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Indiana Pacers' Dahntay Jones (1) drives past New York Knicks' Danilo Gallinari during the second half of an NBA basketball game Wednesday in New York. Jones scored 19 points as the Pacers won the game 101-89.
Frank Franklin II / Associated Press


Indiana Pacers' Brandon Rush, top, shoots over New York Knicks' Jared Jeffries, bottom, during the second half of Wednesday in New York. The Pacers won the game 101-89.
Frank Franklin II / Associated Press


Published November 05, 2009 08:21 am - A couple of top players were already on the bench, then leading scorer Danny Granger joined them after fouling out with plenty of time left. No matter. The Indiana Pacers just won it with defense. T.J. Ford scored eight of his 16 points in the final 3:12, and the Pacers won for the first time this season, holding the New York Knicks without a field goal for the final 9-plus minutes Wednesday night in a 101-89 victory.

Pacers beat Knicks 101-89 for first win
Jones has 19 points, 12 rebounds for Indiana

By Brian Mahoney, The Associated Press

NEW YORK — A couple of top players were already on the bench, then leading scorer Danny Granger joined them after fouling out with plenty of time left.

No matter. The Indiana Pacers just won it with defense.

T.J. Ford scored eight of his 16 points in the final 3:12, and the Pacers won for the first time this season, holding the New York Knicks without a field goal for the final 9-plus minutes Wednesday night in a 101-89 victory.

"That has to be the signature of our team, that regardless of what we're doing on the offensive end, we can always stop you on the defensive end, and we did that tonight," Granger said.

Dahntay Jones had 19 points and 12 rebounds for the Pacers (1-3), who came in as one of the NBA's three winless teams and had lost all three games by double digits. Roy Hibbert added 15 points and 14 rebounds.

Brandon Rush had 12 points and 10 rebounds as the Pacers pulled it out despite losing Granger, who led them with 21 points, to fouls with 3:38 remaining. Indiana forced New York to miss its final 12 shots.

"I'm happy things worked that we've been working on for the past couple of weeks and to know that our defense can anchor us," said Jones, a defensive stopper last season for Denver who helped Indiana hold New York's starting backcourt of Chris Duhon and Larry Hughes to 6 of 23 shooting. "We were communicating and getting stops and trying to dig out rebounds."

Al Harrington scored 22 points for the Knicks, who shot 2-for-17 in the fourth quarter. David Lee had 20 points and 19 rebounds, but New York hit 39.5 percent for the game.

"Our problems in this game started and ended on the offensive end," Lee said. "We talk a lot about our defense, but our offense in the second half, for us to shoot under 40 percent isn't a good sign."

The Pacers turned to their defense without starting forward Troy Murphy, who bruised his lower back in a hard fall during a 111-93 loss to Denver on Tuesday night. They are already without another top player, Mike Dunleavy Jr., who is recovering from surgery on his right knee.

They didn't need them against the Knicks, who fell to 1-2 on a four-game homestand that concludes Friday with the only visit this season from LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers.

"Our guys are in terrific condition to be able to play that hard in the second half after playing back-to-back nights," Indiana coach Jim O'Brien said. "It shows how hard they worked up to this point."

Hibbert tied it at 76 early in the fourth, then Granger made a 3-pointer to give the Pacers the lead for good. Wilson Chandler's jumper with 9:20 left made it a one-point game, but the Knicks were shut out from the field the rest of the night.

The fourth-quarter debacle came after the Knicks had averaged 40.5 points in the fourth quarters of their previous two games. They managed only 33 points in the second half Wednesday.

"For whatever reason, it seems every time we get stuck or whatever, instead of having a little more determination or patience, we just jack one up and that kind of got us in trouble in the second half," Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni said.



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