The Mercury News

Points made: Kings outlast the Clippers 176-175 in double OT

- By Joe Reedy

There were a couple moments Friday night when Sacramento coach Mike Brown wishes he could have enjoyed being a part of the secondhigh­est scoring game in NBA history.

Brown and his Kings though were able to savor something that is more important in the long run — a hard-fought victory.

Malik Monk scored a career-high 45 points, De'Aaron Fox had the goahead basket and finished with 42 and Sacramento outlasted the Los Angeles Clippers 176-175 in double overtime.

It is only the second time in the NBA's 76-year history that both teams have scored at least 170 points. Detroit beat Denver 186-184 in triple overtime on Dec. 13, 1983, in what remains the highestsco­ring NBA game.

The Kings are third on the scoring list with the 176 points and the Clippers fourth. A team has scored 170 points in a regular-season game only seven times.

“From a fan's standpoint, I can see how this game would have been a lot of fun to watch,” Brown said. “There was unbelievab­le shot making and great defense. There was high-level talent that was on display. Kudos to the players.

Sacramento and Los Angeles also combined for 44 3-pointers, tied for the most in a game in NBA history.

Both teams also shot at least 58% from the field and were 80% or better from the foul line.

“I thought was a great game. A lot of momentum shifts,” Clippers coach Tyronn Lue said.

What was overshadow­ed was Russell Westbrook making his Clippers debut after he cleared waivers Wednesday. He started and had 17 points, 14 assists and five rebounds in 39 minutes before fouling out with 1:49 remaining in the second overtime.

“It was great to get back on the floor. Obviously, you want to win and that's the most important part,” said Westbrook.

The Clippers had a 175169 advantage with 1:57 remaining before the Kings scored the final seven points, including Fox's jumper with 36.5 seconds remaining. The Clippers had the final shot, but Nico Batum missed a 3-pointer at the buzzer.

The Kings also overcame a 14-point deficit late in the fourth quarter and a six-point deficit in both overtime periods.

“We just stuck with it. We got down 12 at one point but just had our heads up. We knew they were going to let us back in,” Monk said.

It was the first time in franchise history the Kings have had two players score at least 40 points in a game. It is the second time it has happened in an NBA game this season after Cleveland's Caris LeVert and Donovan Mitchell did it against Boston.

Fox — who also had 12 assists and five steals — is just the 12th player since 1973-74 with 40 points, 10 assists and five steals in a game. The last to do it was James Harden in 2019.

“We just had to grind this game out. We were on the second night of a backto-back but it is what it is. We have a younger team than them,” Fox said.

Kawhi Leonard scored a season-high 44 points for Los Angeles and Paul George added 34. Leonard had 21 points in the third quarter, which tied his career high for points scored in a quarter.

“I thought he did a great job getting to a spot with the 3-point shots and attacking the basket,” Lue said about Leonard.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sacramento's Malik Monk, left, shoots as the Clippers' Mason Plumlee defends during Friday night's game in Los Angeles. Monk scored 45 points in the Kings' win.
MARK J. TERRILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sacramento's Malik Monk, left, shoots as the Clippers' Mason Plumlee defends during Friday night's game in Los Angeles. Monk scored 45 points in the Kings' win.

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