Mavericks hold off T-wolves 104-97 behind Nowitzki

By Dave Campbell

Associated Press

Published: Friday, Feb. 10 2012 10:05 p.m. MST

Minnesota Timberwolves' J.J. Barea, right, keeps up with Dallas Mavericks' Jason Terry, left, who drives in the second half of an NBA basketball game on Friday, Feb. 10, 2012, in Minneapolis. The Timberwolves wore throwback uniforms to the old 1967 Minnesota Muskies of the American Basketball Association. The Mavericks won 104-97 and Terry scored 16 points.

Jim Mone, Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS — Dirk Nowitzki and his smooth, soaring jump shot were in prime form.

What truly made the Mavericks too tough for the sloppy Timberwolves to handle was the presence of their savvy old point guard, Jason Kidd.

Nowitzki welcomed Kevin Love back from his two-game suspension with a season-high 33 points, winning the matchup of Western Conference All-Star power forwards and helping Dallas stave off a Minnesota in a 104-97 victory over on Friday.

"He makes the game so much easier for everyone," said Jason Terry, the other part of the veteran trio that steadied the Mavericks down the stretch after a 19-5 run spurt by the Wolves brought them within 78-75 on Nikola Pekovic's putback to open the fourth quarter.

Kidd, playing for the first time in seven games due to a strained right calf muscle, responded by swishing a 3-pointer to stretch the lead to six with 10:15 left.

"He's a big part of our heart and soul. When we're without him, we can win some games but we're not the same team," Mavericks coach Rick Carlisle said.

Terry had nine of his 16 points in the final period. Kidd had eight points, 10 assists and five rebounds. The Mavericks blamed most of his eight turnovers on teammates unprepared for his slick passes, since they hadn't seen them in a while.

Kidd joked it must've been fan appreciation night because of all the balls being thrown into the seats. He didn't have time to think about his big shot because he was huffing and puffing on the stationary bike behind the bench — riding all the way across the river to St. Paul, he joked — until entering the game 17 seconds before.

"Whatever I can do to help my team," he said.

Nowitzki topped 24 points for the fourth straight game by shooting 11 for 19 from the floor, including 4 of 7 from 3-point range. Love finished with 32 points and 12 rebounds, going 14 for 14 from the free-throw line, but the Wolves missed a chance to sweep the season series from a Western Conference foe since beating the Memphis Grizzlies all three times in 2008-09.

"That is definitely vintage Dirk. He's a Hall of Fame player and when he decides he wants it, more often than not he's going to have success," Love said.

The Wolves had a season-high 28 turnovers and shot just 6 for 23 from 3-point range.

"Just being a youthful team, we're going to have lapses like that and unfortunately it was against a team that we beat a couple of times," Love said.

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