Johnson’s drive at buzzer helps Jazz beat Clippers
Joe Johnson has seen a lot in his 16 years in the NBA. So the veteran didn’t flinch with the clock ticking down and the game tied.
All that experience is why the Utah Jazz brought him in this season.
Article continues after this advertisementIt paid off when Johnson drove the lane and hit a floater at the buzzer, giving the Jazz a 97-95 victory over the Los Angeles Clippers after Utah lost Rudy Gobert 17 seconds into their playoff opener on Saturday night.
“I just wanted to get as close as I could to the basket, and it was a good thing it went down,” Johnson said.
Johnson, who scored 21 points, was left isolated against Jamal Crawford on the final play. He powered his way inside and lofted a shot over Crawford and DeAndre Jordan that bounced around the rim before falling in. A video review confirmed it was good.
Article continues after this advertisement“I just try to be patient, get to a sweet spot, and make the right play,” Johnson said.
He’s made an NBA-best eight game-winning buzzer-beaters in the past 10 years.
“That’s what he’s been doing all his career,” Utah’s Boris Diaw said. “So when he gets the ball at the end of the game, we are pretty confident.”
The Jazz were dealt a blow before either team had settled into the game.
Gobert sprained his left knee on the game’s first play when he banged knees with Clippers forward Luc Mbah a Moute, leaving the Jazz without their 7-foot-1 center who averaged 14.0 points and 12.8 rebounds during the regular season.
“We felt and knew that a lot of people probably were counting us out when he went down, but man, we stuck together,” Johnson said.
Utah steadied itself behind Johnson and fellow veteran George Hill, both of whom were brought in to balance the inexperienced Jazz. Johnson finished with 21 points off the bench and Hill added 16 points.
Gordon Hayward had 19 points and 10 rebounds for Utah.
Blake Griffin scored 26 points and Chris Paul added 25 points and 11 assists for the Clippers, whose seven-game winning streak ended with their first loss since March 26 against Sacramento.
A driving Paul banked in a floater with 13 seconds to go, tying the game at 95.
The Jazz didn’t call a timeout.
“We just wanted to have it where they couldn’t set up on us,” Hayward said, glancing at Johnson. “We just wanted to get it and go and let this man go to work.”
Making their first playoff appearance in five years, the Jazz outshot the Clippers and narrowly controlled the paint, owning a 42-40 edge.
The teams tied with identical 51-31 records in the regular season. The Clippers earned the No. 4 seed and home court by virtue of winning the season series 3-1.
“We fought until the end of the year to get it, and now we’ve given it right back,” Clippers coach Doc Rivers said.
Utah withstood Paul’s offensive outburst in the fourth after the Jazz led by eight on Hill’s 3-pointer. Paul rattled off 10 straight Los Angeles points, drawing the Clippers to 90-89 on a 3-pointer.
Hayward and Johnson scored, keeping the Jazz ahead 94-91. But Johnson lost the ball and Hill fouled Griffin, who made both free throws to get the Clippers to 94-93 with 23 seconds left.
After a timeout by the Jazz, Griffin fouled Derrick Favors, who missed the first and made the second after it hit the rim and went in for a 95-93 lead with 18 seconds left.
“We’ve got to be better,” Paul said. “They played harder, they were more physical.”
Gobert was setting a screen when he and Mbah a Moute made contact and Gobert fell to the court clutching his left leg.
He had to be helped off by Diaw and Hill. A team spokesman said X-rays were negative, and Gobert was taken from Staples Center to have a precautionary MRI.
“We felt a little bit stunned out there,” Diaw said, “but then we regrouped and got back on the horse.”
The matchup between Gobert and Jordan was expected to be a key in the best-of-7 series. Jordan finished with 10 points and 15 rebounds and got called for a technical in the fourth with the Clippers down six.
“We have the rule, no fourth-quarter techs, and he got one,” Rivers said. “It didn’t make a huge difference, but it could have for sure.”
Utah outscored the Clippers 16-10 to open the third before Crawford’s jumper put Los Angeles ahead 70-68. Hayward singlehandedly outscored the Clippers 6-0 to send the Jazz into the fourth leading 74-70.
Neither team led by more than six points in the first half. The Clippers were ahead by six when the Jazz outscored them 14-2 in the second quarter to take their own six-point lead. Griffin got stripped under the basket by Hayward, but he hit a 3-pointer and made a layup on the Clippers’ next two possessions to key a 14-8 spurt that ended with the half tied 52-all.