Indiana Pacers rally past Atlanta Hawks 101-85 to even series

Arkansas-SEMO Live Blog
photo Atlanta Hawks' Jeff Teague is defended by Indiana Pacers' Paul George during the first half in Game 2 of an opening-round NBA basketball playoff series Tuesday, April 22, 2014, in Indianapolis.

INDIANAPOLIS - Paul George scored 27 points and George Hill had all 15 of his points in the second half, leading the Indiana Pacers to a 101-85 victory over the Atlanta Hawks on Tuesday night in Game 2 of their first-round playoff series.

The Pacers and Hawks are tied at a game apiece heading into Game 3 in Atlanta on Thursday.

George was especially effective even though he spent much of the night defending Hawks point guard Jeff Teague, who had 14 points. Paul Millsap finished with 19 for Atlanta.

The first 24 minutes looked like an exact duplicate of Game 1, but the Pacers pulled away with a 31-13 third quarter.

Top-seeded Indiana took its first lead since the first quarter on Lance Stephenson's tiebreaking three-point play with 7:58 left. The Pacers then put the game away with a 19-0 run that stretched into the fourth quarter.

David West got it started with a bank shot that made it 70-65 with 3:20 left. George made a 3 to make it 79-65 heading into the fourth, and the Pacers scored the first eight points of the final period.

Lou Williams stopped Atlanta's scoring drought with a jumper with 9:03 left, making it 87-67. But the Pacers coasted from there.

The series now shifts to Atlanta, where the Pacers have won only two times since December 2006 - though one of those wins allowed Indiana to close out last year's first-round series 4-2.

Tuesday's win at least gave the Pacers a brief respite from the constant questions that have dogged them throughout their late-season swoon. TNT commentator Charles Barkley even questioned the Pacers' toughness on Sunday.

But Indiana tightened up in Game 2 and got back to playing the kind of basketball that it did during the first half of the season.

With the two Georges and Stephenson leading the way in the second half, the offense rolled. And the Pacers finally figured out how to defend Atlanta's spread offense, too.

After allowing 11 3-pointers in Game 1 and eight more in the first half Tuesday, the Pacers gave up just two over the final 24 minutes of Game 2.

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