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Home Page Stories Tuesday, March 26, 2002

Lewis leads Sonics' strong finish

Seattle remains in prime playoff position with solid win over Jazz

JANIE MCCAULEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEATTLE -- Rashard Lewis believed it was more than two years since the Seattle SuperSonics gave their best effort against the Utah Jazz.

He was ready to change that.

Lewis scored 11 of his 28 points in the fourth quarter as the Sonics defeated the Jazz 106-92 Monday night to hold onto their playoff position in the West.

It was Seattle's first win over the Jazz since a 104-96 victory on Feb. 1, 2000. The Jazz had beaten the Sonics by an average of 18 points in the previous three meetings this year.

Lewis also grabbed seven rebounds in the final quarter.

"I was more aggressive in the second half," Lewis said. "They started to slow the game down and I thought I'd pick up the tempo more."

Gary Payton added 24 points and seven assists, and Brent Barry had 18 points and six assists for the Sonics, who entered with a half-game lead over the Jazz for seventh place in the Western Conference.

"It looked like a playoff game to them and it looked like an exhibition game to us," Jazz coach Jerry Sloan said.

"We've got eight or nine guys in there that are free agents and I don't know if we can even think about playing basketball. We're worried about what's going to happen next year and this year ain't over."

Karl Malone had 24 points, six steals and five rebounds for Utah, which is battling to stay ahead of the Los Angeles Clippers for the conference's eighth and final playoff spot.

Malone, responding to Sloan's criticism of the free agents, said: "If that's the case, that's disheartening. ... These are my teammates and there are certain lines I don't cross."

The Jazz, who had won four of five, got 17 points and nine assists from John Stockton a night before his 40th birthday. Bryon Russell added 16 for Utah and substitute Andrei Kirilenko had 10 points and seven rebounds.

Sonics coach Nate McMillan wanted his team to force Utah to shoot from outside, and the plan worked for much of the game. The Jazz shot 40.3 percent, including 4-for-13 from 3-point range.

"We focused on their role players," McMillan said. "We felt like Malone and Stockton were going to get their numbers."

Utah had won eight straight games against Seattle. The Jazz beat the Sonics with big second-half runs in all three wins this season.

Utah shot 36.4 percent in the first half and had no players in double figures, but outscored Seattle 16-7 to open the second half. Stockton scored five and Malone six in the spurt and the Jazz pulled to 76-69 going into the fourth quarter.

Sonics 106, Jazz 92

- Record: 40-31.

- Next: Memphis at Seattle, 7 p.m., Wednesday.

For more local news go to the Local Sports section.

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