| However, New Orleans Pelicans forward Anthony Davis has not 
			developed the short-term memory trick yet, his coach Monty Williams 
			is glad.
 Coming off one of his worse games of the season in a 26-point loss 
			Saturday, Davis posted 38 points and 12 rebounds to lead the 
			Pelicans to a 101-99 victory win over the Oklahoma City Thunder on 
			Sunday at the Chesapeake Energy Arena.
 
 "Last night, he took it personal," Williams said, referring to New 
			Orleans' loss to the Portland Trail Blazers. "He thought it was his 
			fault. We had a conversation about how it's never your fault. It's 
			about our team, but you come back tomorrow and do your thing."
 
 The Pelicans (14-13) held onto eighth place in the Western 
			Conference standings. Playing without forward Kevin Durant, the 
			Thunder (13-15) lost for the second time in three games.
 
 Oklahoma City point guard Russell Westbrook needed 27 shots to score 
			29 points. He finished with eight assists and six turnovers.
 
 "When we won eight in a row, nobody said nothing about not passing, 
			so I don't want to hear it now," Westbrook said. "It's one game, so 
			I'm not 'bout to keep answering questions about me not passing now 
			when we lose."
 
 With 4:53 left in the fourth quarter, Pelicans guard Tyreke Evans 
			cut the Thunder's lead to 97-96. New Orleans came up with a 
			defensive stop, and Davis scored on the other end to put the 
			Pelicans in front 99-97 with a three-point play.
 
 Westbrook tied the contest with a driving layup over Davis, but 
			Davis soon responded with a dunk off a Westbrook turnover.
 
 For a two-minute stretch, Westbrook tried to do it all, and he 
			racked up turnover after turnover as the Pelicans led 101-99.
 
 "He had a couple of tough moments," Thunder coach Scott Brooks said. 
			"There is no question. I thought he had an opportunity to keep 
			attacking and get a chance to get to the free-throw line. He missed 
			some shots he's made all year and a couple of passes he had to hit."
 
 Westbrook missed a 3-point attempt with 34 seconds left and the 
			Pelicans ahead by two, and Davis got the rebound. However, New 
			Orleans committed a shot-clock violation, and Oklahoma City took 
			over with 10 seconds left.
 
 After a timeout, the Thunder got the ball into Westbrook's hands. 
			The star guard dribbled to the top of the key and shot a contested 
			3-pointer. It was off the mark as the buzzer sounded.
 
 "My job is to stay in attack mode and try and score and try and make 
			plays happen," Westbrook said. "If I miss, then I miss. I'm going to 
			live and die by that every night, regardless of what happens."
 
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			Thunder reserve guard Reggie Jackson scored 19 points. Center Steven 
			Adams and forward Perry Jones each scored 12 points.
 Forward Ryan Anderson scored 14 points and shot 3-for-9 from 3-point 
			range for New Orleans. Pelicans guard Jru Holiday added 11 points 
			and 15 assists. However, the entire New Orleans squad knew the 
			team's fortunes rode with their 21-year-old superstar.
 
 "When we start losing, start missing shots, start getting 
			frustrated, I start being selfish, so all of that was on me," Davis 
			said. "So I told them tonight I'm going to go back to how I play, 
			how we play, and that's what I tried to do tonight."
 
 NOTES: Oklahoma City F Kevin Durant sat out a second consecutive 
			game after spraining his right ankle Thursday in Golden State. 
			"Don't know how long he's out," Thunder coach Scott Brooks said. 
			"He's day-to-day. Feeling better today." F Perry Jones started in 
			Durant's place. ... Pelicans F Anthony Davis was the only player in 
			the NBA ranked in the top five through Saturday in scoring (24.1 
			ppg), field-goal percentage (.571) and blocks (2.92). ... The 
			Thunder recalled F Grant Jerrett from the Oklahoma City Blue of the 
			NBA Development League. He did not play Sunday night. ... Pelicans 
			coach Monty Williams said G Tyreke Evans is adapting to a different 
			role. "I think he's more comfortable at the one-two," Williams said. 
			"With the way the roster is set up, there are times he has to guard 
			bigger wing players. But offensively, he still plays the two-one, no 
			matter what. I think defensively it can be a challenge for him. 
			That's how our team is set up, and he has to sacrifice some things."
 
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