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As the Washington Wizards walked off the court with a halftime lead over visiting Seattle, coach Eddie Jordan didn't wear the same smile his players did.
Jordan scoffed at how they allowed the SuperSonics to narrow a double-digit first-quarter deficit to six points.
So at halftime of what eventually became a 108-86 rout yesterday, Jordan voiced his concerns.
"It wasn't angry. It was just a reality check just telling us that we hadn't done anything," said Wizards forward Caron Butler, who scored a game-high 33 points. "We beat a Milwaukee team without their star player [Michael Redd] the other night. That was a quality win for us on the road, but at the same time we had another game in front of us that we could win, so don't get comfortable with the lead right here.
"We didn't," Butler continued. "We came out and applied pressure and did what we were supposed to do."
Washington (17-15) shot 22-for-43 from the field in the second half while outscoring the Sonics (9-24) 56-40. The Wizards, who tallied a season-high 15 steals, forced Seattle into 15 of its 22 turnovers in the second half.
Despite the Wizards' injury problems this season, Jordan said he will continue to push them hard.
"We beat Milwaukee, who was down, and we won tonight against Seattle. We also beat another team that was down [Miami]," Jordan said. "I don't want to be talking about challenging Detroit and Boston for a championship right now. I told them at halftime, 'We're not that good. We're not Boston. We're not Detroit. We're not that good to come out here and play the half that we played.' I just wanted to stroke a fire and put reality on the table."
The Wizards never led by double figures in the third quarter, but they didn't let the Sonics back in the game either. With an 82-71 lead early in the fourth, Washington capitalized on six Seattle turnovers and embarked on a 22-5 run.
"Most of our turnovers led to layups," Seattle coach P.J. Carlesimo said. "It was a turnover and then a breakaway layup. I think we had three that were almost in the same identical spot. Then they got more aggressive and turned up the heat defensively. From that time on we just hung our heads."












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