Paul’s 32 points lift Clippers in Game 1

Los Angeles Clippers guard Chris Paul (3) shoots in front of Oklahoma City Thunder guard Derek Fisher (6) in the second quarter of Game 1 of the Western Conference semifinal NBA basketball playoff series in Oklahoma City, Monday, May 5, 2014. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

Los Angeles Clippers guard Chris Paul (3) shoots in front of Oklahoma City Thunder guard Derek Fisher (6) in the second quarter of Game 1 of the Western Conference semifinal NBA basketball playoff series in Oklahoma City, Monday, May 5, 2014. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

OKLAHOMA CITY - Chris Paul made a career-high eight three-pointers and scored 32 points to help the Los Angeles Clippers beat the Oklahoma City Thunder 122-105 on Monday night in Game 1 of their NBA Western Conference semifinal.

Paul, who had never made more than five three-pointers in a game, had 10 assists. Blake Griffin scored 23 points, Jamal Crawford had 17 and J.J. Redick added 12 for the Clippers, who shot 55 percent from the field and made 15 of 29 three-point attempts.

Russell Westbrook scored 29 points, Kevin Durant had 25 and Serge Ibaka added 12 for the Thunder, who suffered their worst home loss since moving to Oklahoma City in 2008 from Seattle.

The Clippers scored 23 points off Oklahoma City’s 18 turnovers.

Game 2 is Wednesday night in Oklahoma City.

Both teams were coming off Game 7 victories in the first round on Saturday night.

Oklahoma City opened by taking a 16-10 lead but the Clippers responded with a 24-6 run. Paul hit five three-pointers in the first quarter, matching his career high for three-pointers in a playoff game in the first 12 minutes. The Clippers shot 67 percent in the first quarter to take a 39-25 lead.

Los Angeles extended its lead to 24 points in the second quarter and took a 69-52 halftime lead with Paul getting 22 points and six assists.

Durant and Westbrook scored 16 points each in the first half, but the Thunder committed 11 turnovers before halftime.

A quick three-pointer and a pull-up jumper by Paul pushed the Clippers’ lead to 78-56 in the opening minutes of the third quarter. The Clippers reached 100 points with just over a minute left in the period and led 104-78 heading into the fourth quarter.

WIZARDS 102, PACERS 96

INDIANAPOLIS - Washington keeps finding ways to break through old, stubborn barriers.

Even in the unlikeliest place of all - Indiana.

Bradley Beal scored 14 of his 25 points in the fourth quarter, Trevor Ariza added 22 and the Wizards held off the Pacers with a stout defense over the final 7½ minutes Monday night to get a victory in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference semifinals.

It was Washington’s first second-round victory since 1982.

“We know it’s a tough building to play in. We haven’t won here in a while,” Ariza said after the Wizards snapped a 12-game losing streak in Indy. “Why wouldn’t this be the best time to come here and get a win - in the playoffs?”

The Wizards know there is a lot more work to do in this best-of-seven series.

Game 2 is Wednesday in Indianapolis.

So far, though, things have gone well for the upstart Wizards.

After clinching their first playoff berth since 2008, the Wizards have advanced to the second round for the first time since 2005, won at Indiana for the first time since April 18, 2007, and have their first second-round victory since April 28, 1982. Washington has opened these playoffs with four consecutive road victories and put the pressure right back on the top seed in the Eastern Conference.

It doesn’t get better than that for a young team that beat Chicago 4-1 in the opening round.

“The way I think about it, I’m 20 years old, I’m playing in the playoffs, something I’ve always dreamed of. Why not embrace it?” Beal said. “Why not accept the challenge and have fun with it? That’s all I’m doing - having fun.”

For the Pacers, it was another kick in the pants.

After salvaging their season with two consecutive victories to beat Atlanta in seven games, Indiana lost Game 1 for the second straight series and for many of the same reasons.

They were outrebounded 53-36 and were outscored 19-5 on second-chance points. They got beat outside as Washington made a franchise playoff-record 10 3-pointers with Ariza going 6 of 6. They got no points and no rebounds from 7-foot-2 center Roy Hibbert, who has looked nothing like the All-Star he was during the first half of the season.

And when they were desperately trying to rally in the fourth quarter, Indiana went 7 minutes without a basket.

Things got so frustrating that even the emotional Lance Stephenson lost his cool and snapped at Coach Frank Vogel when he was yanked with 1 minute to play in the third quarter. Vogel said he took Stephenson out because he didn’t want him playing 48 minutes. Stephenson said he was mostly mad at himself.

“I waited too late,” Stephenson said. “Third quarter was too late to turn [it] up. I mean we need to come out first quarter and turn [it] up and get everybody going so the second half we could already have that pace.”

Paul George and George Hill scored 18 points each to lead the Pacers, though half of Hill’s points came on three 3s in the final minute when it was too late to come back. David West added 15 points and 12 rebounds.

The Wizards trailed once all game, 31-30, and retook the lead on the ensuing possession.

Playoffs glance CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS MONDAY’S GAMES

Washington 102, Indiana 96

Washington leads series 1-0

LA Clippers 122, Oklahoma City 105

Los Angeles leads series 1-0

TODAY’S GAMES All times Central

Brooklyn at Miami, 6 p.m.

Portland at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.

Sports, Pages 17 on 05/06/2014