RECAP
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BOX SCORE
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GAME LOG
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SHOT CHART
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GAME FLOW
MILWAUKEE (AP) -- The Bradley Center brought out the high-flying
style that has taken the NBA by storm.
| | Baron Davis had the best long-range shooting night of his pro career, going 5-for-5 from 3-point range. |
Only, it was the Charlotte Hornets and not the Milwaukee Bucks
on display Tuesday night.
Jamal Mashburn scored 24 points and the Hornets imitated
Milwaukee's up-tempo, jump-shooting style to perfection in a 94-86
victory that moved them within one win of their first trip to the
Eastern Conference finals.
Baron Davis added 19 points and had a career-high five
3-pointers for the sixth-seeded Hornets, who handed the Bucks their
first loss at the Bradley Center in exactly two months.
"Baron was great tonight," Mashburn said. "He knocked down
big shot after big shot. When he shoots from the outside like that
he's tough to contain because he takes the ball to the basket so
well. He's an up-and-coming star in this league."
And so are the Hornets, who can eliminate Milwaukee, which owns
a three-game losing streak for the first time since Nov. 22-25, in
Game 6 Thursday night in Charlotte.
The Bucks, who played terribly in Games 3 and 4 in Charlotte,
entered the game with a cockiness, Scott Williams acknowledged.
"We felt the homecourt advantage would carry us in this
series," he said.
And why not? The Bucks had won 12 straight games at home. But
they gave their rowdy fans very little to cheer about and were
booed off the court at the buzzer.
Glenn Robinson scored 22 points and Ray Allen had 20 for the
Bucks, who trimmed a 14-point third-quarter deficit to three points
late in the fourth quarter before fading over the final three
minutes.
Sam Cassell's 3-pointer with 4 1/2 minutes left pulled the Bucks to
85-82, but Mashburn hit two free throws and a layup and Davis
swished his fifth 3-pointer as the Hornets took a 92-84 lead with
2:06 left.
"Every time they made a run, we hit a big shot and that's what
these playoffs are all about -- coming through when you need it,"
Hornets coach Paul Silas said. "Baron was kind of a catalyst
tonight and then Mash, of course, in the fourth quarter, provided
us with some needed scoring.
"The second thing is we really contested shots, and their
shooting percentage came way down. When you contest shots with a
perimeter shooting team and they're not hitting, it always give you
a chance."
The Bucks shot 36 percent, missing 52 of 82 shots.
"Their strength has been their defense. Our strength has been
our ability to make shots," Bucks coach George Karl said. "Right
now, I think their strength is kind of controlling our strength."
The Bucks have yet to display the brilliance that carried them
to their first division title in 15 years.
"In this series, we've had fundamental breakdowns," Karl said.
"Rebounding one game, turnovers another game. But it's not
scientific. It's not complicated. We're not shooting the ball worth
a damn.
"We got to shoot the ball better. We got to pass the ball
better, probably have to execute better against a team that right
now has a good confidence in stopping our stuff."
Charlotte extended a three-point halftime lead to 80-69 after
three quarters, but the Hornets didn't score in the fourth until
Davis' 3-pointer with 8:14 left made it 83-74.
Still, the Hornets' defense never faltered and the Bucks never
caught up.
The Hornets led 52-49 at halftime and opened the third quarter
with an 11-4 run sparked by an uncontested layup and a wide-open
jumper by Davis.
Karl, who always insists a series doesn't begin until a team
steals one on the road, called a timeout with his team trailing
63-53 and the house band played "Hit Me With Your Best Shot." And
the Hornets did.
Eddie Robinson's excuse-me 3-pointer to beat the shot clock
thwarted a quick comeback by the Bucks and made it 68-58.
"Luckily, it went in for me," Robinson said. "I was kind of
stuck with it with the shot clock running down."
Mashburn's jumper over Darvin Ham made it 79-65, the Hornets'
biggest lead of the night.
Elden Campbell had three rebound baskets in a 16-6 run that the
Hornets used to take the lead for good at 42-34 in the second
quarter. Two of them were dunks that quieted the rowdy crowd.
The fans finally made some noise with two minutes left in the
half when Cassell, bothered by sore ribs since Game 3, made his
first basket two minutes before halftime.
Cassell, who was 4-for-12 from the floor, said he had trouble
getting around screens and in finishing shots. His replacement,
Lindsey Hunter, hurt more than he helped, missing 6-of-7 shots and
committing two crucial turnovers.
"It's desperation time now," Hunter said.
Game notes Mashburn tied his career high with eight assists. ...
Johnson had a career-high 17 rebounds. ... Before the game, Allen
was given the inaugural "Magic Johnson Ideal Player Award" by the
Professional Basketball Writers Association. ... The Bucks' last
loss at home was to Seattle, 108-102 on March 15.
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ALSO SEE
NBA Scoreboard
Charlotte Clubhouse
Milwaukee Clubhouse
Hornets-Bucks Series Page
AUDIO/VIDEO
Jamal Mashburn hopes the Hornets can step it up at home and win the series (Courtesy: TBS Sports).
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With Jamal Mashburn in check, coach George Karl didn't expect the other players to dictate the game.
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