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It's another 'awful' loss for Clippers

That's how Coach Mike Dunleavy describes it after Clippers blow a 13-point lead in the second half against the Pacers.

INDIANA 86, CLIPPERS 73

November 26, 2009|By Lisa Dillman, On The Clippers
  • Michael Conroy / Associated Press

Reporting from Indianapolis — The Indiana Pacers lost their leading scorer to injury before the game yet managed to hang around and ultimately rally from a 13-point, second-half deficit.

Their opponents got their second-leading scorer back on the court, which should have provided some sort of cosmic lift but instead produced a monumental clunker.

And the identity of the team behind door No. 1?

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That would be the Clippers. Actually, "identity" is probably the wrong word since the Clippers seem to be desperately searching for one, flailing and grabbing at the wind.

Well, something like that. After the Pacers beat them in embarrassing fashion, 86-73, on Wednesday night at Conseco Fieldhouse, the Clippers returned to their futile quest for answers.

"It was an awful loss for us," Clippers Coach Mike Dunleavy said.

"Awful" may not even begin to cover it.

The Clippers (6-10) led by 13 points in the third quarter, and again, watched their lead dwindle and, again, managed to let it vanish in the fourth. They didn't score in the final 2 minutes 10 seconds, and didn't hit a field goal after Mardy Collins pulled them to within four points with 4:36 remaining.

Indiana, playing without leading scorer Danny Granger (sprained ligament in his left knee), finished the game on a 12-3 run and handed the Clippers their first loss in three games, and third straight road defeat.

The Clippers looked like the team having played the previous night out of town, not the Pacers. Toronto crushed Indiana, 123-112, on Tuesday and the Pacers came out Wednesday looking ragged, shooting 17.4% in the first quarter and scoring a season-low 12 points. Their 34 points in the first half tied their fewest in a half this season.

Unfortunately, for the Clippers, there wasn't much of a lasting impact of team-wide energy from the return of shooting guard Eric Gordon, who missed eight consecutive games because of a strained groin.

Gordon, the homegrown Indiana star playing in front of a large gathering of family and friends, entered the game early, with 4:42 remaining in the first quarter, and showed his trademark explosiveness in short order, driving to the rim hard a couple of minutes later.

He played 27-plus minutes and scored six points, and had three turnovers.

"My timing was off," he said. "It just wasn't going my way. The timing wasn't there for me. . . . We definitely should have won. There's no ifs about it. We should have won the game."

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