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Jazz slow down Warriors, grind out Game 4 win

Utah takes 3-1 series lead, moves one win from West finals

Image: Boozer
Jed Jacobsohn / Getty Images
Utah's Carlos Boozer celebrates during Sunday's victory over the Golden State Warriors.
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updated 9:02 a.m. ET May 14, 2007

OAKLAND, Calif. - The Utah Jazz sure knew how to close a great show.

When the Golden State Warriors wanted to run their pell-mell offense Sunday night, the Jazz patiently slowed the tempo. When Baron Davis attempted his usual magic tricks, Utah pulled back the curtain with dogged defense.

And when a tight game came down to the final minutes, Derek Fisher upstaged the Warriors with a shooting show of his own that put the businesslike Jazz on the edge of an unlikely stage: the Western Conference finals.

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Carlos Boozer had 34 points and 12 rebounds and the Jazz handed the eighth-seeded Warriors their first home loss of the postseason, 115-101 on Sunday to put Utah up 3-1 in their second-round playoff series.

Fisher scored 14 of his 21 points in the fourth quarter for the surprising Jazz, who hadn’t been to the playoffs since the Stockton-to-Malone era ended in 2003. Utah won the Northwest Division title this season, but is learning the playoff game on the fly.

The Warriors had another golden mass of fans — but the Jazz had more brass.

“That was a big step in the growth process for us as a team,” said Fisher, who missed the series opener and dramatically returned during Game 2 after tending to his daughter’s serious health problem.

“It was like we knew what to expect. It was a great atmosphere to play in, but we handled it like pros.”

With a poised, gritty performance that should have made the former Jazz greats proud, Utah earned the chance to clinch its first trip to the conference finals since 1998 with a victory at home in Game 5 on Tuesday night, ending the Warriors’ improbable run of playoff excitement.

Deron Williams had 20 points and 13 assists as the Jazz finally solved the riddle of Oracle Arena, where the underdog Warriors won their first four playoff home games with uptempo offense and fan support that dazzled the nation.

But with a Jerry Sloan game plan that hearkened back to those bruising days when Karl Malone and John Stockton ruled the West, Utah simply bullied Golden State.

“We’re doing better staying with what they’re trying to take away from us,” Sloan said. “Our team hasn’t had to make these adjustments, but our guys are getting better and better.”

Al Harrington scored 24 points before fouling out, but Baron Davis had just 15 points and seven assists. The Warriors were a dissonant mess through most of their first home loss in 10 games dating to the regular season — yet they still held a lead in the final minutes before Utah’s superior poise won it again.

Sleepy Floyd had his 51-point playoff game for the Warriors against the Los Angeles Lakers on Mother’s Day 20 years ago, but Davis had no such heroics left. The Warriors’ leader went 6-for-16, including 2-of-8 on 3-pointers.

“I just didn’t find it,” Davis said. “It’s all on me. It’s not on my teammates. It starts on me and ends on me. I have to assume the responsibility for this. ... It’s my job to get that motor running and get us to playing the right basketball we need to be playing.”


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