Jazz shock Rockets to level NBA playoff series

The Utah Jazz started strong then held their nerve to beat the top-seeded Houston Rockets 116-108 on Wednesday and level their NBA playoffs second-round series at one game apiece.

Australian Forward Joe Ingles scored a playoff career-high 27 points and star rookie Donovan Mitchell added 17 as Utah used a big fourth quarter to thwart a second-half comeback bid by superstar James Harden and the Rockets in Houston.

Ingles, a 30-year-old who played internationally as a pro for eight years before landing in the NBA in 2014, drained seven of nine three-point attempts.

That included two late in the fourth, when his three from the left corner with 4:25 remaining took the Jazz lead to 108-96.

Rookie star Mitchell's 17 points included an one-handed dunk off the rebound of his own missed shot -- an emphatic jam that keyed Utah's 16-2 fourth-quarter scoring run.

"To be honest I was just trying to shoot a floater and grab a rebound, but I was up there so I figured why come down with it," Mitchell said.

Moments before, Mitchell had forced Harden into a 24-second violation, just one solid defensive move from a Jazz team that held the vaunted Rockets offense to 24 percent shooting in the final period.

"The biggest thing is we defended," Mitchell said. "We'll take this win, but we need three more."

- 'Series is on' -

NBA scoring champion Harden notched 32 points with 11 assists and seven rebounds for the Rockets, who erased a 19-point first-half deficit to take a five-point lead in the third quarter.

"We came out a little to lackadaisical," said Harden. "We were kind of going through the motions."

Just when it looked like the potent Rockets had warmed up and might pull away, the Jazz responded and were up 86-85 heading into the final period.

"They're obviously a good team," Ingles said of the Rockets, who posted the league's best record in the regular season. "They made runs -- we knew they were going to make runs.

"Sticking together, I think we did a really good job of that," he added. "We were able to make our own runs when it was our turn as well."

Jazz coach Quin Snyder was pleased with the poise his young team, still coping with the injury absence of Spanish point guard Ricky Rubio, displayed.

"(Houston) not only made it a game but basically took control of the game, I think we could feel that," he said of the Rockets' surge to the lead in the third. "So at that point for our guys to keep their focus on what we were trying to do says a lot about the team -- that they didn't break at that point."

The Rockets, who made 17 of 32 three-pointers in a 110-96 game-one romp, connected on just 10 of 37 from beyond the arc and were 38-for-95 from the field overall.

"We did a pretty good job of fighting back," Harden said, but he echoed Rockets coach Mike D'Antoni in saying the effort to climb out of a 19-point hole was tiring.

"You've got to get greedy and try to get every stop after that, it's just draining," Harden said.

The Jazz, seeded fourth in the West, will try to grab the series lead when they host game three on Friday in Salt Lake City.

"The series is on," D'Antoni said. "Get it going now."


AFP

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