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The Leading Logic In Sports Handicapping

Friday 5/16/2008Line$ LineOU LineGame InfoScore
LA LAKERS at UTAH10:35 PM ETPreview | FoxSheet | Recap | Boxscore
531:  LA LAKERS
NBA Western Conference Playoffs - Second
532:  UTAH
+3.5  

-3.5  
+145

-165

212.5
 
 108
Final
105
 

By Chris Bellamy
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

SALT LAKE CITY (Ticker) -- It took six games, but home-court
advantage finally cracked.

Behind Kobe Bryant's 34-point effort, the Los Angeles Lakers
stole one at the toughest home floor in the NBA, ousting the
Utah Jazz from the playoffs with a thrilling 108-105 victory in
Game Six of the Western Conference semifinals on Friday night.

What looked like a blowout for most of the night turned into a
nail-biter for the top-seeded Lakers, who had just enough in the
final minutes to stave off the Jazz and avoid a Game Seven.

"This is a big step for us," Bryant said. "I think the
important thing is coming on the road and winning in this
building, a place where prior to tonight they lost five games
all year. It shows a lot of character on our part to come out
of here with a victory."

Deron Williams' 3-point attempt that would have sent the game
into overtime and capped off a huge Utah rally rolled around the
rim and slipped out just before the buzzer sounded to save the
Lakers victory.

With the win, the Lakers not only became just the second road
club to claim a victory in the entire second round but, more
importantly, advanced to the Western Conference finals for the
first time since 2004.

Bryant, looking fully recovered from the back spasms that have
ailed him since Game Four, led his team to one of its most
impressive offensive showings of the postseason.

"It feels good. It feels great. We're excited about (going to
the conference finals)," Bryant said. "It's been a great
journey so far, and we want to keep it rolling. We're proud of
what we've accomplished, but we believe we can accomplish much
more."

After having to fight off the Jazz in a hotly contested Game
Five at the Staples Center on Wednesday night, the Lakers didn't
have much to sweat until the closing moments of the fourth
quarter when the Jazz, finally facing the very real prospect of
elimination, started to battle back.

After being ice-cold from the floor all night, the Jazz got hot
at just the right moment. The Jazz hit 3-pointers on five
consecutive possessions including two huge ones within 12
seconds from an unlikely source, Andrei Kirilenko, the one-time
All-Star not commonly known as a perimeter shooter.

"They made some run at us at the end of the game," Lakers coach
Phil Jackson said. "I had confidence we would make the right
play at the end of the game. I just felt (the Jazz) made some
incredible shots. Obviously, five 3-pointers down the stretch
is pretty remarkable in itself."

That brought Utah to within two points, at 105-103 with 16
seconds to play, forcing the Lakers to try to win the game at
the free-throw line.

"It's just tough. The thing that hurt us in the first two games
in L.A. was our starts, and it hurt us again," Williams said.
"You can come back, but it's hard to get over that hump, and
that was the case tonight. Tonight, we just couldn't take the
lead back."

Despite being automatic for the most part, the Lakers gave the
Jazz one last window when Derek Fisher missed one, giving the
Jazz a final possession with a chance to send the game into
overtime.

But Utah misfired on two opportunities to tie the game. After
Mehmet Okur's attempt clanked off the rim, Williams grabbed the
offensive rebound and found his way back behind the arc for his
own try. His shot was tantalizingly close to extending the
Jazz's season at least an extra five-minute period but just
missed.

"I didn't know how much time was left so I rushed it a little
bit too much. I probably could've taken my time because Kobe
wasn't gonna risk fouling me. I could've taken my time a little
more," Williams said. "But it was a great look and I just
missed it."

Despite facing a team that lost just four times at home during
the regular season, the Lakers steamed ahead from the start and
never relinquished the lead.

By the five-minute mark of the opening quarter, they already had
a double-digit lead a far cry from the series' first two games
in Salt Lake City, when the Jazz led for nearly the entirety of
both contests.

Bryant did his usual damage, posting up the perpetually
outmatched Utah defenders and finishing with turnarounds and
drives to the hoop. He was 8-of-10 from the foul line over the
first two quarters of play.

Fisher capped off the lopsided first half with three free throws
on a controversial call at the buzzer. Controversy or not,
Fisher buried all three to put the Lakers up by 62-43 at the
break.

"We came out and they got after us, and that's what experience
can do. It can come out and get in your face a little bit, and
get after you, and I thought they did that," Jazz coach Jerry
Sloan said. "It looked like if we could get a little run going,
put a little pressure on them, then I thought we could get back
in the ballgame. But we couldn't calm down."

The Jazz, one of the most efficient offensive clubs in the
league throughout the season, shot just 33 percent (14-of-42)
from the field in the first half. The frontcourt tandem of
Carlos Boozer and Mehmet Okur was ineffective, despite a strong
presence on the boards.

Boozer was repeatedly double-teamed by the Lakers' quicker,
longer big men, frustrating the three-time All-Star who led the
Jazz in scoring this season but has struggled to find his
offensive game in the playoffs. He fouled out in the fourth
quarter after just a 12-point effort.

"I'm disappointed in my play," Boozer said. "I feel like I let
my teammates down. I could've played a whole lot better."

Okur, meanwhile, was just 1-for-7 from the field in the first
half before catching fire down the stretch.

The Jazz hardly made a dent in their deficit until midway
through the fourth quarter, and even then it wasn't nearly
enough of one.

With Boozer taking up the attention of the Lakers' interior
defense, Williams found reserve Paul Millsap instead.

Millsap, a second-year forward from Louisiana Tech, scored eight
straight points in the fourth quarter to spark the Jazz's
comeback. He finished two fast breaks with dunks including
one while facing heavy traffic in the paint and had 12 points
and seven rebounds in the fourth quarter alone.

"He was just very aggressive offensively; defensively, he was
very active. He provided us with a big spark of energy,"
Williams said of Millsap. "He was running the floor hard, and I
wanted to get the ball to him."

But the Lakers had their answer and, as usual, it was the
league's Most Valuable Player. After a pair of Matt Harpring
free throws pulled Utah to within seven, Bryant pulled up for a
3-pointer to extend the lead back into double digits.

Moments later, he extended it even further, starting with his
back to the basket on Harpring and quickly turning around for an
off-balance fadeaway that dropped in off the glass, plus a
foul.

"I went to the 'Black Mamba,'" Bryant said. "I just had to take
advantage of the opportunities. It's my role to kind of be
patient and just pick my spots. Then when that moment comes,
it's my responsibility to this ballclub to make the right
plays."

The Jazz's flurry of 3-pointers late in the period brought them
back to within striking distance yet again, but they never got
any closer than a two-point deficit.

"Surprisingly enough, I think the best looks they had may have
been at the end of the game when they missed two open threes,"
Jackson said. "We'll remember most of all the fact that we
played with some sense of urgency and determination."

Williams led the Jazz with 21 points and 14 assists. Okur added
16 points and 10 boards but shot just 6-of-18 from the field.