The intensity of the fourth quarter and the speed with which they think give Pelicans the advantage over the Knicks



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The New Orleans Pelicans offense, Julius Randle, cleared up at 129-124 on Friday, Nov. 16 (Nov. 129) to win the 129-124 win.

He did not mean exactly what he had seen – "I can not say, you will try to take my secrets." – But while Anthony Davis was lining up for the second of his two free throws with the Pelicans hanging on to a front row, Randle had a plan in mind in case Davis missed the second as he missed the first .

The Pelicans went with the guard Jrue Holiday and the little striker Darius Miller in the painting for Davis' attempts with E'Twaun Moore and Randle outside.

Randle told Holiday what he was about to do and put the plan into action. As Davis's second free throw went up, Holiday started boxing Kevin Knox and Tim Hardaway followed both under the basket.

Meanwhile, Miller began to fade and the Knicks' center, Mitchell Robinson, started to get away from goal with Miller.

This left Randle a very open path. And he took it. While Davis was missing, Randle was there.

Randle flew relentlessly and caught Davis's attack and handed it back quickly to keep the lead – and momentum – with the Pelicans.

"I told Jrue to come in," Randle said. "I do not remember who it was, but they only watched I just stayed intact and I got the offensive rebound.

Davis, who finished with 43 points and 17 rebounds, said he had dropped his head slightly as he saw the second free-throw slamming on the sill. But then, he saw a blue jersey scroll in front of him.

"I do not know where he's coming from, but wherever he comes from, I appreciate it," Davis said.

Holiday said Randle told him to make the free throw before Davis's first free-throw attempt and that he would try the putback if the opportunity arose.

"All I've really tried to do is get out of my box (Knox)," said Holiday. "Then the other guys (Hardaway) pushed me. But (Randle) is like a bull. I do not know who stops him. I'm not."

In three quarters, Anthony Davis scored 37 points, but no other Pelicans player was over 11. New Orleans was trailed by up to 19 points, but she was looking for another scoring weapon in addition of his superstar.

In the fourth quarter, Randle played alongside Holiday to make the necessary games to complete the third-largest return in the team's history.

Randle had 10 points and seven rebounds in the quarter – finishing with 19 and 11 – while Holiday scored 14 points for the fourth quarter and finished with 24 points with 10 assists.

It was Holiday who scored 34 points to put the Pelicans at six points and put the game away. Holiday also scored the final point on the board when he made two free throws with 14.3 to go.

"We were 11 with 6:40 to play," Randle said. "From that moment on, we really got on and got stops and let that energy go to the offensive end.

New Orleans beat the Knicks by 13 in the fourth quarter and rebounded against the Knicks in the quarter, 18-5. That's about the same margin as in the 19-5 round that Davis scored with a superb 1-on-1 opener finish to play.

The Pelicans started the game with just 16 points in the first quarter before scoring 38 points in the second, 34 points in the third and 41 points in the fourth to return to the match. It's a start they hope to avoid by returning to the ground Saturday night against the Denver Nuggets.

"We started the game without missing a series of easy and achievable shots," said Pelicans coach Alvin Gentry. "We did not return to our defense and they came out and fired a few shots, and from there the path was uphill.

"We had some crucial turnovers, but most of the time it was an all-out win and we just hung and found a way to win the game."

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