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Toronto Raptors guard Fred VanVleet (23) drives past Houston Rockets guard Chris Paul at the Air Canada Centre. Image Credit: USA TODAY Sports

Los Angeles: The Toronto Raptors withstood a late surge from Houston to halt the Rockets’ 17-game NBA winning streak with a 108-105 victory Friday in a clash of conference leaders.

Kyle Lowry scored 30 points and DeMar DeRozan added 23 for the Eastern Conference-leading Raptors, who have already secured a playoff berth.

James Harden scored 40 points for the Rockets, who came into the game with the best record in the league but were out-scored 32-16 in the first quarter and trailed by as many as 19 in the first half.

“We were maybe surprised by the intensity or whatever,” admitted Houston coach Mike D’Antoni, whose Rockets hadn’t lost since January 26. “We didn’t quite come out with what we had the last three quarters.”

Despite the defeat, the Rockets maintained a half-game lead over Golden State atop the Western Conference after the reigning NBA champion Warriors were beaten 125-108 by the Trail Blazers in Portland.

Houston trailed by 15 at halftime and were down by 17 with less than five minutes to play in the third quarter.

Despite their struggles from three-point range, Houston chipped away and knotted the score at 102-102 on a three-pointer by Harden with 2:10 left.

DeRozan put the Raptors back up by two with a jump shot with 1:49 remaining and the Rockets wouldn’t get as close again.

Chris Paul finished with 14 points for Houston but missed a go-ahead three-pointer with 14.5 seconds to play.

After Jonas Valanciunas made two free throws to stretch Toronto’s lead to three points with 5.4 seconds left, Harden missed a last-gasp three-point attempt and the Raptors’ seventh straight win was in the books.

“We shouldn’t have even given him the opportunity to get the shot off, but it worked out,” said Lowry, who said the Raptors must find a way to maintain the level they showed in the first quarter throughout the game.

“We can’t be satisfied with big leads in the first quarter and let them go — we’ve got to find a way to continue to be strong.”

With Stephen Curry sidelined by a right ankle injury and Andre Iguodala, Jordan Bell and David West also sidelined, Golden State’s Kevin Durant stepped up with a 40-point performance in Portland, but that wasn’t enough to stop the red-hot Trail Blazers.

Damian Lillard led the Blazers with 28 points and Portland won their ninth straight to consolidate their third place in the West ahead of New Orleans — who were beaten 116-97 by the Washington Wizards.