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Warriors look to advance, Clippers, Heat aim for home wins

Thomas B. Shea / USA TODAY Sports

MIAMI - There's been the unexpected, like Golden State's Stephen Curry going down with a knee injury. Then came a double whammy for the Clippers, with Chris Paul out with a broken hand and Blake Griffin's season ending because of a nagging leg injury.

Then there's been the expected, like Charlotte and Miami giving each other problems in a series that's been wildly back and forth.

So what awaits in a trio of Game 5's on Wednesday night - when Charlotte goes to Miami, Portland visits the Los Angeles Clippers and Houston treks to Golden State - is anyone's guess. The Hornets-Heat and Blazers-Clippers series are tied at two games apiece, while the Warriors enter with a 3-1 series lead over the Rockets and will try for the clincher.

Hornets at Heat

Series tied 2-2. 8 p.m., TNT

They were tied after 82 regular-season games, so it should be little surprise that Charlotte and Miami are tied after four more in the playoffs.

Home has been where the wins are for the Heat, especially since the All-Star break. Miami is 14-2 in its last 16 games at home, one of those losses coming to Golden State. The other was against these same Hornets on March 17, the Heat blowing a 15-point lead in that one.

They're 8-0 at home since, winning by an average of 17 points per game.

The Heat averaged 119 points and shot 58 percent in each of the two home wins to begin the series; they averaged 82.5 points and shot under 40 percent in each of the two losses at Charlotte.

Trail Blazers at Clippers

Series tied 2-2. 10 p.m., NBA TV

This was a Portland team that was completely written off last summer, when most of its rotation moved on to new teams.

Now the Clippers have lost two straight, plus two starters.

''My job as a coach is to figure out a way of getting us up and ready for Game 5,'' Clippers coach Doc Rivers said.

Portland is shooting only 39 percent in the series, but the Blazers seem to be keeping the Clippers guessing. Damian Lillard, C.J. McCollum and Al-Farouq Aminu have all had at least one 27-point-or-better game in the series.

And they know the Clippers facing adversity won't automatically mean this becomes a Portland upset.

Rockets at Warriors

Golden State leads 3-1. 10:30 p.m., TNT

If there's any sense that the Rockets have a better chance now that Curry is out, take note of this score: 65-38.

That was the Warriors' advantage over Houston in the second half Sunday, all without the league's MVP, on the road no less. And now they go home, with a chance to be off until at least Sunday if they finish Houston off in Game 5.

''It's a win-or-go-home situation,'' Houston's Michael Beasley said. ''It's definitely critical. We don't want to start the game off slow, don't want to dig ourselves a hole early. We're going to come out and give it all we've got.''

Being without Curry - who only played the equivalent of about three quarters in the series anyway - has forced Golden State to become very balanced. Klay Thompson is averaging 22.5 points in the series, and four other Warriors are averaging between 12 and 13 points per game apiece.

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