Hot shooting leads Rockets past Spurs

Houston’s Patrick Beverley (Arkansas Razorbacks) had 10 points, 4 rebounds and 6 assists in the Rockets’ victory over the San Antonio Spurs in Game 4 of their NBA Western Conference series Sunday night.
Houston’s Patrick Beverley (Arkansas Razorbacks) had 10 points, 4 rebounds and 6 assists in the Rockets’ victory over the San Antonio Spurs in Game 4 of their NBA Western Conference series Sunday night.

HOUSTON -- After fighting through a terrible chest cold for the last few days, James Harden finally felt like himself Sunday night.

"I can finally breathe," Harden said.

And the Houston Rockets can, too, after his performance helped them rebound from consecutive losses to beat the San Antonio Spurs 125-104 and tie the Western Conference semifinal at 2-2.

Harden scored 28 points and Eric Gordon added 22 as the Rockets never trailed and used hot three-point shooting to pull away in the third quarter.

"I think our energy was just up no matter what," Harden said. "They went on runs. They cut the deficit down ... but no matter, what we just stayed with it."

Game 5 is Tuesday night in San Antonio.

Jonathon Simmons had 17 points for the Spurs, and Kawhi Leonard and LaMarcus Aldridge added 16 apiece.

Houston made 22 three-pointers in a blowout victory in Game 1, but had struggled from long-range in its two losses. The Rockets' three-point shooting got back on track Sunday when they made 19 of 43, led by six from Gordon.

The Rockets led by 15 entering the fourth and immediately padded the lead when Gordon made a three-pointer to open the quarter. Simmons made a three-pointer on the other end before Gordon struck again with his sixth three-pointer to leave the Rockets up 97-79.

The Spurs were unable to cut into the lead after that and both teams had mostly backups on the court by the midpoint of the period with the game out of hand.

San Antonio Coach Gregg Popovich pointed to one big reason to explain why his team struggled Sunday night.

"Our bible begins with transition defense, and if it's not there, then we're just not ready to go," he said. "If you had seen clips of our transition D [Sunday], you would trade all the players and fire me by the end of the game. It was that bad."

Houston's offense bounced back in a big way after the team had been held to below 100 points in each of the last two games after failing to reach the mark only five times in the regular season.

Rockets Coach Mike D'Antoni was impressed with how his team corrected the mistakes it made in the last two games in this one.

"This is a big stage they did it on," he said. "We have a lot of work left, but there's no reason why we can't go down to San Antonio and repeat the performance."

The offense was helped by a more balanced scoring attack with seven players scoring 10 or more points after only three Rockets scored more than 10 in Game 3. Harden had 12 assists after managing just 5 in the last game and added 5 rebounds.

The Rockets were up by five early in the third quarter before using an 8-2 run to make it 70-59 with about eight minutes left in the quarter.

Harden was shaken up soon after that when he banged his left knee into Patty Mills as he attempted to drive to the basket. He fell to the court grabbing his knee as Houston called a timeout and trainers rushed to him. But there was no need for alarm, as he shook off the injury and returned after the timeout to make a three-pointer seconds later.

It was the first of three consecutive three-pointers for the Rockets in a 9-2 run that made it 79-61 midway through the quarter.

San Antonio scored the next eight points, with six from Aldridge, to cut it to 79-69 with 3 1/2 minutes left in the third.

Houston still had a 10-point lead late in the quarter before closing out the third with an 8-3 run that pushed it to 91-76 entering the fourth. Ryan Anderson wrapped up the scoring in that quarter with a three-pointer at the buzzer.

Sports on 05/08/2017

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