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Blacksburg's Moore helping Nets

2007-01-17 / Sports

By ASSOCIATED PRESS

New Jersey Net and former Blacksburg High star Mikki Moore puts up a shot as he is guarded by Indiana Pacers' Jermaine O'Neal (7) during third quarter NBA basketball Monday in East Rutherford, N.J. Moore scored 19 points as the Nets beat the Pacers, 105- 95. New Jersey Net and former Blacksburg High star Mikki Moore puts up a shot as he is guarded by Indiana Pacers' Jermaine O'Neal (7) during third quarter NBA basketball Monday in East Rutherford, N.J. Moore scored 19 points as the Nets beat the Pacers, 105- 95. EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. - After spending the last nine years collecting frequent-flier miles and more than a few rejection slips, Mikki Moore has found a niche with the New Jersey Nets.

The 7-foot journeyman stepped into the lineup when Nenad Krstic was lost for the season with a knee injury last month and has begun to pay regular dividends. On Monday he scored 19 points - including four dunks in the first quarter - as New Jersey opened a big early lead and ran away from Indiana in a 105-95 victory.

Vince Carter led New Jersey with 31 points and Jason Kidd added 19 and narrowly missed his second triple-double in three games with 10 assists and nine rebounds.

Moore was added in the offseason to spell Krstic, who tore his left ACL on Dec. 22 against Los Angeles. In contrast to the third-year Serbian, Moore had been with eight NBA teams before arriving in New Jersey, in addition to spending time in Greece and in the CBA.

A career three-points-pergame scorer, Moore has averaged 11 points over his last six games, and scored a career-high 20 on nine-fornine shooting against Minnesota on Dec. 30.

Moore acknowledges that he is rarely the first option on a play, but that his teammates have a knack of finding him when he is open. That is usually around the basket, as in Monday's first quarter.

''They're really unselfish,'' he said. ''If the play is there, they'll get me the ball. And if they're going to put that trust in me, I have to finish.''

Moore's transformation from a bench player who could provide energy and rebounding into a dependable scorer has been timely for New Jersey, which is 17- 20 but still only percentage points behind first-place Toronto in the Atlantic Division.

''I think it may have been more of an adjustment for him to the way we play, because we're all such willing passers,'' Carter said. ''If you're open, we're going to get you the ball. And with his athleticism and his ability to finish around the rim, we wanted to take advantage of his skills.''

New Jersey built a 20- point lead in the first half and led by 25 at the end of three, enabling Carter and Kidd to start the fourth quarter on the bench. They had to return to the game when Sarunas Jasikevicius' 3- pointer pulled Indiana to within 15 (95-80) with less than six minutes remaining.

Enter Moore, who scored five consecutive points which, combined with Carter's fifth 3-pointer of the game, helped New Jersey keep a comfortable cushion.

''We got beat soundly the first three quarters,'' Indiana coach Rick Carlisle said. ''The guys who played the fourth won the quarter by 15, but we never got within striking distance to be in position to be in the game. It's disappointing because we made some significant strides over the last week to 10 days. Today we took a step back.''

Al Harrington had 18 points for Indiana, which lost its second straight game after winning three in a row.

Kidd continued to excel in the face of mounting offcourt distractions surrounding his marriage. The All-Star point guard filed for divorce from wife Joumana last Tuesday, and both he and his wife have filed restraining orders against each other recently.

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