<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'>TORONTO (CP) -- With the ball in his hands and the game on the line, Chris Bosh went to his favourite spot on the court _ the free-throw line. Bosh hit the deciding free throws with 3.4 seconds left as the Toronto Raptors stormed back for a 97-96 win Friday over the Milwaukee Bucks. Bosh finished with 27 points and 10 rebounds for his 30th double-double of the season as the Raptors (24-42) ended a nine-game home losing streak to the Bucks. After trailing by 16 points with fewer than six minutes remaining, Toronto ended the game on a 19-2 run to earn its first home win over Milwaukee since Nov. 18, 2000. Bosh, who is shooting a career-best 82 per cent from the line, said his transformation into one of the league's premier free-throw shooters comes down to focus. ``It's just all about concentration and repetition,'' said Bosh, who made all nine of his free throws Friday. ``Coach (Sam Mitchell) has confidence in me, he knows I can make plays, and I think he just wants to get me over the hump.'' Mitchell agreed. ``Free-throw shooting is personal,'' said Mitchell. ``You have to put the time, work and concentration in and he's done that with the understanding that he's going to have the ball a lot, (and) get fouled a lot.'' Bobby Simmons had 21 points and Toronto's Jamaal Magloire added 12 points and nine rebounds for the Bucks (32-33), who saw their two-game winning streak come to an end. A dejected Magloire blamed a lack of intensity for the late-game collapse. ``We had a lead and we didn't execute when we had to,'' said Magloire. ``You have to give them credit. They had the fight in them in the fourth quarter that we need and they were able to win.'' Down 94-78 with 5:41 left, the Raptors reeled off 14 consecutive points to close to within two. After Bosh missed the potential tying shot, Michael Redd replied with a layup with 37.6 seconds remaining. Mike James answered with a three-pointer, and after Redd missed from 24 feet, the Raptors turned to Bosh. Taking the inbounds, the Raptors all-star was fouled by Simmons on a drive to the hoop, and calmly sank both free throws to send the ACC crowd of 17,273 into hysterics. Milwaukee had a chance for the win, but T.J. Ford's game-winning three-point attempt came well after the final horn sounded. ``The best thing about this win is how bad we were playing,'' said James, who shot just 5-for-16 to finish with 14 points. ``We couldn't do anything right. We were down all those points but we never stopped.'' Charlie Villanueva added 14 points while Morris Peterson had 12 for the Raptors, who went 22-for-23 from the line to mask an abysmal 39-per cent performance from the field. The Raptors were particularly frigid in the third quarter, shooting 28 per cent as the Bucks turned a 54-54 tie into a 77-66 advantage heading into the fourth. Bucks coach Terry Stotts said this loss would sting for a while. ``They made a lot of shots but we didn't close the game out,'' said Stotts. ``This was a game we needed to have and we should have come away with a win.'' Redd finished with 17 points while rookie centre Andrew Bogut, making his first appearance in Toronto, had six points and four rebounds in 24 minutes for the Bucks. Cheered by a small throng of supporters waving Australian flags, Bogut showed flashes of why he was the taken first overall in the 2005 draft. The seven-footer displayed deft touch on a first-quarter layup and made a nifty pass to Michael Redd for an easy dunk in the second. Magloire wasted no time creating a stir in front of the hometown crowd, bowling over Raptors centre Pape Sow with a powerful dunk on the game's opening possession. The Bucks rode the momentum _ and four quick Toronto turnovers _ to a 10-2 lead, but Peterson and Bosh combined for 13 first-quarter points to even things up at 27-27 after one. The Raptors came out cold in the second _ missing their first five shots _ but the Bucks couldn't take advantage, as Redd missed a pair of easy finger rolls and several other Milwaukee players clanked mid-range jumpers. Magloire kept Milwaukee in front, scoring five points late in the half as the Bucks enjoyed a 49-46 lead at the break. Toronto committed nine turnovers in the half after averaging just 13 per game on the season. Notes: Milwaukee fell to 14-7 lifetime in Toronto. ... Peterson executed a rare four-point play in the first quarter, banking in a three as he was fouled by Redd. ... Bogut is one of only two players to rank in the top-10 among rookies in points, rebounds and assists. Hornets G Chris Paul is the other. ... Raptors G Andre Barrett had four points in 16 minutes in his second game since signing a 10-day contract Wednesday. He hit the floor hard on his first basket, a driving layup late in the second quarter. ... Toronto hits the road for games Tuesday in New York and Wednesday in Boston.</div>http://www.nba.com/raptors/news/postup_060317.html
Didn't get to see the game but it sounds great. I stayed at a hotel and watched a movie with my parents and my bro. I like to hear that Chris stepped it up and won it for us though.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (CB4AllStar @ Mar 18 2006, 04:48 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'>Didn't get to see the game but it sounds great. I stayed at a hotel and watched a movie with my parents and my bro. I like to hear that Chris stepped it up and won it for us though.</div>chris had a great game and mike james was playing good down the stretch to help us come back from that large lead the bucks had
Wait the Raptors went to Chris Bosh down the stretch?Excuse me while I go and call up Jalen Rose and shout: "See what happens when Mr.Bosh gets the ball?"<Censored>
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Delonte4Prez @ Mar 18 2006, 08:41 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'>yeah what a great game, chris bosh is probably the best player in the division</div>why did you post the losing payton manning sig for?