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Sports / NBA

NBA: Cavs rout Bulls to advance, Rockets rally to stay alive

Published: 15 May 2015 - 12:43 pm | Last Updated: 14 Jan 2022 - 02:03 am


Chicago - The Cleveland Cavaliers punched their ticket to the NBA Eastern Conference finals on Thursday, but in the West the Los Angeles Clippers stunningly failed to get past the Houston Rockets.

Cleveland superstar LeBron James got plenty of help from his supporting cast in the Cavaliers' 94-73 victory over the Chicago Bulls.

With the win the Cavs completed a four-games-to-two triumph over the Bulls in their best-of-seven second-round series, and will now face either the Atlanta Hawks or Washington Wizards for a place in the NBA finals.

In Los Angeles, the Clippers had appeared to be heading for a similar series win.

But the Rockets put together a stunning comeback, erasing a 19-point third-quarter deficit to shock the clippers 119-107 and force a decisive game seven back in Houston on Sunday.

"We gave this one away, there's no doubt about that," said Clippers coach Doc Rivers, whose team was out-scored 40-15 in the fourth quarter. "But it's still 3-3, and we have a game seven."

Rivers admitted it would be tough for his players to regroup after their second straight failure to put away a series which they had led 3-1.

It was an outcome that looked impossible when Rockets star James Harden went to the bench with 1:33 remaining in the third quarter, his team trailing by 17.

Harden never even got back in the game, as Corey Brewer and Josh Smith spearheaded the Rockets' remarkable resurgence.

Brewer and Smith combined for 29 points over the final 12 minutes, each finishing with 19.

"This is what we fought all season for -- for home court to be able to put the pressure back on them for a game seven at our house," Smith said.

Blake Griffin, who finished with 28 points for Los Angeles, didn't score in the final period -- nor did Matt Barnes or DeAndre Jordan.

"We got very tentative," Rivers said. "Very few people event wanted to shoot in stretches. It happens, but it's awful to watch."

AFP