playing that bad, or are they playing that
good?" Miami forward Anthony Mason said. "I don't know."
The Hornets need one more victory to reach the second round of
the playoffs for only the third time since the franchise was
founded in 1988. Game 3 is Friday at Charlotte, where Miami is 0-2
this season.
"We have to gather ourselves," Heat coach Pat Riley said.
"Thank God we have four days. Even though it's a daunting task in
front of us, it's been done before."
Five teams have rallied from an 0-2 deficit to win a
best-of-five series, most recently Denver against Seattle in 1994.
"Anybody who knows Pat Riley knows it's not over," Mashburn
said.
"We have to be desperate," Hardaway said. "We're still a
better team."
Hardaway again started despite a bruised left foot and again
failed to keep up with the Hornets' quicker guards. He scored two
points in 19 minutes, and by the third period fans were chanting
for rookie point guard Eddie House to replace him.
Adding injury to injury, Alonzo Mourning played with back spasms
that had him wincing and stretching on the floor when he was out of
the game. He had nine points and four rebounds in 26 minutes.
It was Mourning's 15th game in a comeback from kidney disease,
and the storybook ending he had hoped for looks increasingly
unlikely.
"We haven't gotten it done," Mourning said. "We have to find
a way to win three games. It's not impossible."
The crowd showed no sympathy toward the Heat. Boos were even
louder than Saturday, including a chorus of jeers from the few
spectators left when the game ended.
Mashburn, relishing the chance to show up the team that traded
him last August, enjoyed the final five minutes from the bench. He
got the Hornets off to a good start with 12 points in the opening
period.
"We have no problem scoring, getting easy baskets and getting
the ball inside," Mashburn said.
The Hornets led only 54-52 at halftime before Mashburn scored
four baskets to spark their run at the start of the second half.
The Heat committed five turnovers and missed 11 of 13 shots to
begin the half.
"They looked like a team that was out of sync and didn't have
any answers," Davis said.
Riley said the biggest difference in the two teams has been
shooting -- Charlotte is hot, Miami is not. The Heat relied largely
on perimeter attempts and went 6-for-22 on 3-point tries. The
Hornets, repeatedly slashing to the basket, shot 45 percent and
outscored Miami 30-8 at the free-throw line.
Said Riley: "Their accuracy, our inaccuracy and their play have
taken our heart right now."
Game notes The Heat allowed 100 points in only eight regular-season
games, but Charlotte has reached that milestone twice. ... VIPs in
the crowd included actor Cuba Gooding Jr., Hall of Fame coach Don
Shula and Minnesota Vikings receiver Cris Carter. ... Miami's A.C.
Green, who has played in an NBA record 1,192 consecutive games,
entered the game with 7:18 left. The streak is unaffected by the
playoffs. ... Charlotte has scored at least 23 points in every
quarter. Send this story to a friend | Most sent stories
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ALSO SEE NBA Scoreboard
Hornets' Mashburn enjoys burning former Heat teammates
RECAPS
AUDIO/VIDEO
Baron Davis gets the rebound and finds David Wesley for a 3-pointer. avi: 455 k RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN Cable Modem
Eddie Jones gets hot from 3-point land for the Heat. avi: 913 k RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN Cable Modem
Paul Silas says everyone is contributing for the Hornets. wav: 122 k RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
Jamal Mashburn says the Hornets are playing hard every game. wav: 138 k RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
Pat Riley and the Heat are getting beat by good shooting from the Hornets. wav: 122 k RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
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