National Post

Nuggets on road to playoff failure

Inability to win away from Denver doomed fortunes

- Tim Bontemps The Washington Post

This season began with so much promise for the Denver Nuggets.

Pairing an emerging young core of Nikola Jokic, Canadian Jamal Murray and Gary Harris with allstar power forward Paul Millsap was supposed to provide a backbone to a team that could score with anyone, but didn’t have much interest in playing defence. And even in the Western Conference, this group looked to have enough talent to make the post- season for the first time in five years.

That was before Saturday in Memphis, where the Nuggets had the single-worst loss of the NBA season. Denver never led and fell 101-94 to a Grizzlies team that is actively participat­ing in the Great Tank Race of 2018 and had lost its previous 19 games, a streak going all the way back to a win over the Phoenix Suns Jan. 29. With the loss, Denver fell to 10th in the crowded Western Conference standings, but were back in ninth after the Los Angeles Clippers’ Sunday loss to Portland.

“Our starting group did an awful job of starting the game with any real sense of urgency and we built ourselves a 21- point hole on the road,” Denver Nuggets coach Mike Malone told reporters after Saturday’s loss.

“If we have to coach effort at this time of year, we have a big, big problem.”

Now, as the Nuggets wake up Monday i n Miami for a game against the Heat, they find themselves staring at a schedule of six consecutiv­e road games — five of which will come against playoff teams — that will determine their post- season fate. To make matters worse, the Nuggets will have to do so without Harris, who Malone said will be out “three or four games” with a knee injury.

So if Denver hopes to make the playoffs, it will have to do so by winning away from home — something it has spent all season failing to do — and with one of its key players hobbled.

The Nuggets have more than lived up to their pre- season expectatio­ns while playing in Denver, where they are 27-10 this season. But when they leave the Mile High City, they don’t just become ordinary, they are downright awful.

Denver’s 11- 22 record in road games this season is easily the worst of any playoff hopeful in either conference. The Nuggets are being outscored by 4.9 points per 100 possession­s away from home ( 20th best in the NBA) and have the league’s 26th-ranked defence.

It’s hard to see any of those num- bers improving as Denver moves into a closing stretch that has eight of its final 12 games coming on the road — with seven of those coming against teams with winning records. The home games won’t be gimmes either as all four are against opponents — the Indiana Pacers, Milwaukee Bucks, Minnesota Timberwolv­es and Portland Trail Blazers — that will likely be where Denver hopes to be: in the playoffs.

So how did Denver end up here? Some will point to the loss of Millsap for three months with a torn ligament in his wrist that required surgery. But the Nuggets have actually taken a step back in the 10 games since Millsap returned to the lineup, going 5-5, including catastroph­ic road losses to the Grizzlies, Dallas Mavericks and Los Angeles Lakers, games in which Millsap combined to shoot 8-for-24 and missed all six of his three-point attempts.

But it would be hard to place blame on any individual for the Nuggets having a 10- point swing between their performanc­e at home and while on the road, the biggest discrepanc­y in the NBA by far this season.

What does it mean going forward? There was plenty of pressure in Denver for this to be a breakthrou­gh season. The Nuggets had slowly rebuilt after George Karl was fired and Masai Ujiri left to run the Toronto Raptors in 2013 following that year’s 57- win team was bounced in the first round by the Golden State Warriors.

Pressure in these kinds of situations tends to lead to job changes if expectatio­ns aren’t met — which means Malone could find himself out of a job. The fact Denver traded away the 13th pick to the Utah Jazz — who then selected Donovan Mitchell, the potential rookie of the year who has led Utah on a huge late-season winning streak to surge into the playoffs (and past Denver) — won’t reflect well on the front office either.

As recently as a month ago, these were not the kinds of conversati­ons Denver expected to be having. The Nuggets had remained on solid footing in the playoff race all season long and looked like they would achieve what they had set out to this year.

But in a Western Conference playoff picture where a bad week can change everything, those recent losses to the Lakers, Mavericks and Grizzlies could prove costly. Had Denver just won those three games, it would be sitting in fifth place in the West and would have a much better chance of surviving its rough late-season schedule.

Now, the Nuggets have no margin for error, leaving them in a situation where they have to do something they haven’t been able to do much of — win on the road — to have any chance of doing what they want: make the playoffs.

 ?? BRANDON DILL / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Nikola Jokic, right, and the Denver Nuggets bobbled their chances of claiming a playoff spot Saturday with a loss to woeful Memphis.
BRANDON DILL / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Nikola Jokic, right, and the Denver Nuggets bobbled their chances of claiming a playoff spot Saturday with a loss to woeful Memphis.

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