Games

Recap
 
Butler, Wizards headed back to playoffs
WASHINGTON 109, MIAMI 95
 

By Tim Hipps
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

WASHINGTON (Ticker) - Caron Butler had 29 points and five
assists to lead the Washington Wizards to their fourth
consecutive playoff berth with a 109-95 victory over the Miami
Heat on Friday night.

The franchise last made four straight playoff appearances as
part of a five-year run from 1983-88 as the Washington Bullets,
who featured the likes of Jeff Ruland, Gus Williams, Leonard
"Truck" Robinson, Moses Malone and Bernard King.

The Wizards also completed a four-game season-series sweep of
the Heat for the first time since 1988-89, Miami's inaugural
season in the league.

"We've been though a lot of adversity this year," Butler said.
"We lost Gilbert (Arenas) early and have had a lot of doubters
since. We've been coming out and playing at a high level night
in and night out. Clinching a playoff spot is real rewarding
but, at the same time, it is what is expected from us."

Two-time All-Star forward Antawn Jamison missed the game with a
sprained right shoulder sustained in the waning seconds of
Washington's 110-109 loss to Milwaukee on Wednesday night.

That left guard DeShawn Stevenson as the lone remaining player
who has started every game this season for the Wizards. He
scored all of his 12 points in the first quarter against the
undermanned Heat, who competed with only nine players.

"As long as we are healthy, we can beat anyone," Butler said.
"We need to get Antawn back out there. It is ironic that once
we get everyone healthy, someone else goes down. Once we get
all of our core players back out there, we'll be real lethal. We
can spread the floor and cause a lot of damage."

Miami nailed a franchise-record 18 3-pointers, capped by Ricky
Davis' shot from the arc with 3:03 remaining.

Davis, who shot 11-of-16 from the floor, including a career-best
9-of-12 from behind the arc, led the Heat with a season-high 33
points and eight assists.

"It felt great," Davis said. "Me, (Chris) Quinn and Daequan
(Cook) were shooting the ball pretty good. I think after a
while, we were just trying to get behind the three and let it
go.

"We do pretty good when we're shooting that ball real good. A
lot of it comes from just getting the ball in a rhythm and guys
moving the ball and getting guys open shots."

Davis said it may have been the best 3-point shooting night of
his career.

"I've shot it, but I don't know about that good," said Davis,
whose previous high was seven 3-pointers in a game. "I just
felt great tonight. I, more or less, wasn't even seeing a
defender, really. I was just kind of shooting it and letting it
go - feeling good."

Quinn, who scored 14 points in the third quarter, matched his
career high with 24 points for Miami, which has lost six in a
row.

"We were able to get some good looks," Quinn said. "We've got a
few guys that can shoot the ball - myself, Daequan, Ricky - we
were able to get some good looks and knock them down.

"We obviously don't have our full team, so us out there that are
playing are just trying to compete and play as hard as possible
and do what we can do."

Brendan Haywood had 14 points and eight rebounds and reserve
forward Andray Blatche added 15 and five in 26 minutes for
Washington.

Arenas, in his second game back after missing 66 contests
recovering from left knee surgery, added 13 points, eight
assists and five rebounds in 21 minutes.

"Gilbert is coming off the bench and playing well," said Wizards
assistant coach Mike O'Koren, who addressed the media after the
game for coach Eddie Jordan, who was bothered by a sinus
infection. "We are watching Gilbert's minutes. He is in a
20-25 minute range and we are trying to stay within that.

"We were very proud of him and the way he distributed the
basketball, getting six or seven guys in double figures."

O'Koren was equally impressed that Jordan coached the team from
the bench.

"Eddie, as the head coach, has kept this team organized,"
O'Koren said. "He has kept this team with a tremendous work
ethic. That's a part of toughness. He has been ill and had a
fever, and he called me this morning and said he didn't think he
would be here tonight.

"For him to get here, shows toughness. Making the playoffs for
the fourth straight year was a tremendous goal for us. It all
starts with Eddie."

Stevenson scored six points and Blatche added four as the
Wizards closed the first quarter with a 12-4 run. Washington
led 29-23 after one and was never seriously threatened
thereafter.

"When I first got here just making the playoffs gave the fans
something to cheer about," Haywood said. "We have made it four
years in a row and now they want to see us make a run deep in
the playoffs. Being a part of the playoffs isn't good enough
now. We have to do something when we get there."

Heat reserve forward Alexander Johnson was taken from Verizon
Center on a stretcher to George Washington University Hospital
for evaluation after the game.

Johnson was accompanied to the hospital by Heat trainer Ron Culp
and met there later by Wizards team physician Marc Connell. By
midnight, Johnson had been treated and released and was on his
way to the airport to fly with the team back to Miami.

Johnson, a 6-foot-9, second-year NBA forward from Florida State,
banged heads with someone and left the game with nine minutes
remaining after scoring nine points and grabbing four rebounds.
He was scrapping on the floor for a loose ball with Arenas.

"I just saw him collide and go down," Quinn said. "When I went
to help him get up, he wasn't in any shape to get up fast. His
eyes were rolled back in his head, and it was a scary moment."

Culp tended to Johnson for about three minutes while he was down
on the court.

"He was going for the rebound it looked like," Heat guard Ricky
Davis said. "I'm not sure who he ran into. It's just another
one of our soldiers down."

Riley said Johnson was disoriented in the locker room and team
officials sent him to the hospital for evaluation.

"We just hope that he's OK," Riley said. "He got hit in the
temple and he's just not responding, at all.

"We just wanted to take him because we just don't know what it
is. They're concerned. They want to take him and get him
cat-scanned, so we're just wishing him the best. This
God-forsaken season has got to be over with."


 
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