George, West lead Pacers past Pistons

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INDIANAPOLIS — The hard part for the Indiana Pacers isn’t over. It takes time to climb out of a slump.

“Once you’re not playing well and you finally get a win, the hardest part is maintaining that
consistency,” Paul George said. “You have to understand that it’s going to be different every night, but
you got to find a way to build off the first win.”
George had 27 points and 13 rebounds, David West scored 15 points and the Indiana Pacers snapped a
three-game skid with a 101-94 win over the Detroit Pistons on Wednesday night.
George hit a 3-pointer from 35-feet to give the Pacers a 94-90 lead with 3:19 remaining and Indiana never
trailed the rest of the way.
Josh Smith scored 15 of his 24 points in the first quarter and finished with five rebounds, and Greg
Monroe added 16 points for the Pistons, who have lost four of their last five games.
Brandon Jennings hit a 3 to get Detroit within 94-93 before George scored, forced a turnover and West hit
a jumper to give the Pacers a 98-93 lead with 1:35 left to play.
“We were locked in really early in this game,” George said. “They made a late push when we were up a good
eight points, they made a pretty good push. But I felt our guys were locked in throughout this whole
game.”
George’s two free throws with 8:54 left in the third gave Indiana a 58-50 lead. The Pistons bounced back
with a 9-0 run and Rodney Stuckey hit a 3-pointer to give Detroit a 74-73 lead with 13 seconds left in
the third.
The Pacers gave fans mixed signals. At times Indiana’s sluggish play showed signs of a team that
continues to struggle with chemistry, shooting and turnovers.
The Pistons scored 17 points off 10 Indiana turnovers.
At other times the Pacers looked like the same old team fans were used to before the All-Star break.
Bankers Life Fieldhouse was abnormally silent when the Pistons went on an 8-0 run midway through the
first quarter and took a 23-14 lead after Monroe scored with 4:19 left in the opening quarter.
Then the Pacers showed signs of life.
They went on a 12-2 spurt to close out the first. George scored to give the Pacers a 28-27 lead with 20
seconds left in the first.
Evan Turner dunked and West scored to give the Pacers a 35-32 lead with 8:03 remaining in the second
quarter.
“We had good pace, we threw it up the floor, we attacked,” Pistons interim coach John Loyer said. “I
can’t fault the way our guys played. They competed their butts off against the best team in the East.”

The Pistons went on an 8-0 run to take 40-35 lead with 5:13 left in the second quarter.
Stephenson then sparked a 10-0 surge with a one-handed dunk and George closed it out with a 3 to give the
Pacers a 45-40 advantage with 3:20 left in the half.
George’s free throw with 31 seconds left in the second gave the Pacers a 50-46 lead at halftime.
The Pistons handed Indiana its first home loss of the season, 101-96 back on Dec. 16 — one of the few
positives for Detroit this season. The Pacers won twice in Detroit, including a 112-104 overtime win on
March 15.
Indiana hopes Wednesday’s win over the Pistons is the start to getting back to playing at the level they
were.
“You get a win, but you have to string a couple together,” Pacers center Roy Hibbert said. “Winning is
hard work. We have to see if we can keep it going.”
It won’t be easy.
The Pacers play three of their next four games on the road. They go to Toronto on Friday and will host
Atlanta on Sunday before going on the road to Milwaukee and Miami next week.
They host Oklahoma City on April 13 in Indiana’s final home game before the playoffs.
NOTES: Detroit G Chauncey Billups was out after left knee surgery. … Pistons G Josh Harrellson was out
with a knee injury, C Andrew Bynum was out with a sore right knee and G C.J. Watson was out with a right
hamstring straight. … Hibbert left the game with 1:21 left in the first quarter after he hit the back
of his head falling to the ground on a Flagrant 1 foul called on Charlie Villanueva. Team officials said
Hibbert has questionable with a sore neck, but he started the second half. . The Pistons shot 44 percent
in the first quarter and led by as many as nine points, but went 23 of 68 (33.8 percent) in the final
three quarters.

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