Brazil’s Nene drained two clutch free throws with 0.7 seconds left on the clock to lift the Houston Rockets to a 118-116 victory over the Oklahoma City Thunder yesterday.
 James Harden nearly had a triple-double for the Rockets with 26 points, eight rebounds and 12 assists as Nene added a season-high 18 points. All five Rockets starters scored in double figures and Eric Gordon came off the bench to score 22.
 The game-deciding drama started with an inbounds play with three seconds left. Nene set a screen for Harden and drove to the basket. Harden passed out of the double team, hitting Nene in stride and forcing Thunder forward Jerami Grant to commit the foul.
 “They (the Thunder) did a good job (setting up defensively) on the first play so we called a timeout,” Harden said. “I just got open and I saw two defenders guarding me, made the simple play to Nene and he knocked down two free throws.”
 The Rockets win spoiled a dynamic performance from Russell Westbrook who made a career-high eight three pointers en route to a 49-point night.
 Westbrook shot 16 of 34 as Oklahoma City nearly overcame an 18-point deficit after blowing an early 14-point lead.
 Victor Oladipo nailed a shot from beyond the arc for a 116-114 lead with 1:55 remaining. The Thunder dominated the Rockets on the boards in the fourth period, getting 13 rebounds in total from Enes Kanter, who also had 15 points.
 Elsewhere, a determined Kyle Lowry led the charge by scoring 33 points as the Toronto Raptors returned home from a road trip and knocked off the Utah Jazz 101-93.
 DeMar DeRozan gave Toronto its first lead with 3:08 remaining and contributed 23 points and seven rebounds. Jonas Valanciunas added 18 points and 13 rebounds for Toronto, which just completed a six-game road trip.
 Raptors coach Dwane Casey said Lowry outworks his opponents. “I’ll tell you what, if it’s a loose ball down there, he’s like a little pit bull,” Casey said. “That’s why he is who he is. He’s been that way since high school and it’s not going to change. He took over the game down the stretch.”
 Shelvin Mack led Utah with 17 points while starting his third straight game for injured George Hill. Gordon Hayward added 16 and Rudy Gobert finished with 15 points and 16 rebounds.
 In Portland, Damian Lillard returned from an ankle injury to spark the Trail Blazers to a 115-109 victory over the lowly Los Angeles Lakers.
 CJ McCollum had 27 points and seven assists and Lillard chipped in 21 points and 10 assists as the Trail Blazers won for the fourth time in their last 16 outings.
 Evan Turner scored a season-high 20 points off the bench and Mason Plumlee contributed 15 points, seven rebounds and five assists for Portland.
 D’Angelo Russell scored 22 points, Jordan Clarkson added 21 and Julius Randle had 17 points for the Lakers, who lost for the 16th time in 19 contests.
 The Blazers used a late 13-1 run to erase a four-point deficit and provide the cushion needed to get the win.
 In New Orleans, Dennis Schroder scored 22 points and hit the go-ahead three-pointer with 1:13 remaining to lift Atlanta to a 99-94 win over New Orleans.
 Meanwhile, NBA scoring leader Russell Westbrook of Oklahoma City and assists leader James Harden of Houston are leading the league on a record-shattering pace for triple-doubles in a season.
 So far this season, there have been 42 triple-doubles — double-digit production in three statistical categories in a single game. That’s on pace for 97 for the full season, well ahead of the NBA record of 78 set in the 1988-89 campaign and last season’s second-best total of 75.
 Westbrook leads the NBA this season with 16 triple-doubles while Harden is second with nine and Cleveland star LeBron James ranks a distant third with three this season.
 The most recent for Westbrook came December 31 when he finished with 17 points, 14 assists and 12 rebounds. But he reached a triple-double in only 19 minutes, just off the fastest triple-double ever record in NBA history, Jim Tucker’s 17-minute effort in 1955.
 Westbrook is averaging 30.9 points, 10.5 rebounds and 10.5 assists a game in a bid to become only the second player in NBA history with a triple-double season average. Hall of Fame legend Oscar Robertson averaged 30.8 points, 12.5 rebounds and 11.4 assists a game in the 1961-62 campaign for the Cincinnati Royals, now the Sacramento Kings.
 Harden ranks fourth among NBA scorers with 28.4 points a game but has a league-best 11.9 assists and 8.2 rebounds a game.
 Westbrook is on pace for 36 triple-doubles, which would fall short of the single-season record of 41 achieved by Robertson in 1961-62. Wilt Chamberlain is second with 31 in the 1967-68 season.
 Only two more triple-doubles this season would allow Westbrook to match his total from last season of 18, level eighth in NBA history. His 53 career triple-doubles rank sixth in NBA history and top all active players.
 Westbrook’s Thunder are 21-15 this season with 46 games remaining, sixth in the Western Conference, while Harden’s Rockets are 27-9 and third overall in the West.
 Harden, who has 18 career triple-doubles, and Westbrook have each scored 50 points this season in a triple-double effort, a feat that had not been done since Kareem Abdul-Jabbar achieved it in 1975.