Houston Chronicle

Miami survives Lowry’s big shot

- By Ian Harrison

TORONTO — It only counts as one win, though the Miami Heat had to work twice as hard to get it.

Goran Dragic scored 26 points, Dwyane Wade had seven of his 24 in overtime after Kyle Lowry’s halfcourt shot tied it at the buzzer, and the Heat beat the Toronto Raptors 102-96 on Tuesday night in Game 1 of their Eastern Conference semifinal series.

“We had to win the game t wice t onight,” Wade said.

Joe Johnson scored 16 points and Josh Richardson had 11. Hassan Whiteside had 17 rebounds for the Heat.

Game 2 is Thursday night in Toronto.

Lowry’s i mprobable 3-pointer from his own side of the halfcourt line capped Toronto’s six-point comeback in the final 20 seconds of regulation, but the Raptors couldn’t deliver in the extra session. Toronto went scoreless for the first 3:46 of overtime before DeMar DeRozan hit a jumper.

Dunks by DeMarre Carroll and Jonas Valanciuna­s made it 99-96 with just over 10 seconds to play. Toronto got the ball back after a Miami turn- over on the inbounds play, but Wade stripped the ball from DeRozan and sealed it with a three-point play.

“D-Wade did a great job of reading the play and jumping toward the ball, trying to take the ball away from me,” DeRozan said.

Wade ( 3,638 points) moved into 16th place on the NBA’s playoff scoring list, passing Elgin Baylor ( 3,623). Scottie Pippen (3,642) is in 15th place.

Valanciuna­s had 24 points and 14 rebounds, and DeRozan added 22 points for the Raptors, who dropped to 1-9 in the opening game of a postseason series. Five of those defeats have come at home.

“Game 1, you’ve got to be on point,” Raptors coach Dwane Casey said. “You can’t have some of the mistakes that we made, turning it over. We’d get stops and lose it back, not rotate quick enough in some of the situations.”

DeRozan connected on his first three field goal attempts of the game, then made only six of 19 the rest of the way.

Lowry also struggled, going scoreless in the first half and finishing 3 of 13 for seven points.

The All-Star guard headed to Toronto’s practice gym on the upper level of Air Canada Centre to work on his shooting after the game.

“We know he’s not shooting the ball well,” Casey said. “He’s not making the shots that he normally makes. It’s just like a hitter, hitters go through slumps. He’s there.”

 ??  ?? The Raptors went from the joy of a buzzer-beating heave by Kyle Lowry, left, that forced overtime to the despair felt by DeMar DeRozan, right, after his turnover sealed Toronto’s fate in overtime.
The Raptors went from the joy of a buzzer-beating heave by Kyle Lowry, left, that forced overtime to the despair felt by DeMar DeRozan, right, after his turnover sealed Toronto’s fate in overtime.
 ?? Frank Gunn photos / Associated Press ??
Frank Gunn photos / Associated Press

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