Houston Chronicle Sunday

RALLY SNUFFED

San Antonio hits 11 straight free throws in final 3 minutes to repel rally

- JONATHAN FEIGEN On the Rockets jonathan.feigen@chron.com twitter.com/jonathan_feigen

Wall’s 27 points, Gordon’s 26 not enough in 111-106 loss to Spurs.

The Rockets finally had gotten their offense in gear, had finally caught the Spurs, had finally seemed to get the stops to complete the comeback.

But they could not keep themselves from putting the Spurs on the line, which was all the Spurs needed.

The Spurs had just one basket in the final seven minutes, but they drained 11 straight free throws in the final 3 minutes to repel a Rockets rally and take a 111-106 win Saturday night at Toyota Center.

DeMar DeRozan went 11 of 12 from the line and had a game-high 30 points for the Spurs, whose 29 free throws matched the most the Rockets have allowed in a game this season.

John Wall had 27 for the Rockets, with Eric Gordon adding 26. But while the Spurs lived at the line, the Rockets struggled from long range, making just 12 of 38 attempts as the fourth-quarter comeback fell short.

Much of the game had trudged along as if the first to 90 would win it. Either that, or someone would snap out of it.

The Spurs broke free first, with DeRozan often cashing in on the good looks he got all game.

After the Spurs made just one of their first five shots of the second half, a DeRozan jumper, they made 11 of 17 in the rest of the third quarter.

DeRozan had 12 in the quarter as the Spurs built a 13-point lead. But as they had throughout the game, each time the Spurs built a double-digit edge, the Rockets answered with a brief run that put them in position to catch San Antonio if they could just string together baskets.

Wall and David Nwaba pulled the Rockets back within seven heading into the fourth quarter. With the Rockets employing their small-ball lineups, first with Jae’Sean Tate at center and then with P.J. Tucker, the Rockets offense clicked as it had not all game.

Some of that was from making the shots they had been missing. Danuel

House Jr. put in consecutiv­e 3s, one when he drove from the 3-point line and back out again. When Eric Gordon added a pair of free throws, the Rockets were within one for the first time since the first quarter.

In a game where both teams had struggled for so long to get going, the Rockets would have to find a way to get stops in order to complete their comeback.

They did for a few minutes. After falling behind by five, Victor Oladipo and DeMarcus Cousins blocked shots and Oladipo came up with a steal.

The Rockets left a couple points unclaimed by missing free throws, but Gordon put in a 3-pointer, his fourth of the night, to tie the game with 4:13 remaining, the first time it had been tied since the third minute.

After Dejounte Murray missed and Wall pulled up from 20 feet, the Rockets had their first lead of the night.

But the Rockets committed consecutiv­e bad fouls, with Oladipo undercutti­ng Jakob Poeltl in the final seconds of the shot clock before DeMarcus Cousins got a piece of DeRozan 80 feet from the basket.

The Spurs made all four free throws. After a Rockets turnover, DeRozan was fouled again, putting the Spurs up two. After House missed a good look at a 3-pointer, DeRozan finished the Rockets off.

His jumper through a House foul was the Spurs’ only field goal of the final seven minutes. He added a free throw for a 3-point play and a five-point lead heading into the final minute.

The Spurs iced the win from the line.

The Rockets had spent much of the night rallying from double-digit deficits.

With the Spurs leading by 12 late in the first half, House sank a 3-pointer before Gordon finished a pair of drives, Cousins put in a short jumper, and Wall and Tate were fouled on drives and hit four free throws.

That gave the Rockets a 13-3 run to pull within two. They trailed 51-47 at halftime after failing to get back on defense in the final second to gift a layup to Patty Mills on a break. Until then, both teams were 18 of 48 and 5 of 16 on 3s, both missing shots they normally expect to make.

Yet after a low-scoring, largely defensive half, both teams likely wanted to tighten up the defense if only to keep the other struggling. The Rockets did, but not without fouling.

 ?? Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er ?? Rockets guard Eric Gordon goes to the hoop against Spurs big man Drew Eubanks in the first half. Gordon had 26 points off the bench to help keep the Rockets in Saturday’s game until the final seconds.
Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er Rockets guard Eric Gordon goes to the hoop against Spurs big man Drew Eubanks in the first half. Gordon had 26 points off the bench to help keep the Rockets in Saturday’s game until the final seconds.
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