Boston Herald

Jazz beat Pacers, but lose Mitchell

- — assoCiated press

Tough team defense rescued the Utah Jazz after Donovan Mitchell went down with an ankle injury.

The NBA-leading Jazz rallied to beat the Indiana Pacers 119-111 on Friday after Mitchell the left game with a sprained ankle in the second half. He scored 22 points on 7-of-15 shooting before spraining his right ankle with 8:18 left in the third quarter.

Mitchell could not put any weight on his leg, and teammates helped him off the floor to the locker room. X-rays on the ankle were negative, and he was scheduled to undergo an MRI on Friday evening.

Without Mitchell on the floor, the Jazz clamped down defensivel­y to win their second straight game. Utah allowed Indiana to score on only 10 total possession­s over the final 15 minutes.

“It’s always tough to see one of your guys go down. Donovan, in particular, is so important to our team,” point guard Mike Conley said. “He’s what makes us go . ... I was proud of the way we responded with Donovan going down.”

The Jazz erased a doubledigi­t deficit and tied it at 89 heading into the fourth quarter on back-to-back baskets from Clarkson.

Utah overtook Indiana for good with a 10-0 run, highlighte­d by back-to-back baskets from Bogdanovic, to take a 108-99 lead. Utah held Indiana scoreless on eight straight possession­s over 4 1/2 minutes during the decisive burst.

“Everything was better in the second half and it did change momentum in the game,” center Rudy Gobert said. “It fueled our offense.”

Gobert fueled the defense with 13 points, 23 rebounds and four second-half blocks. Bojan Bogdanovic had 24 points to pace the Jazz offense. Jordan Clarkson chipped in 18 points off the bench while Conley had 10 points and 10 assists.

Domantas Sabonis had 22 points, 15 rebounds, and seven assists for the Pacers. Caris LeVert scored 24 points and Malcolm Brogdon added 16. Indiana led by as many as 17 points in the first half but lost for the second time in its last six games.

Utah’s perimeter offense came to life after halftime which, combined with improved defense, made it tough for the Pacers to not lose ground.

“They really made us pay from the arc there in the second half,” Indiana coach Nate Bjorkgren said. “We weren’t as forceful, into ball screens and transition defense.“

The Pacers built their largest first-half lead at 5336 midway through the second quarter when Goga Bitadze capped a 9-0 spurt with a dunk.

Pistons 110, Thunder 104 — Josh Jackson scored 29 points, and the Detroit Pistons overcame several key absences to beat Oklahoma City, handing the Thunder their ninth straight loss.

Oklahoma City cut an 11point, fourth-quarter lead to one, but Detroit held on two nights after blowing a double-digit advantage in the final period against the Los Angeles Clippers.

With the score 97-94 and 3:10 remaining, Jackson was called for an offensive foul — his sixth. But that call was overturned after a review, and Jackson made two free throws.

Isaiah Stewart had 15 points and 22 rebounds for Detroit.

The Pistons — who are in last place in the Eastern Conference — were missing Jerami Grant (right knee), Mason Plumlee (rest), Hamidou Diallo (right knee), Wayne Ellington (rest), Cory Joseph (left ankle), Rodney McGruder (right elbow) and Dennis Smith Jr. (left knee).

 ?? Ap ?? HOLDING THEIR BREATH: The Jazz are waiting for an update after guard Donovan Mitchell had to be helped off the court after an ankle injury yesterday.
Ap HOLDING THEIR BREATH: The Jazz are waiting for an update after guard Donovan Mitchell had to be helped off the court after an ankle injury yesterday.

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