Wednesday, March 26, 2008 - Page updated at 12:00 AM
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Josh Howard picks up slack for Nowitzki
The Associated Press
DALLAS — Life without Dirk Nowitzki started quite nicely for the Dallas Mavericks.
Josh Howard scored 32 points, Jerry Stackhouse had 20, Erick Dampier had 19 points and 17 rebounds and Jason Kidd neared a triple-double, lifting the Mavs past the Los Angeles Clippers 103-90 on Tuesday night.
OK, so it was only the Clippers. Still, Dallas needed something to go right after dropping three consecutive games and losing its leading scorer and rebounder to a sprained ankle and knee. And this kind of team-wide effort could serve as a blueprint for how the Mavericks hope to make up for Nowitzki's absence.
"If everyone goes up four or five points, that'll cover it," Howard said.
Howard was an All-Star last season and was the team's top scorer for the early part of this season, but he has been fighting through injuries and learning to play with Kidd. This was easily his best game since the All-Star point guard arrived.
It didn't start that way, with Howard going 2 of 11 and getting to the free-throw line only once in the first half. Dampier was the early star, getting 12 points and 12 rebounds over the first two quarters.
"Damp obviously was very inspired," coach Avery Johnson said. "We need him to do what he did tonight, not necessarily the numbers but being aggressive going to the basket."
But in the third quarter Dallas was up only 60-58 and in need of a Nowitzki-like surge. Howard provided it, scoring 20 of the team's next 26 points, putting Dallas up by 16 early in the fourth quarter. The Mavericks stretched it out enough that Johnson emptied the bench in the final minutes.
Howard finished 8 of 22 and made all 15 of his free-throw attempts. He also had seven rebounds and four steals.
"For him to get to the line like that, that was very important," Kidd said. "He was aggressive, kept driving to the basket and was active on defense."
Kidd had 10 points, eight assists and six rebounds. Dampier's rebounds tied his season high. Malik Allen started for Nowitzki, but got two fouls in the first 2:21 and went to the bench. He finished with six points and tied his season high with nine rebounds.
Nowitzki watched from the bench, wearing a light beige jacket, even lighter shirt and a protective boot on his left ankle. His swelling was expected to be done Tuesday, so he could start a rehabilitation program soon.
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The Mavericks are tight-lipped about when Nowitzki might be back, but it's safe to say the longer he's out, the tougher it will be for them to make the playoffs — unless they get more performances like this.
"We're up to the challenge," Stackhouse said. "We don't have to win out. But we all have to pick it up a little."
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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