Clippers Lock 4th Seed After Win Over Sacramento, Host Memphis In 1st Round Of Playoffs
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) —Jamal Crawford scored 24 points, including several big shots down the stretch, and the Los Angeles Clippers locked up home-court advantage in the first round of the playoffs, holding off the Sacramento Kings 112-108 on Wednesday night in the regular-season finale for both teams.
Clippers First Round Playoff Schedule
And with NBA owners still deciding whether to approve the sale and relocation of the Kings to Seattle, possibly the last in California's capital city.
Chris Paul had 25 points and 11 assists to lead the Pacific Division-champion Clippers (56-26), who earned the Western Conference's fourth seed and will open against fifth-seeded Memphis (56-26). The Clippers won three of four games against the Grizzlies this season.
DeMarcus Cousins had a season-high 36 points and a career-best 22 rebounds, and Marcus Thornton scored 21 to rally Sacramento from an 11-point deficit in the fourth quarter before the Clippers took control.
If this really was the last game in Sacramento, the Kings had the home fans rocking one last time.
Thornton hit a 3-pointer to pull Sacramento to 91-88 midway through the fourth, then Cousins blocked Matt Barnes' short jumper into the stands and belted out a roar along with the announced sellout crowd of 17,317.
Patrick Patterson's shot from the corner arc puts the Kings up 98-97 with 2:31 to play. He pointed his right hand to the crowd and flexed three fingers around his eye as the Clippers called a timeout.
Crawford came back with consecutive 3s, the second right in front of Sacramento's bench. The Sixth Man of the Year candidate stared back at Thornton after putting Los Angeles ahead 103-100.
Cousins and Blake Griffin traded emphatic two-handed dunks. Then Cousins hit two free throws, Griffin answered with a put-back layup to give the Clippers a 107-102 lead and Los Angeles sealed the game on free throws.
If this really was the final game in Sacramento, what a heart-wrenching way to lose.
The Maloof family has had a signed agreement since January with a group that wants to buy the Kings, move them to Seattle and rebrand them the SuperSonics -- who left the Pacific Northwest for Oklahoma City in 2008. Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson, who sat courtside eating nachos while cheering on the Kings, has streamlined a new arena plan and put together a competing investor group to buy the team.
NBA Commissioner David Stern said a decision is unlikely until at least May.
Fans were loud during player introductions and often cheered "Sacramento!" Dozens held up signs during timeouts with phrases such as "NBA Please Don't Take Our Team" and "This is NOT goodbye." Many stayed even after the final buzzer and chanted "Here we stay!"
Clippers coach Vinny Del Negro, drafted in the second round by the Kings in 1988, said before the game that he thought the atmosphere would actually give his team a boost.
Paul and Chauncey Billups certainly had no problem quieting the crowd. The backcourt tandem carried the Clippers to a 50-39 lead late in the second quarter
Griffin walked to the locker room with a few seconds remaining in the first half because of back spasms. He still started the third quarter and played through any pain.
Sacramento surged ahead 60-59 behind a pair of 3-pointers by Thornton. The Clippers closed the quarter on a 17-8 run, and went ahead 81-70 on Crawford's 3 at the beginning of the fourth.