Being glued to the bench with three fouls for most of the first half didn't 
sit well with Shaquille O'Neal, and it showed in the second half against the New 
Jersey Nets. 
 
 
   New Jersey Nets guard Vince Carter (15) drives between Miami 
 Heat center Shaquille O'Neal (L) and forward Udonis Haslem (40) in the 
 first quarter of their NBA basketball game in East Rutherford, New Jersey, 
 March 15, 2007. Heat wins the game 93-86. [Reuters]
   | 
A well-rested O'Neal scored 17 of his 19 
points in the final two quarters and the Miami Heat won their eighth straight 
game with a 93-86 win Thursday night. 
"I was really upset," said O'Neal, who fended off a late Nets run with a 
basket in the lane with 1:07 to play. "I felt like they tried to limit me, 
whoever 'they' may be. So I just said to myself third quarter I'm going to come 
out and do what I do." 
O'Neal had plenty of help as the Heat won for the 16th time in 20 games, and 
for the ninth time in 11 since Dwyane Wade went down with a shoulder injury. 
Udonis Haslem added 21 points and 12 rebounds, Jason Williams had 13 points 
and 12 assists, and James Posey and Antoine Walker made big fourth-quarter 
baskets for Miami. 
"I think it helped us out in a strange way with the big fella being out 
(knee) early this year and now Dwyane being out, and just different guys being 
out," Haslem said when asked how the Heat have overcome so many injuries. "I 
don't think there's any situation that any of us haven't faced, any situation 
that makes us uncomfortable." 
The win pulled Miami within a half-game of first-place Washington in the 
Southeast Division. 
"There's teams in front of us that are winning just as much as we are," Heat 
coach Pat Riley said. "So in order for us to catch anybody, we have to keep 
winning. That's all there is to it." 
Jason Kidd had nine points, 14 assists and 10 rebounds for New Jersey in 
narrowly missing his 11th triple-double of the season. Richard Jefferson had 20 
points and Vince Carter added 12 on 4-of-15 shooting from the field. 
"Our shots didn't fall tonight, and by and large, they were very very good 
shots," coach Lawrence Frank said. New Jersey finished 31-of-80 from the field 
(39 percent), with Kidd and Carter making only 1 of 8 in the fourth quarter. 
Miami, which led 68-60 entering the final quarter, appeared to be in command 
when O'Neal made a free throw to push the lead to 86-75 with 4:32 to play. 
Riley took O'Neal out after that and the Nets scored the next nine points to 
get within 86-84 on a 3-pointer by Jefferson with 1:26 to play. 
O'Neal returned, made a power move in the lane and scored for an 88-84 edge. 
After Kidd missed a 3, Haslem made two free throws and Miami was never 
threatened again. 
"He is a great leader," Jefferson said of O'Neal. "When Dwyane went out and 
people questioned his ability to carry the team, he is showing that he can still 
do it. It also helps in a weird way having that injury (knee). Now he has his 
legs, he is rested and he is carrying the team." 
O'Neal, who picked up three fouls in the first half and played less than 6 
minutes, dominated the third quarter, scoring 12 points, grabbing four rebounds 
and blocking a shot. 
His presence in the middle also made the Nets a jump-shooting team and they 
only hit 7-of-21 from the field. 
The Heat took advantage with a 15-2 spurt that turned a 51-47 deficit into a 
62-53 lead on a baby hook by O'Neal, who was 5-for-7 shots in the quarter. 
"When he came out in the third quarter he was just committed that he was 
going to get to the basket, get to the basket, they didn't double him, and we 
got that post up game going," Riley said.