Mashburn learning to come through in clutch
Associated Press

MIAMI -- The score was tied with less than 25 seconds left in a pivotal playoff game, just the sort of situation that has always brought out the worst in Jamal Mashburn.

Not this time. He calmly took the ball on the left wing, waited for the clock to run down, split two defenders with a nifty spin move and threw up an eight-footer over Christian Laettner that banked softly off the glass and through the hoop.
Jamal Mashburn
Mashburn can score, but not always when it counts.

The basket with six seconds left Tuesday gave the Miami Heat an 84-82 victory over the Detroit Pistons and a 2-0 lead in their best-of-five series.

The basket also capped Mashburn's second consecutive strong playoff performance, reinforcing the notion that at age 27, he may finally be ready to lead the Heat on a postseason run.

"He's taking more shots and handling the ball a lot more, and he's ready," coach Pat Riley said. "He's confident right now, and he's been that way all year. He's an anchor on our team, and I have tremendous faith in him. We need to put history behind us."

Mashburn, who maintains a stoic expression win or lose, shrugged off his heroics.

"In college and high school I've done a lot of different things," the former Kentucky star said. "Just like I'm going to get the glory, I'm going to get the blame, too. I welcome that."

Mashburn is trying to shake a reputation for shrinking from pressure and leaving the Heat to play 4-on-5 at critical moments.

He began the series against Detroit with a career regular-season scoring average of 18.0 points per game but a 9.6 average in 27 playoff games. He is considered a culprit for first-round losses the past two years against the New York Knicks.

Even during the regular season, Mashburn has been unreliable in the clutch. This season he averaged 17.5 points, his best effort in four years with Miami, but barely three points per game in the fourth quarter.

The seven-year veteran has been a frequent subject of trade rumors, and he's considered the player most likely to be dealt away if the Heat again fizzle in the playoffs. But the fast start against Detroit has squelched all talk of a postseason flop, at least for the moment.

The Pistons face possible elimination Saturday in Game 3, and they'll be without All-Star forward Grant Hill, who fractured his left ankle Tuesday and will miss the rest of the playoffs. Hill had already been hobbled by a bone bruise in his left foot.

Miami has played the series without point guard Tim Hardaway, also sidelined by a foot injury, and Mashburn has taken up much of the slack.

In Game 1 he scored a career playoff high 29 points, including 10 in the fourth quarter. On Tuesday he again had 10 in the fourth quarter and finished with 24 points, seven rebounds and five assists. He sparked a comeback starting with a 3-pointer that cut Detroit's lead to 70-68 with 11 minutes left.

"That was his biggest shot of the night," Riley said.

Mashburn hit another jumper and a layup, then fed Alonzo Mourning on an alley-oop dunk to put Miami ahead 78-74. After the Heat blew a six-point lead in the final 2:10, Mashburn sank the game-winner and sent the Pistons back to Detroit reeling.

"We just came up short at the end," Hill said. "Mashburn came up with an unbelievable shot."

Mashburn's critics still want to see him come through against the Knicks. But teammates are already convinced that his performance against Detroit represents a breakthrough.

"I'm so happy for that man," Mourning said. "Think about all the things he has gone through the past few years, all the criticism he has taken. This is his moment to shine, and he deserves it."
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