LeBron Takes Over Late, Heat Defeat Knicks
By JOSH NEWMAN
Special to ZAGSBLOG

They evaporated in a flurry of late, big-game plays on both ends from LeBron James, every shot J.R. Smith missed in the fourth quarter and with the realization that Sunday’s 99-93 Heat victory at Madison Square Garden was No. 14 in a row for the reigning NBA champions.
“It was huge, it was our next game, it was our next challenge,” James said. “We’ve had a few this week. We had Memphis come into our building (on Friday), a very good team, one of the best teams in this league. Today, New York, one of the best teams in our league as well, so to come here, against a team that’s very good at home, who has played well at home and to get the win under the circumstances, to gut it out is good.”
A pair of 20-point Knicks victories over the Heat on Nov. 2 and Dec. 6, respectively, feel like a lifetime ago. The Heat are 29 games over .500, seven games ahead of the rest of the Eastern Conference, James appears to be completely locked in and the Knicks (35-21), now 7.5 games behind the Heat in the East, continue to meander as the regular season begins to wind down.
“Our guys showed some more mental toughness and resolve in the second half,” Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra said after his team overcame a 16-point first half deficit. “In the second half, we just focused on playing our game and competing and trying to dig back into it and make plays in the end. We had so many plays going down the stretch, a lot of them on the defensive end.”
UCLA coach Ben Howland confirmed the seemingly obvious Saturday when he said that Shabazz Muhammad will enter the NBA Draft after his freshman season.
Andrew Wiggins will begin his official visit to Kansas Sunday and is expected to be on hand for Monday’s game in which the four KU seniors play their final home game against Texas Tech.
GREENBURGH, N.Y. — Marcus Camby and John Calipari maintain a close relationship after all these years, but Camby admits it’s “a tough pill to swallow” that his former coach is now leading the team that beat UMass in the 1996 Final Four.