| Chicago (22-9), now 14-4 on the road, missed 17 consecutive 
			field-goal attempts to close the third quarter and then through more 
			than eight minutes of the final period, were outscored at one point 
			20-0 and gave away all of what was at one point a 21-point lead.
 But rising star guard Jimmy Butler came to the rescue during the 
			final 2:29, and the Bulls rallied for a 92-90 victory, which hung in 
			the balance until Indiana guard C.J. Watson missed what could have 
			been a game-winning 3-pointer at the final buzzer.
 
 Butler made a 3-pointer with 1:07 remaining, capping a game-closing 
			7-2 Chicago burst after trailing 88-85. Butler, who scored a 
			game-best 27 points, had five of the Bulls' final seven.
 
 "I thought they played harder than we did on both ends of the floor 
			in the fourth quarter, and we can't let that happen," Butler said of 
			the wild Indiana comeback. "But late in the game, I am confident in 
			myself, and so are my teammates.
 
 "I feel like it is my job to step up and take and make shots. 
			Derrick Rose is always on me to shoot and to shoot 3s."
 
 Chicago, now 18-1 when leading after three quarters, trailed 88-85 
			before finishing with the 7-2 run. The Bulls survived despite making 
			only 2 of 21 fourth-quarter shots and being outscored 25-11.
 
 Forward Pau Gasol added 20 for the Bulls, and guard Rose scored 17.
 
 Reserve guard Chris Copeland led Indiana (11-21) with 17 points. 
			Pacers guards C.J. Miles and George Hill each added 11. The Pacers' 
			non-starters outscored the Bulls bench 48-14 and were at the core of 
			the Indiana comeback.
 
 Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau said his team was really good for three 
			quarters.
 
 "Obviously, we didn't close out the game the way we would have 
			liked," Thibodeau said. "The lesson we learned is that you have to 
			keep playing. No lead is safe in this league."
 
 Chicago outscored the Pacers 29-13 from the free-throw line and 
			outrebounded Indiana 46-44.
 
 Indiana outscored the Bulls 15-2 during the fourth quarter's first 
			4:50 to pull within 83-80 on Copeland's 3-pointer.
 
 Baskets from Copeland and forwards Luis Scola and Lavoy Allen pushed 
			the Pacers into an 86-83 lead with 5:61 to go. At one point, the 
			Bulls missed 17 consecutive shots and were outscored 20-0 before 
			Gasol scored with 3:25 remaining, cutting Indiana's lead to 86-85.
 
 "When you have a big lead on the road, you still have to keep a 
			certain edge," Gasol said. "A team hits a few shots, and then their 
			crowd gets into it. But when we came through, I saw a calmness out 
			there."
 
 Chicago outscored Indiana 12-6 to start the third quarter for a 
			59-41 lead, prompting a timeout from Indiana coach Frank Vogel. Two 
			Rose free throws with 6:05 left in the third gave the Bulls a 63-44 
			lead.
 
 Forward Mike Dunleavy, who failed to score in the first half, got 
			involved in the third quarter, making a jumper, a 3-pointer and then 
			a three-point play for a 75-54 lead with 2:29 left in the period.
 
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			"One of the factors was that we did not get to the free-throw line 
			enough, and we settled for jump shots too often," Vogel said. "But I 
			am really proud of the guys who got us back in the game.
 "We had opportunities in our offense for Copeland to post up. Some 
			were on switches in the pick and roll game, and there were some sets 
			we called. When we were coming back, you think about coming back 
			with your starters, but there are certain situations that were 
			no-brainers and that second group deserved to win or lose that ball 
			game."
 
 Miles, who helped bring the Pacers back despite battling an upper 
			respiratory infection, said it is difficult to lose after making 
			that kind of comeback.
 
 "It's tough when you fight that hard and dig out of a hole and then 
			just can't finish it," Miles said. "We did such a good job bringing 
			a lot of energy off the bench. We knew we had to show some 
			resistance and just chip away at it."
 
 The Pacers pulled within 81-65 after three quarters, closing the 
			period on an 11-6 run.
 
 The Bulls won despite shooting just 34.5 percent from the field. The 
			Pacers hit 43.4 percent of their field-goal attempts.
 
 NOTES: The Bulls played without G Kirk Hinrich (left hamstring 
			strain) and F Doug McDermott (right knee). ... The Pacers were 
			without G/F Paul George (fractured right tibia/fibula) and C Ian 
			Mahinmi (torn left plantar fascia). ... After a stretch in which 
			they faced six consecutive Western Conference opponents, the Pacers 
			are in a sequence of facing five consecutive Eastern Conference 
			foes, of which Chicago was the third. ... Indiana defeated the Bulls 
			99-90 on Nov. 15 in Chicago in their only other meeting thus far 
			this season. ... The Bulls entered ranked second in the NBA in 
			blocked shots (6.1 per game) and fourth in rebounding (45.5). ... 
			The Pacers began the night as the NBA's second-ranked defensive 
			team, allowing
 
 only 96.5 points per game. ... The Bulls return to Bankers Life 
			Fieldhouse on March 5.
 
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