Dallas deflates Sacto – Mavericks 132, Kings 110

Mavericks nearly perfect in record-setting game

? Nick Van Exel insisted that the Dallas Mavericks ignore the Sacramento Kings. Just make shots, he said repeatedly, and everything will be fine.

Sticking to those thoughts even after falling behind by 10 in the opening minutes, the Mavericks roared back in their second-round series with a record-setting offensive display Thursday night.

Dirk Nowitzki made five of Dallas’ 11 straight baskets in the first quarter, and Van Exel went 8-of-9 in the first half as the Mavs set or tied several NBA playoff scoring records in a 132-110 victory, tying the series at one game apiece.

Van Exel scored a career playoff-high of 36 in 30 minutes, and he didn’t even get rolling until after the big run of consecutive shots. He sparked a 30-7 run in the second quarter with three straight three-pointers.

His biggest contribution, though, was inspiring his teammates to keep believing in themselves after a lopsided loss in the opener made them 2-8 in their last 10 games against the Kings.

“I hope it had a lot to do with it,” Van Exel said. “I thought we responded and played with a lot of heart and aggressiveness.”

Their streak of made baskets was a thing of beauty. It included four three-pointers, three by Nowitzki — one of which he turned into a four-point play. Nowitzki had 14 points during that run and finished with 24 in 30 minutes.

Michael Finley also scored 24 and Steve Nash had 19 as Dallas became the first team since Houston in 1995 to top 130 points in a playoff game.

“Nick got our attention and we responded,” said surprise starter Adrian Griffin, who had eight of Dallas’ first 16 points and finished with 15. “That’s the sign of a great leader, when you not only tell people what to do but then lead by example.”

Dallas guard Nick Van Exel struts after making a three-point shot against Sacramento. The Mavericks beat the Kings, 132-110, Thursday in Dallas.

The Mavs set a first-half playoff scoring record with 83 points and were one shy of the mark for the first quarter with 44. With 113 points through three quarters, they had a shot at the playoff record of 157 set by Boston in 1990. But they scored only seven in the final 8:52.

“I think that’s as well as we’ve played for three quarters,” Dallas coach Don Nelson said. “Boy, we really had it rolling.”

The loss may have been extra costly for Sacramento.

All-Star forward Chris Webber was carried to the locker room by four teammates late in the third quarter after he injured his left knee while going for a lob pass. The exact nature of Webber’s injury was uncertain. He’ll undergo an MRI exam today.

“I just twisted it,” said Webber, who led the Kings with 31 points in 29 minutes.

Also, backup guard Bobby Jackson fractured his right cheekbone in a fourth-quarter collision. His status for Game 3 is not yet known.