Rondo injures elbow as Boston beat Heat, Memphis win in OT

BOSTON, (Reuters) – Rajon Rondo overcame a dislocated  left elbow to lead the Boston Celtics to a 97-81 win over Miami  on Saturday which cut the Heat’s lead to 2-1 in their Eastern  Conference semi-final.

In the Western Conference, the Memphis Grizzlies fought back  from 16 points down to beat Oklahoma City 101-93 in overtime and  take a 2-1 lead over the Thunder in their semi-final series.

In Boston, the Celtics trailed by two points at halftime but  started the third quarter with a 16-4 run to seize control of  the game.

Boston Celtics guard Rajon Rondo chases a loose ball with Miami Heat forward Mike Miller during the second half of Game 3 of their NBA Eastern Conference playoff series in Boston, Massachusetts on Saturday night.

Rondo scored his first basket of the game during the run but  then dislocated his left elbow after falling awkwardly in a  tangle with Miami’s Dwyane Wade.

After being helped from the court with his arm immobilized,  Rondo returned in the fourth quarter and finished the game with  six points and 11 assists.

“My adrenaline was too high. I fed off the crowd energy,”  Rondo told reporters, with the injured arm in a protective  sleeve.

“I thought I could try to change the game’s momentum by  getting to the ball defensively. I only need two legs for that.

“I’m glad we have a day off (on Sunday). I’ll get a lot of  treatment and hopefully I’ll be ready to play,” Rondo said of  his chances of making Game Four yesterday.

Rondo’s coach Doc Rivers was surprised to see the point  guard return to the court after such a gruesome looking injury.

“I still haven’t seen it. I don’t want to see it,” Rivers  told reporters of the incident.

“It helped me that I didn’t see it, because I probably  wouldn’t put him back in the game.”

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Kevin Garnett was the Celtics scoring leader with 28 and 18  rebounds while Paul Pierce added 27 points.

Wade led the Heat with 23 points while LeBron James was  limited to 15 points and Chris Bosh scored just one field goal  among his six points.

“This is a championship team and they played at a  championship level,” Wade said of Boston.

“We (will) come back Monday and try to learn from our  mistakes and not let them outplay us. For most of the game, they  did a good job of outplaying us, and that can’t happen.”

In Memphis, the Grizzlies clamped down on the Thunder  offense over the final 22 minutes, limiting them to 25 points  while scoring 49 to claim the victory.

“We were fortunate to get this win, but that’s the  playoffs,” said Grizzlies coach Lionel Hollins.

“In order to go further, you always have (to) experience  games where you have to do something miraculous in order to win  the game. And I thought this was miraculous the way we fought  back after being down 16.”

Zach Randolph led the Grizzlies with 21 points and 21  rebounds while Mike Conley and O.J. Mayo each scored 18 points.

Tony Allen was outstanding on defense, limiting Kevin Durant  to 22 points and just four in the fourth quarter and overtime.

Russell Westbrook led the Thunder with 23 points, including  13 in the third quarter but, like Durant, only scored four  points in the fourth quarter and overtime.

“I think we just got slow. We weren’t moving with any speed,  no energy, and that’s what we have to do.

We have to do a better  job of doing that,” said Thunder coach Scott Brooks.

“We were taking bad shots and that’s not a good combination  when you’re trying to close out a game.”