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BOX SCORE
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GAME FLOW
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) Tracy McGrady collected the NBA's Most Improved Player Award, then went out and showed why he deserved it.
| | Ray Allen scored 27 points but couldn't put the Bucks over the top in OT. |
McGrady had 42 points 21 in the fourth quarter and overtime
as the Magic finally beat the Milwaukee Bucks, winning 121-116 Saturday night to stay alive in their playoff series.
"Right now, I'm so tired," said McGrady, who tied Orlando's playoff scoring record and added 10 assists and eight rebounds. "Fifty playoff minutes is a different sort of minutes. But it was either do or die."
Game 4 in the best-of-five series is Tuesday in Orlando.
The Magic had lost 11 straight games against Milwaukee.
"We finally got that big gorilla off our backs," Orlando coach Doc Rivers said. "Now that we've beaten them, we know we can."
Ray Allen scored 27 points, Sam Cassell had 21 points and a career-high 16 rebounds, and reserve Tim Thomas scored 18 for Milwaukee, which won the first two games of the series at home.
"We probably thought it was going to be easier that it was,"
Milwaukee coach George Karl said. "I thought we took this game
with a degree of complacency."
The Magic pulled out the victory after letting a 14-point lead
slip away in the last five minutes of regulation.
Allen blamed "greedy basketball" for his team's deficit but said he was proud of the comeback.
"We started moving the ball, we started creating a defensive
game out there for us and we started playing like we played all
year," said Allen, who sent the game into overtime on a thundering
dunk over McGrady with 3.5 seconds left in regulation. "We were
ready to turn it around but unfortunately it wasn't enough."
Orlando finally found McGrady some offensive help, with Darrell
Armstrong scoring 18 points and Pat Garrity 16.
"We talked about needing a hero today," Rivers said. "We have
several of them."
The Magic appeared to have the game in hand leading 101-87 with
4:58 remaining, but Milwaukee rallied behind Allen and Glenn
Robinson, held in check by McGrady most of the series.
Robinson's jumper with 35.7 seconds left gave the Bucks a
108-107 lead. Robinson had all seven of his fourth-quarter points
in the final 2:15, and finished with 14.
McGrady's three-point play put the Magic ahead 110-108. Allen
then tied it by driving past Armstrong and dunking over McGrady.
In overtime, McGrady capped off a 6-0 run with a leaner and a
layin for a 119-114 lead with a minute to go.
McGrady shot 14-for-32 from the field and 14-for-18 on free
throws to tie Penny Hardaway's franchise playoff scoring record,
set against Miami in a 1997 first-round game.
Armstrong, who won the honor two years ago, presented McGrady with the Most Improved Player Award before the game.
Milwaukee had a chance to tie with less than five seconds
remaining in the extra period, but Thomas missed a 3-pointer, and
the Magic came up with the rebound.
Armstrong, who seemed to be recovered from a strained groin
that's plagued him the last half of the season, then sealed the
victory with a pair of free throws.
There was a chaotic moment midway through the third quarter.
Bo Outlaw and Scott Williams got tangled up going after a loose
ball near the Magic bench, and then Cassell bumped Outlaw.
Armstrong and Williams began to tangle, then McGrady and Robinson
started jawing at each other.
No punches were thrown, but all six players were hit with
technical fouls.
Starting with the next possession, Garrity briefly took over the
game with 12 straight points as the Magic went from trailing by
three to leading 69-63 with 3:51 left in the period.
The run started when Garrity was fouled on a 3-point attempt,
and his free throws tied the game at 60.
He followed by making three straight 3-pointers, the last coming
after he accidentally undercut Thomas, who fell hard to the floor.
Thomas didn't move during the Bucks' ensuing timeout, but he got to
his feet and jogged to the bench.
Orlando eventually went ahead 89-78 with 8:48 left on Dee
Brown's 3-pointer. Nine of Brown's 12 points came in the fourth
quarter.
Game notes The Bucks closed the first half on a 13-3 run to lead 50-44
at the break. ... Milwaukee last swept a playoff series in 1988,
eliminating New Jersey in the first round. ... Orlando has only
been swept in the first round once, in 1994 against Indiana.
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ALSO SEE
NBA Scoreboard
Milwaukee Clubhouse
Orlando Clubhouse
Magic-Bucks Series Page
Flying on his own, T-Mac is NBA's most improved
RECAPS
Philadelphia 92 Indiana 87
Dallas 94 Utah 91
Minnesota 93 San Antonio 84
Orlando 121 Milwaukee 116
AUDIO/VIDEO
Doc Rivers says there are more wins to come for the Magic.
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Ray Allen says the Bucks let their guard down against the Magic on Saturday.
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RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
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