RECAP
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BOX SCORE
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GAME FLOW
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) Jamal Mashburn and the Charlotte Hornets
had the last laugh. Pat Riley and the Miami Heat are headed for
another long offseason.
| | Eddie Robinson (14 points Friday) and the Hornets outscored Miami by 67 points in the three-game series. |
Mashburn, acquired from Miami in a nine-player offseason deal,
got the best of his former team by scoring 21 points to lead the
headband-wearing Hornets to a 94-79 victory Friday night to
complete a stunning three-game sweep.
"Sure, it's gratifying," said Mashburn, who set personal
playoff bests with nine rebounds and eight assists.
"I'm not going to sit here and lie and say I didn't want to do this the whole series. I did want to sweep them and prove a point and I think I proved it."
Baron Davis also scored 21 in front of a raucous crowd of
22,283, and Miami was eliminated in the first round of the playoffs
for the fourth time in Riley's six years as the Heat's coach.
Charlotte won the three games by a total of 67 points, and held
Miami to a record-low 235 for the series. The old record for fewest
points in a three-game playoff series was 239.
"It was no contest; we were outcoached, outran, outjumped, everything," Riley said.
"I'm like a basketball coach-aholic that bottoms out. I need to find a 12-step program, that's how I look at it. I'm going to have to do some real deep, deep searching here on how this game has got to be played for the Miami Heat to go forward."
Mashburn averaged 23.6 points in the series and was a record
25-for-25 on free throws to carry the Hornets into the second
round of the playoffs for the third time in franchise history.
They've never been to the Eastern Conference finals.
Mashburn shattered the mark for most free throws made without a
miss in a three-game playoff series. Kiki Vandeweghe went 18-for-18
from the line for Denver against Phoenix in 1982.
Mashburn took much of the blame for Miami's past playoff failures. After the trade, which sent Anthony Mason and Eddie Jones to Miami, some of Mashburn's ex-teammates said the Heat would be better without him.
"His defense, his intensity, everything was just on a whole other level these three games," Davis said. "He really wanted to beat them and we fed of his passion and desire."
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That was just overwhelming. Hopefully a love affair is going to develop with this team the way it did in the early years. ” |
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— Hornets coach Paul Silas |
The Hornets, who wore headbands throughout the series to show
team unity, took a double-digit lead early in the second quarter
Friday and built it to 27 at halftime.
"There's power in the headbands, no doubt," Davis said. "When
you see a 13-year veteran agree to wear a headband, that means
something. It shows this team is together, playing as one and we
were for 12 quarters of basketball."
It did wonders for the city of Charlotte, which had been blase
about the Hornets all season and barely blinked when the franchise
filed for relocation to Memphis last month.
But for Game 3 against the Heat, fans wearing headbands including singer Darius Rucker from the band Hootie and the Blowfish arrived early carrying brooms and towels in the first
true sellout of the season.
A year ago, just over 11,000 turned out for Charlotte's first-round playoff series against Philadelphia.
Fans were on their feet from the start Friday and were chanting
"Sweep! Sweep!" by the time P.J. Brown who also arrived from
Miami in the trade hit two free throws to give the Hornets a
27-point lead right before halftime.
"That was just overwhelming," Hornets coach Paul Silas said. "Hopefully a love affair is going to develop with this team the way it did in the early years."
Former Hornets player Eddie Jones, booed every time he touched
the ball, led Miami with 22 points.
"I felt like we were the better team, better conditioned and
better physically then they are," Jones said. "They seemed like
they were the team playing down two games to zero. They did
everything right and we didn't do anything right."
Tim Hardaway, ineffective in the first two games because of a
bruised left foot, didn't play for Miami. The Heat used a
combination of Anthony Carter and rookie Eddie House in his place.
Davis scored 14 in the first half six on flying dunks and David Wesley had 12 as the Hornets took a 58-31 lead at the break.
Miami struggled to get the ball inside to its powerful frontline
of Alonzo Mourning, Mason two former Hornets and Brian
Grant until the result was decided.
The trio was held to a combined 31 points in the game.
Mourning, playing in his 16th game after missing most of the
season with kidney disease, had 12 points and nine rebounds.
"I don't have any idea at all why this turned out the way it
turned out," Mourning said. "With a healthy Miami Heat team, it
would have been a totally different story."
Game notes Hardaway sat on Charlotte's bench during the pregame
shootaround, silently staring as the Hornets warmed up. ... Fans
sitting near Riley waved a sign that said "Nice Trade, Pat" and
another that listed the stats of the principles in the trade. ...
Charlotte's only other two sellouts this season had 4,000 fewer
fans because the Hornets had tarps over the "least desirable"
seats until the playoffs.
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ALSO SEE
NBA Scoreboard
Miami Clubhouse
Charlotte Clubhouse
Hornets-Heat Series Page
RECAPS
Charlotte 94 Miami 79
AUDIO/VIDEO
Jamal Mashburn hits Elden Cambell with the behind-the-back pass for the easy jam.
avi: 798 k
RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN' 'Cable Modem
David Wesley feeds Baron Davis for the reverse jam.
avi: 388 k
RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN' 'Cable Modem
Paul Silas is happy for his Hornets.
wav: 210 k
RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
Jamal Mashburn slows down for ESPN's Scott Van Pelt after the Hornets' series sweep of the Heat.
wav: 846 k
RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
Pat Riley sums up his feelings about being swept out of the playoffs by the Hornets.
wav: 846 k
RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
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