INDIANAPOLIS - Miamiâs season, the one thatâs supposed to end in an NBA championship and vindication, was slipping away.
LeBron James brought it back.
And this time, Dwyane Wade helped him.
James scored 40 points, Wade added 30 â" 22 in the second half â" and Miamiâs dynamic duo took over after halftime to get the Heat even in the series with a 101-93 win over the Indiana Pacers in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference semifinals Sunday.
With Chris Bosh injured and back in Florida, the James-Wade tandem saved the Heat, who will host Game 5 on Tuesday night in Miami.
âJust survival,â Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. âThis is what the playoffs are about.â
James was at his MVP best, adding 18 rebounds and nine assists and refusing to let Miamiâs season slip away.
âItâs still going to be a dogfight,â James said. âItâs a three-game series now.â
Wade rebounded from the worst playoff game of his career, shaking off a 1-of-8 shooting start and adding nine rebounds and six assists.
Danny Granger scored 20 to lead the Pacers, who had the Heat down but couldnât put the defending conference champions away.
Down by 10 points in the third quarter, the Heat were in danger of having their championship dreams obliterated by an Indiana team outworking them at both ends and backed by a sea of towel-waving fans.
James would have none of it.
Nor would Wade.
Wade, who scored five points in Game 3 and yelled at Spoelstra on the sideline during a third-quarter timeout in Miamiâs 19-point loss, came alive in the third when he made all six shots and scored 14 points.
âIâve been doubted before. Iâll be doubted again,â Wade said.
James added 14 as well in the period as the pair landed a 1-2 punch on the Pacersâ chin.
âWe had a terrible performance in Game 3,â James said. âWe wanted to redeem ourselves.â
Grangerâs three-pointer had given Indiana a 61-51 and the Pacers, outhustling the Heat to loose balls, appeared poised to take a commanding lead in the series.
But thatâs when James and Wade put on a jaw-dropping spectacle, combining for all but two points in a 25-5 run that put Miami up 76-66.
During one sequence, Wade lost his balance and fell and was lucky to push the ball toward James near the top of the key. As Wade scrambled to his feet, James alertly passed him the ball and he calmly knocked down a three-pointer to give the Heat a 64-63 lead. The pair made easy shots, tough ones and did everything in their power to steer Miami away from a 3-1 hole.
Only eight teams in league history have overcome a 3-1 deficit to win a best-of-seven series. Thatâs what the Heat were staring at with a loss in Game 4.
The Heat took a 76-70 lead into the fourth, and every time Indiana got close, either Wade or James responded.
Miami also got a huge lift down the stretch from Udonis Haslem, who hasnât been a factor in the series but made four big jumpers in the final six minutes despite playing with a large bandage over his right eye after being elbowed by Indianaâs Tyler Hansbrough.
Grangerâs three-pointer got the Pacers within 96-91 with 1:33 left, but Haslem hit another short shot and James closed the Pacers out with three free throws in the last 16 seconds.
Leandro Barbosa dropped a layup just before the horn to give the Pacers a 54-46 lead at halftime, closing a second quarter that included another altercation involving Granger.
Wade was fouled hard on a drive with 12.6 seconds left by Hibbert. After the whistle, Miamiâs frustrated star slapped off the Indiana centreâs arm after the two got tangled. Granger didnât like that and he confronted Wade nose-to-nose in the foul lane.
Wade turned to one official and pleaded to âget him out of my face.â
Granger was slapped with a technical foul for the second straight game, and as Wade lined up to shoot his free throw, Indianaâs forward kept jawing at him.
âIâm right here,â Granger said, standing near mid-court.
Wade got the message, and he and James returned one of their own in the third.
His teamâs dynamic disrupted without Bosh, Spoelstra changed his starting lineup for the fourth time in four games, putting Ronny Turiaf at centre and starting Shane Battier up front with James for the second straight game. The switch did nothing to stop the Pacers from getting off to another strong start.
Indiana was up 9-0 in a blink and led 19-11 after Granger dropped a three-pointer.
James, though, got things going for the Heat and had them within 25-18 after one, a deficit that could have been much worse if not for the Pacers missing several wide-open three-pointers.
The Associated Press
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