NBA·Recap

Raptors can't stop Wizards' Beal as comeback falls short

Bradley Beal scored 25 of his 27 points in the second half, and the Washington Wizards beat the Toronto Raptors 122-119 on Thursday night.

Washington guard scores 25 points in 2nd half

Bradley Beal, right, scores 27 points in the Washington Wizards' 122-119 victory over the Toronto Raptors on Thursday evening. (Alex Brandon/Associated Press)

Washington's Bradley Beal says he's playing with less stress since making his first NBA All-Star Game.

The way he shook off his miserable start on Thursday, he might be onto something.

Beal scored 25 of his 27 points in the second half, helping the Wizards to a 122-119 victory over the Toronto Raptors.

"It lifted a little bit of a burden off my shoulders," said Beal, who overcame the first half of his NBA career without a made field goal. "That's something I don't have to think about or try to prove. I can just play freely, enjoy the process, enjoy the moment."

Prior to the game, DeRozan was named the Eastern Conference player of the month for January. DeRozan averaged a team-high 25.3 points (second in the East), 5.9 assists and 3.7 rebounds in 15 games and was the Raptors' leading scorer seven times.

No Wall, no problem

The Wizards had eight players score in double figures in their third straight win without all-star point guard John Wall, who had surgery on his left knee on Wednesday.

Otto Porter Jr. had 16 points and 11 rebounds in his first double-double since early December, and Markieff Morris scored 15 points — including five straight in a stretch that gave Washington the lead for good in a dogged battle against the second-place team in the Eastern Conference.

"It's basically a simulation of the playoffs," Morris said. "Bodies flying everywhere and you just got to play through it. The toughest team is going to win like it did tonight."

'I wasn't clutch enough'

Kyle Lowry scored 17 of his 29 points in the fourth quarter for Toronto, but missed two late free throws. All-Star DeMar DeRozan added 23 points and Serge Ibaka had 16 after a potential tying 3-pointer rimmed out late.

"I'll live with Serge's shot any day," DeRozan said. "I'll live with Kyle going to the free-throw line any day. It just didn't go in."

Morris capped a 9-0 run by hitting a pair of free throws and then a baseline 3-pointer off Porter's feed to put Washington up 115-110. From there, the Wizards hit seven of their last eight foul shots to seal the game.

Lowry hit a spinning runner to cut it to 118-116 with 11.6 seconds left, but couldn't convert the three-point play. Then with 3 seconds left and Toronto down 120-118, Lowry reached a loose ball off Washington's inbounds and got fouled, but missed the first of two foul shots.

"I wasn't clutch enough," Lowry said. "But trust me, I will be next time."