Boozer, Williams key Jazz past San Antonio


The Spurs still lead the best-of-seven series 2-1.

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Back in the comfort of home, the Utah Jazz found some things they didn’t have the first two games of the Western Conference finals: Confidence, defense and scorers other than Carlos Boozer and Deron Williams.

Williams and Boozer still led the way, but it was the contributions of their teammates that carried Utah past San Antonio 109-83 on Saturday night, and cut the Spurs lead in the series to 2-1.

Williams had 31 points and eight assists and Boozer had 27 points and 12 rebounds, keeping the Jazz a perfect at home this postseason — now 7-0 — and making them 3-0 against the Spurs in Salt Lake City this season.

Tim Duncan got in foul trouble early and never recovered. Although he didn’t foul out, he played tentatively and wound up with 16 points and eight rebounds. He also had eight turnovers as his run of 20-point, 10-rebound games ended at 11 in a row.

Utah’s win means there will be no sweep, and that this may yet turn into a competitive series after two lopsided games in San Antonio. The loud Jazz fans in their “Think Blue” T-shirts can now start dreaming of their team being the first to overcome a 2-0 deficit in the Western Conference finals. Why not? They’ve already dug out of such a hole once this postseason, against Houston in the first round.

And they get to play another game in Salt Lake City on Monday night. This victory by Utah guarantees there will be a Game 5 in San Antonio on Wednesday night.

Getting help

Andrei Kirilenko, Jarron Collins, Gordon Giricek, Derek Fisher and Matt Harpring all pitched in for the Jazz in Game 3, providing the support Boozer and Williams were lacking back in San Antonio.

The Spurs came out of a choppy first half ahead by four, but Williams wasted no time showing his aggressiveness. In the first minute, he darted down court with a different energy level than he’d had all series, missing a layup but seeing Boozer tip it in.

San Antonio kept things close as long as it could, holding its final lead at 60-59. Then Fisher hit a 3-pointer and the Jazz became a different team.

It was his first basket of the game, the first points by a starter other than Williams or Boozer. More rare contributions followed from Kirilenko (his first point of the game), Collins (who hadn’t scored in 11 games) and Giricek.

Ahead only by six early in the fourth quarter, Paul Millsap joined the list of new contributors with a dunk that bumped the lead into double digits for the first time. He scored a layup the next time down, making it 83-71, and San Antonio was never closer than 11 the rest of the game.