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James lead Heat over Knicks 108-82
NBA
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MIAMI — LeBron James scored 31 points, Dwyane Wade added 23 and the Miami Heat used a huge third quarter to run away and eventually rout the New York Knicks 108-82 on Thursday night.
James donned a dark mask to protect his broken nose and was clearly unencumbered, hitting 13 of 19 shots and topping 30 points for the fifth consecutive game.
Wade shot 10 for 13 from the field for Miami, which outscored New York 23-3 over the final 7:02 of the third and won its sixth straight.
The Heat shot 61 percent, while the Knicks shot 37 percent.
Carmelo Anthony scored 29 points for New York, but none in the final 21:38. Tyson Chandler had 19 points and 16 rebounds, and J.R. Smith added 11 points for the Knicks, who fell to 2-10 in February.
Norris Cole, Mario Chalmers and Ray Allen each scored 11 points for the Heat, who are 41-7 in February games over the last four seasons.
The blowout was so pronounced that TNT cut away from the game midway through the fourth quarter, opting instead to show part of the third overtime of the Washington-Toronto game. By then, all the stars in Miami were on the bench anyway.
When that game ended, TNT came back for the end of Heat-Knicks, missing about 4 minutes of game action.
James got the buzz for this one going just before tip-off, strapping the mask over the top half of his face, the deviation from the usual clear-plastic look enough send Twitter users into some sort of commenting overdrive.
More importantly to the Heat, the mask didn’t seem to impair his vision. James had 11 in the opening quarter, the Heat finished the period with a six-point lead and soon stretched the margin to 16 in the second quarter. A hook shot from Wade in the lane was his seventh straight make, giving Miami a 43-27 lead and indicating things would be a runaway.
Eventually, they indeed would.
But New York made it interesting for a bit.
Anthony said a few hours before the game that every outcome is critical to the Knicks now, especially with playoff chances dwindling. And he backed up those words with a brilliant flurry, scoring all 16 of his second-quarter points in the final 5:52 of the period as New York erased just about every bit of that big Miami lead.
With 8:36 left in the third, Anthony set up J.R. Smith for a jumper that got New York within 64-61.
And from there, it was all Miami.
That’s when the huge run to end the third got started. The Knicks missed 12 of their final 13 shots to end the third — their only field goal in the final 8½ minutes was a layup by Tim Hardaway Jr. — and the Heat just got rolling. For some perspective, James had 12 points in the quarter while the Knicks, total, had 14.
Shane Battier set up James for a down-the-lane dunk that got Miami’s lead back to double digits at 72-61 and the snowball just kept growing. A 10-0 run in the final 2:21 of the quarter turned it into a runaway; James got fouled by Anthony and turned it into a three-point play with 1:58 left, then beat Anthony on a cut and accepted a pass from Cole for an easy layup on the next possession.
One trip later, Allen hit a 3-pointer, and just like that, Miami’s lead was 23, the outcome quickly becoming academic.

WIZARDS 134,
RAPTORS 129, 3OT
TORONTO — Trevor Ariza scored the go-ahead basket on a fast-break layup with 1:20 left in the third overtime and Washington outlasted Toronto for its fifth straight victory.
Marcin Gortat fouled out with 31 points and 12 rebounds, John Wall also had 31 points, and Ariza fouled out with 16 points and 10 rebounds.
DeMar DeRozan scored 34 points in 58 minutes for Toronto, and Kyle Lowry fouled out with 18 points, 10 assists and nine rebounds in 54 minutes. Greivis Vasquez added a season-high 26 points.

PACERS 101, BUCKS 96
INDIANAPOLIS — Roy Hibbert had 24 points and 12 rebounds to help Indiana rally to beat Milwaukee.
Paul George and Lance Stephenson each scored 18 points for NBA-leading Indiana. The Pacers, 44-13 overall and an NBA-best 28-3 at home, blew a 17-point lead in the first half.
The Bucks, an NBA-worst 11-46, tied it at 50 at the half and built a six-point lead in the third quarter. Brandon Knight had 23 points for Milwaukee, and Khris Middleton added 22.
Before the game, the Bucks waived forward Caron Butler after agreeing to a contract buyout.