The Memphis Grizzlies on Wednesday secured a berth in the NBA Western Conference semi-finals by beating the Portland Trail Blazers 99-93, completing a 4-1 series victory.
Five of the final eight teams in the playoffs have now been decided, while Atlanta took a 3-2 lead over Brooklyn in one of the three first-round series which are yet to be settled.
Memphis’ Marc Gasol, who had 26 points and 14 rebounds to lead the Grizzlies, was thrilled with the victory and the chance for three days off before the conference semi-finals against Golden State which starts on Sunday.
Photo: EPA
“It feels great to have a little time off to do some things around the house,” Gasol said. “I’m going to have a little time to be with my little girl. It’s actually great to be home.”
In the West semi-finals for the third time in five years, the Grizzlies realize it is time to go further.
“We wanted to go get the job done now, get some days of rest to get ready for the next tough series,” Vince Carter said. “This is just a warm-up for the next one, and the next one and the next one.”
Memphis closed it out despite not having point guard Mike Conley for a second straight game as he recovers from surgery to repair broken bones near his left eye.
Courtney Lee scored 20 points for Memphis, Zach Randolph had 16 and Jeff Green added 10 off the bench.
C.J. McCollum led Portland with a career-high 33 points. Damian Lillard had 22 points, and LaMarcus Aldridge had 14, before fouling out late on, as they combined to shoot 13 of 37. The Trail Blazers lost in the first round for the seventh time in their past eight postseasons after reaching the West semi-finals last year.
“The season was going to be a very special season,” Portland coach Terry Stotts said. “Unfortunately some things didn’t turn out the way we wanted to.”
Memphis led only 68-66 at the end of the third quarter, and the game was tied 72-72 before Carter put the Grizzlies ahead to stay with a fade-away jumper. Aldridge got the Trail Blazers within 76-75 with a three-point play before Memphis went on a 9-0 run, pushing their lead back to double digits.
“We’re one of the top offensive teams in the league, and we never felt that rhythm,” Aldridge said. “That’s disappointing for us. We know that this team is a lot better than what we played. I’m mad about going home so early.”
Atlanta won 107-97 at home against Brooklyn to take the upper hand in a first versus eight series that is closer than most expected.
Al Horford shook off the discomfort of a dislocated finger and flew around the court in the fourth quarter when it looked like Brooklyn were on the verge of bouncing all the way back from an early 17-point deficit. In the final minute, Jeff Teague darted into the lane for a couple of baskets that sealed another hard-fought victory. Horford and Teague both finished with 20 points.
The Hawks can wrap up the series with a victory in Brooklyn today, but the eighth-seeded Nets seem intent on taking it to the limit.
Alan Anderson led the Nets with 23 points off the bench, while Jarrett Jack added 18 as the Brooklyn backups dominated Atlanta’s reserves.
DeMarre Carroll scored 24 points, pushing the Hawks out to a big lead. But the Nets, as they did in each of the first two games in Atlanta, came back to make it another close encounter.
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