iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Thunder Beat Lakers 106-90 To Win Series, Advance To Western Conference Finals (VIDEO)

By JEFF LATZKE 05/22/12 04:22 AM ET AP

Thunder Lakers
Oklahoma City Thunder forward Kevin Durant (35) pumps his fist in front of Los Angeles Lakers forward Metta World Peace, right, after hitting a basket in the third quarter of Game 5 in their NBA basketball Western Conference semifinal playoff series, Monday, May 21, 2012, in Oklahoma City. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

OKLAHOMA CITY -- Ramon Sessions did the best he could to keep Russell Westbrook from making a high-flying dunk that would energize the Oklahoma City Thunder.

No matter.

Even with his feet flat on the ground, Westbrook found a way to get the Thunder rolling past the Los Angeles Lakers and into the Western Conference finals for the second straight year.

After Sessions committed a foul to stop him on the fast break, Westbrook flipped the ball up toward the rim and got it to go in for what would become a three-point play. Westbrook took off toward the scorer's table, pumping his fist as the home crowd celebrated.

There was no turning back after that, and Oklahoma City pulled away for a 106-90 victory in Game 5 on Monday night to knock the Lakers out of the playoffs.

"That was an amazing play," coach Scott Brooks said. "Obviously, there's a lot of luck to that. You put yourself in that position to get a little lucky there.

"I thought from that point on, we really played with great energy on the offensive end, moved the ball and made shots."

Westbrook finished with 28 points, Kevin Durant added 25 points and 10 rebounds and the two All-Stars skipped their usual rest periods to power the Thunder ahead in the second half.

After Westbrook's pair of three-point plays fueled a 14-3 burst that put Oklahoma City ahead to stay late in the third quarter, Durant hit two 3-pointers as the Thunder scored the first 10 points of the fourth to push their lead to 93-77.

Los Angeles never got closer than 13 after that.

"That's a tough team, man. They weren't laying down," Westbrook said. "We got a little down on ourselves and we had to come together and be better teammates, and we did that."

Kobe Bryant scored 42 points for the Lakers and took the briefest of rest – less than 2 minutes – in the second half. It didn't even take that long for the game, and their season, to slip away.

Bryant was waiting to check in when Durant connected on his second 3-pointer, just 89 seconds into the fourth quarter. But by the time he got in, there was little he could do – despite the 13th 40-point game of his playoff career.

After getting eliminated by Los Angeles in 2010 and Dallas in 2011 before both of those teams went on to win it all, the Thunder knocked both out on their way to the West finals for the second straight year.

The only other time the franchise made consecutive conference finals was from 1978-80, including Seattle's only NBA title in 1979.

Once there, they'll face top-seeded San Antonio, which is riding an 18-game winning streak and is the only team other than the Lakers or Mavs to win the West in the past 13 years. The series starts Sunday night in San Antonio.

Los Angeles has followed back-to-back championships with two straight second-round exits.

"I'm not fading into the shadows," said Bryant, a five-time NBA champion with the Lakers. "I'm not going anywhere. We're not going anywhere."

Certainly, not this offseason.

Westbrook made sure of that when he went running to the scorer's table and pumped his fist in the air after his energizing three-point play.

"I just tried to throw it to the rim and luckily it went in. That kind of sparked us, and everybody else kept it going from there," Westbrook said.

Westbrook converted another after banking in a jumper from the left side despite Sessions slapping him on the arm to make it 82-76 with 1:29 left in the third quarter.

Durant extended the lead with a 3-pointer in the opening minute of the fourth and then hit another 32 seconds later – just after Bryant had stepped to the scorer's table to check in after a brief rest.

Bryant described it as "tough, to say the least."

After blowing a fourth-quarter lead in Game 4, Bryant had called out forward Pau Gasol to be more aggressive – much as he had with Gasol and Bynum before the Lakers faced elimination in Game 7 of the first round against Denver.

Gasol then came through with a monster game – 23 points, 17 rebounds and six assists – and Steve Blake scored a playoff career-best 19 points to save the Lakers that time. Bryant didn't get nearly as much help against the Thunder.

Gasol took 14 shots, his most of the series, but made only five to finish with 14 points and 16 rebounds. Metta World Peace scored 11 and Bynum 10.

James Harden added 17 points as Oklahoma City's bench outscored L.A.'s 35-5. The Thunder also had a 30-6 edge in fast-break scoring. The Lakers were outrebounded 51-35 and had only three offensive rebounds, two from Gasol and none from Bynum.

"We're asking our bigs to do a lot, but I know for sure we could have gotten more scoring from those two guys in the offensive rebounding category ... and we could have gotten more from our bench," Lakers coach Mike Brown said.

Bryant had to create all of the offense early, scoring 15 of the Lakers' first 19 points and getting all six of his baskets without the benefit of an assist. When others started chipping in, the Lakers went on a 16-7 run to go up 35-32 following Bynum's three-point play.

Oklahoma City scored the next eight points, including Harden's fast-break dunk, before Bryant got past him for a pair of dunks of his own – the first a driving, two-handed reverse jam and the second a two-handed alley-oop slam over Harden.

But Bryant and World Peace both drew technical fouls as the Lakers lost their cool with 31.9 seconds left before halftime when World Peace was called for a flagrant foul against Thabo Sefolosha on a fast break. World Peace used his right hand to strip the ball from Sefolosha as he went up to the basket but then shoved him out of bounds with his left hand.

Sefolosha hit both free throws and Durant capitalized on both shots from the technicals World Peace and Bryant got for arguing the flagrant call to put the Thunder 54-51 ahead at halftime despite shooting less than 40 percent.

Notes: The Lakers had baskets just after the buzzer at the end of the second and third quarters that both got reviewed on instant replay. ... Westbrook got a technical foul for cursing at an official after a no-call midway through the first quarter. ... The Thunder's Nick Collison needed stitches to close a cut on the back of his head that he sustained during Game 4. ... Los Angeles is 10-3 when Bryant scores 40 points in the playoffs, losing both times he did it this season.

FOLLOW SPORTS

OKLAHOMA CITY -- Ramon Sessions did the best he could to keep Russell Westbrook from making a high-flying dunk that would energize the Oklahoma City Thunder. No matter.
OKLAHOMA CITY -- Ramon Sessions did the best he could to keep Russell Westbrook from making a high-flying dunk that would energize the Oklahoma City Thunder. No matter.
Filed by Michael Klopman  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 345
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (7 total)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Geoprof
09:53 AM on 05/23/2012
Kobe, please go away so I can start supporting the Lakers again.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paul OhioSprtzfan Sink
06:03 AM on 05/23/2012
OKC one of the most entertaining teams to watch in the NBA in years,Harden one of the best weapons coming off the bench.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
liblizard
Really missing Bill Loney
09:49 PM on 05/22/2012
Good gosh---The Thunder win the series and will meet the Spurs in the Conference Finals, and all these posts are about the Lakers.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlueDog1
"Taking the High Road"
05:33 PM on 05/22/2012
Great show put on by the WWF otherwise known as the NBA circus. The clowns in the stripped shirts got even with the Lakers b y dropping a flagrant foul on World and then dropped a Bryant.

It was determined three months ago the Lakers would not make the finals when the NBA Commish pulled the trade out from under the LA Lakers.

I stopped watching the NBA four years ago just because of the WWF type show stuff by the NBA. It has only gotten worse.........................................
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
paulhunterjones
A new age Republican
05:03 PM on 05/22/2012
The Thunder just outplayed the Lakers in every aspect of the game. KB’s offensive performance was an impressive individual feat but his team did little to win the game. This year the Lakers have not played like a team that was determined to win it all. That is the problem; the Lakers do not play team basketball. I think it is time to clean house and restructure the team. The NBA has too many showboating players who are short on basketball skills and sportsmanship. The Lakers represent this malaise in the NBA that is damaging the league. The NBA needs to produce a superiority quality of basketball.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RusStyles
Author of Getting Back in the Game!
05:40 PM on 05/22/2012
So what you're saying is the Lakers would be better if Kobe took fewer shots and passed to open teammates...Even when they toss-up uncontested bricks or--worse yet--turn down open shots 'cause they know they're going to miss...Then Kobe, by default, takes a tough shot with the 24 sec running down...When the Lakers won titles they had player who could make open shots. You can play all the team ball you want and lose if so-called professionals continue to miss wide open jumpers. This causes a myriad of problems for the offense, and makes it easy for the defense to clog the paint, front the bigs, double Kobe, and so on....The problem is not team ball, it's acquiring people--as the Spurs have--that can make open shots. Of course, it requires a team to have 2-3 players that can force the defense to help out. Further, the Lakers get nothing from their bench, except for Hill...But he can't make an open jump-shot either...
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alois SaintMartin
aloistmartinsequinox.blogspot.com
03:53 PM on 05/22/2012
Shot Heard Cross The Desert;

Oklahoma didn`t Win that series, the Lakers simply Lost It ! Oklahoma did not impress me any more than Dallas did last year ( Or The Super Bowl Champion New York Giants ? ); And I. believe the Playoffs will follow 100% !

And What bout next year ? I. Think the Laker emphasis on the Pau Gasol led Offence is pretty much a matter of History. Lakers would be better off leaving A. Bynum in the middle. Andrew does what a Center is supposed to do. A more Conventional role in the Offence would be better for both Bynum, and the Lakers. Gasol is the expendable Luxury. A more Conventional addition to the Forward Squad would go a long ways towards streamlining the Lakers overburdened Offence. Players in particular, who should typify Laker play next season are; J. McRoberts, Who`s Spirit and Hustle at P/Forward is everything P. Gasol is not. Also J. Hill who`s play in the paint only proves my main point. Also Metta-World Peace and the Downcast Bench beyond. Metta-World is Lakers Heart and Soul, even If all he does is is provide Enforcer support from the Bench. The Lakers don`t need D. Howard or some kind of Major Overhaul, all they need is a little Showtime Tuneup ! See you you all next Fall at Sport`s South ~
03:53 PM on 05/22/2012
What good are TWO seven footers if they are going to play like poorly shooting forwards.
03:52 PM on 05/22/2012
This may be a good thing.

Now the Lakers can clean house without any guilt and the fans will be behind most moves made.
photo
M Smoove
M Smoove= Always CALM, COOL & COLLECTED!!!
05:28 PM on 05/22/2012
I agree with you that now the Lakers can get rid of one of their seven footers without being questioned. The twin tower affect looked awful way too many times this season.
photo
ZenSufi
Sisters and Brothers of America!
03:47 PM on 05/22/2012
You don't want to be out on a Lake if you hear Thunder.
12:02 PM on 05/23/2012
/facepalm...that is all.
03:32 PM on 05/22/2012
The Lakers seem like they're in an unwinnable situation.

Kobe's by far their best scoring threat, yet he has to jack up a million shots to get his points, so the rest of the team seems to be less involved when he's on the court. When Kobe's on the bench, the others have to step up -- but they're certainly not a better team without Kobe on the floor.

It's weird, but I guess it's like it was for Lebron in Cleveland. You had one guy dominate the scoring and a lot of other guys standing around. That worked to a certain extent, but not enough when you ran into teams that spread the scoring around.

When Kobe is the only one scoring big, the Lakers don't seem to have a chance. When the other guys step up, Kobe can have an off night (for him) and the Lakers can still win games.
02:37 PM on 05/22/2012
Kobe is still the best player out there, his stats prove it,
but he cant do it all by himself.
even Micheal Jordan didn't do it all on his own.

if the Lakers can trade Bynum for Howard, they better jump on it!
03:23 PM on 05/22/2012
Gasol needs to go. Bynum is still the best big in the league (when he shows up), but Gasol will never again be as dominant as he was in 09-10. He's still butthurt from being in the trade talks and plays like he doesn't want to be there.
photo
M Smoove
M Smoove= Always CALM, COOL & COLLECTED!!!
05:36 PM on 05/22/2012
Yeah, I agree with you. The Lakers seem to have lost Gasol when his name was mentioned in the trade. I'm not totally sold on Bynum though. He has the potential... But way to often he just doesn't seem to show up. He seems to be injury prone. And I cannot believe the immaturity he has shown over the last couple of seasons.
photo
jondekonkeroo
Spells and remedies..
02:33 PM on 05/22/2012
FIVE bench points? That's not playoff caliber.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FoxNude
02:08 PM on 05/22/2012
I'm concerned about Laker play calling. With two 7 footers why have them posting up so far from the basket? Why having Gasol at the 3 point line? What part of pounding the ball inside don't they understand? No penetration no lay ups. The Beard is left handed!!! Make him go right? Was it a foul EVERYTIME he penetrated? OKC must be the greatest defensive team ever! And that flagrant foul on MWP. Really? That ref should be FINED. Sorry Mike Brown you had your chance.
03:24 PM on 05/22/2012
Gasol is being given chance after chance to post up and drive, instead he lurks near the 3 point line, then puts up bricks. Same with Bynum. A coach can only do so much if his players don't show up.
02:00 PM on 05/22/2012
If Bryant wants another ring, he had better find another team.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Quotidien
01:56 PM on 05/22/2012
Kobe is legit. He has 2 or 3 title runs left in him. Needs a better cast around him.