NBA PLAYOFFS

Bulls put best foot forward

Chicago Bulls forward Luol Deng (9) celebrates near the end of the second half of Game 2 of their first-round NBA basketball playoff series as Brooklyn Nets guard Joe Johnson (7) walks away, Monday, April 22, 2013, in New York. The Bulls won 90-82. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)
Chicago Bulls forward Luol Deng (9) celebrates near the end of the second half of Game 2 of their first-round NBA basketball playoff series as Brooklyn Nets guard Joe Johnson (7) walks away, Monday, April 22, 2013, in New York. The Bulls won 90-82. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

NEW YORK - Whatever pain Joakim Noah was feeling in that achy right foot would have to wait.

Blowing a chance to even the Chicago Bulls’ playoff series would have hurt so much worse.

Noah played through a foot injury that made it difficult to even run in Game 1, making three fourth-quarter baskets as the Bulls beat the Brooklyn Nets 90-82 on Monday night to tie their first-round series at one game each.

“I thought overall, I thought Jo was very rusty in the first game but willed it, and I thought he willed it again tonight and we needed every bit of it,” Bulls Coach Tom Thibodeau said. “To me, it’s obvious we’re a much better team with him on the floor.”

Carlos Boozer had 13 points and 12 rebounds, and Luol Deng bounced back from a poor opener with 15 points and 10 rebounds for the Bulls, who became the first team to win a road game this postseason.

They did it with bruising defense.

“I feel like overall our team played passionate basketball tonight and that’s a plus, because it was ugly in that Game 1,” Noah said.

Chicago held the Nets to two baskets in the third quarter to build a big enough lead to hold off a charge in the fourth.

Noah finished with 11 points and 10 rebounds for the Bulls, who host Game 3 on Thursday.

Brook Lopez scored 21 points for the Nets, who shot 35 percent from the field and were just 4 of 21 from three-point range. Star point guard Deron Williams was 1 of 9, finishing with eight points.

“We didn’t get stops, which was the key for us because then we couldn’t get out and run like we wanted to,” Williams said. “We have to do a better job defensively next game. I’ve got to do a better job of everything really. This was a bad one for me.”

After a defensive effort in a 106-89 loss in Game 1 in which they allowed the Nets to shoot 16 of 20 in the second quarter, the Bulls got back to the mentality that has helped them overcome a number of injuries, including the season-long absence of Derrick Rose.

Noah, who has battled plantar fasciitis and whose status was in question coming into the series, played 25 1/2 minutes, just passing the 20 to 25 to which Thibodeau said he would be limited.

The All-Star center, who grew up and played high school basketball here, missed 12 of the final 15 games of the regular season. He was ineffective in 13 minutes Saturday, finishing with four points, but he was all over the court in the second half Monday, scoring 11 points and grabbing seven rebounds and fighting for any loose ball he could get near.

Joe Johnson (Little Rock Central, Arkansas Razorbacks) scored 17 points but shot 6 of 18 for the Nets, who couldn’t even reach the 87.5 points they averaged against the Bulls in the regular season, let alone the 106 they rang up in the opener.

Two nights after the first major postseason game in Brooklyn since the 1956 World Series, the crowd wasn’t as energetic and neither were the Nets, who didn’t give the fans much to cheer about with poor starts in both halves.

“Our execution when they made an adjustment or when they increased the defensive pressure, we didn’t handle it or react as well as we need to,” Nets interim coach P.J. Carlesimo said.

Sports, Pages 17 on 04/23/2013

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