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News / Sports / Blazers

Blazers feel the blues in Memphis

Portland scores a season low in 92-83 loss to Grizzlies

By CLAY BAILEY, Associated Press
Published: December 12, 2018, 11:09pm
11 Photos
Portland Trail Blazers forward Caleb Swanigan (50) and Memphis Grizzlies forward JaMychal Green, right, struggle for control of the ball in the second half of an NBA basketball game on Wednesday, Dec. 12, 2018, in Memphis, Tenn.
Portland Trail Blazers forward Caleb Swanigan (50) and Memphis Grizzlies forward JaMychal Green, right, struggle for control of the ball in the second half of an NBA basketball game on Wednesday, Dec. 12, 2018, in Memphis, Tenn. (AP Photo/Brandon Dill) Photo Gallery

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Portland averages 112 points per game. The Memphis Grizzlies’ defense wasn’t letting the Trail Blazers anywhere near that.

Mike Conley scored 23 points and keyed a fourth-quarter outburst as the Grizzlies pulled away for a 92-83 victory over Portland on Wednesday night.

But it was the Memphis defense that made the difference, as the Grizzlies held Portland well below its season average, with the 83 points marking Portland’s season-low for a game — by 13 points.

Leading-scorer Damian Lillard was held to 14 points — one of his worst games of the season — and Portland barely avoided its lowest shooting percentage in a game, hitting only 36.2 percent of its shots.

“We had trouble scoring,” Blazers coach Terry Stotts said. “Part of it was their defense. I thought our offense never really got on track after the first quarter.”

CJ McCollum matched his season-high with 40 points, or things could have been even worse for Portland. McCollum made 16 shots in the game, half of the Trail Blazers’ 32 field goals. Without McCollum, Portland would have shot 27 percent.

Blazers players, like Stotts, acknowledged it was just a bad night.

“I played bad. I struggled,” said center Jusuf Nurkic, a major contributor to the Trail Blazers low percentage, making only one of his 15 shots. “Most of my shots were wide open, and I didn’t make them.”

Lillard added: “They just grind you. They played physical and are a good defensive team. … They come out aggressive and see what they can get away with.”

Jaren Jackson Jr. finished with 14 points, and MarShon Brooks added 13 as the Grizzlies snapped a two-game losing streak.

Despite the shooting woes, Portland had pulled within 79-78 on a reverse layup by Lillard with 5:27 left. But Memphis rattled off 13 straight points, including eight by Conley, stretching the lead to a game-high 14 points at 92-78, and the Grizzlies coasted home.

“We were focused and locked-in after we started a little slowly. We put a lot of focus on the defense,” Jackson said.

Conley limping

Conley was questionable for the game with left hamstring soreness, and there were times he appeared at less than full speed. “I don’t want to full-on sprint out of nowhere, cause any further damage,” the Grizzlies point guard said. “So, I’ve just been trying — especially tonight — to play at a nice pace and save it for more half court. I’m not trying to get up and down and outrun you as much as I might want to.”

Second-quarter jolt

Memphis got out to a poor start, trailing by 11 early. Bickerstaff went to his bench and got a more-spirited performance. “We got off to a little bit of a sluggish start, but our bench came in and really, really sparked us,” Bickerstaff said. “We had a ton of energy there, and everybody kind of fed off it.” Portland coach Terry Stotts perception of it? “Well, we had a really good first quarter. The rest of the three quarters were a grind.”

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