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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

In brief: Kyle Lowry nets 43 and Toronto Raptors edge first-place Cleveland Cavaliers

Toronto’s Kyle Lowry, right, is hugged by DeMar DeRozan after Lowry made the game-winning basket against the Cavaliers. (Nathan Denette / Associated Press)
From staff and wire reports

NBA: Kyle Lowry scored a career-high 43 points to help the host Toronto Raptors beat the Eastern Conference-leading Cleveland Cavaliers 99-97 on Friday.

Terrence Ross added 15 points for Toronto, which won its 10th straight at home to tie a franchise record previously set between March 24 and Nov. 4, 2002.

LeBron James had 25 points and Kevin Love added 20 for the Cavaliers, who had their lead over Atlantic Division- leading Toronto in the East cut to two games.

Lowry tied the score at 97-all with a hook shot with 51.9 seconds remaining. After J.R. Smith’s miss gave the Raptors back the ball with 28.9 seconds left, Lowry took his time before firing a pull-up jumper with 3.8 seconds left to put Toronto back in front.

Following a Cleveland timeout, James unleashed what would have been a game- winning 3-pointer, but it missed the rim completely as time expired.

Walker hits game-winner: Kemba Walker scored 22 points and hit the game-winning shot with 2.4 seconds left to lead the Charlotte Hornets over the Indiana Pacers 96-95 in Indianapolis.

Monta Ellis gave Indiana the lead with a layup over Walker with 16.2 seconds to go. Walker then split two defenders to get to the rim on Charlotte’s ensuing possession and sank a left-handed scoop shot over Paul George.

The Pacers had a chance at the buzzer, but George’s shot from the top of the key missed. George finished with 32 points.

Mavericks beat Nuggets in OT: Raymond Felton tied the score late in regulation and then had eight of his 16 points in overtime as Dallas rallied from 23 points down to beat visiting Denver 122-116.

Chandler Parsons led the Mavericks with 27 points, including 15 in the third quarter when Dallas took a 67-66 lead with 5:15 to play – coming all the way back from a 55-32 deficit late in the second quarter.

Hawks snap three-game skid: Jeff Teague scored 19 points, Al Horford added 18 and host Atlanta snapped a three-game losing streak with a 103-88 victory over the short-handed Chicago Bulls.

The Hawks ended a four-game home skid – their longest since April 2007.

Gordon returns: Pelicans guard Eric Gordon, who has missed 16 games with a fractured right ring finger, will return to the lineup against Minnesota, New Orleans coach Alvin Gentry said.

Gordon injured his finger against the Timberwolves on Jan. 19. He said he’ll play with a small, stabilizing brace on his finger initially.

Bishop, Tampa Bay blank New Jersey

NHL: Steven Stamkos extended his goal-scoring streak to a season-high five games and the Tampa Bay Lightning beat the fading New Jersey Devils 4-0 in Newark, New Jersey, for their fifth straight win.

Ben Bishop made 21 saves for his third shutout of the season. Alex Killorn, Ondrej Palat and Matt Carle also scored as the Lightning sent the Devils to their second loss in as many nights and fifth in six games.

Stamkos’ goal-scoring streak is two games shy of his personal best, set in 2010.

Capitals rally past Wild: Dmitry Orlov scored with 5:04 remaining after Alex Ovechkin got a tying goal earlier in the period to help the Washington Capitals rally for a 3-2 win over the visiting Minnesota Wild.

Ovechkin got his league- leading 40th goal 4:35 into the third on a power play.

Belesky lifts Bruins over Canes: Matt Beleskey scored goals in the first and third periods, leading Boston to a 4-1 win over Carolina in Raleigh, North Carolina.

It was the 388th regular- season victory for Boston coach Claude Julien, who needs two wins to tie Art Ross as the Bruins’ career leader.

Fowler takes early lead at Honda Classic

Golf: Rickie Fowler kept bogeys off his card for the second straight round for a 4-under 66 and the early lead in the Honda Classic in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.

Fowler’s longest par putt was 12 feet on the fourth hole after driving into the bunker, and he ended his round with a 25-foot birdie putt on the ninth hole to reach 8-under 132.

Jimmy Walker finished birdie-eagle, holing a 40-foot putt on the 18th hole for a 66 and was one shot behind. Sergio Garcia had a 69 and was another stroke back.

Bohn suffers heart attack: PGA Tour officials say Jason Bohn suffered a mild heart attack after the second round at the Honda Classic.

The tour says Bohn complained of chest pains after his round and went to see a medical staff at PGA National. He was taken by ambulance to Palm Beach Gardens Medical Center, where tests revealed a mild heart attack.

Yang leads: Defending champion Amy Yang carded a 3-under 69 to lead by one halfway through the LPGA Thailand in Chonburi, Thailand.

Yang trailed first-round leader Lexi Thompson by two before teeing off at Siam Country Club, then had consecutive bogeys on Nos. 5 and 6, but rallied with four birdies.

Wawrinka reaches final, faces Baghdatis

Tennis: Stan Wawrinka will play for his second title of the year when he faces Marcos Baghdatis in the final of the Dubai Tennis Championships in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

Wawrinka advanced when Nick Kyrgios retired with a back injury while trailing 6-4, 3-0 in the semifinals. Wawrinka will meet the unseeded Baghdatis, who came from a set down to beat sixth-seeded Feliciano Lopez 3-6, 7-6 (1), 6-1.

Navarro advances to final: Carla Suarez Navarro restricted No.3-ranked Agnieszka Radwanska to only two games as she reached the final of the Qatar Open in Doha, Qatar with a 6-2, 6-0 semifinal victory.

The eighth-seeded Suarez Navarro needed only 62 minutes to beat Radwanska and will next face Latvian 18-year-old Jelena Ostapenko.

Oregon’s Alleyne out with torn ACL

Miscellany: Jillian Alleyne, who just moved into second place in NCAA history with her 92nd career-double-double, had her senior season at Oregon cut short after suffering a torn ACL in practice on Tuesday.

“It is tough to see such a good person have to deal with such a difficult injury,” Oregon coach Kelly Graves said in the release. “Jillian has had one of the most remarkable careers in Pac-12 history and I’m sad to see it cut short. With her strong faith and work ethic, however, I know she will recover and go on to a long and successful professional career.” Alleyne is the 10th player in NCAA history with at least 2,000 points and 1,500 rebounds.

She was the media pick for the Pac-12 Freshman of the Year, was an Associated Press honorable mention All-American as a sophomore and an AP third-team selection last year.

Pinturault wins: Alexis Pinturault dominated a men’s World Cup giant slalom in Hinterstoder, Austria, becoming the first skier from France in 47 years to win two straight races in the discipline.

Pinturault led the field by more than a half-second after the opening leg, finishing 0.79 ahead of Austria’s Marcel Hirscher for his 13th career win and fourth in GS.