Jamaica Gleaner

Denver Nuggets credit teamwork for play-off dominance

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WHEN THE Denver Nuggets faced the most crucial stretch of the biggest road game in franchise history, Nikola Jokic took over both on the floor and in the huddle.

The two-time MVP decided he would run a two-man, pick-and-roll offence with Jamal Murray late in Game 3 of the Western Conference finals on Saturday night, and Jokic came through with a 15-point fourth quarter. He also commanded his teammates to buckle down on defence against the Lakers, and the Nuggets responded by taking over the game on both ends.

“Coach Jokic did a great job tonight,”Denver coach Michael Malone said with a smile.

When told of his new job title, Jokic grimaced.

“I don’t want to be a coach,” he said. “I think that’s the worst job on the planet, for sure.”

Jokic had simply done what was necessary – and that’s the story of Denver’s entire season.

Whenever a challenge arises, whether it’s in the doldrums of a dominant regular season or in tough play-off matchups with the star-studded Suns and Lakers, Jokic and the Nuggets figure out a path around it, over it or through it to keep moving towards their goal.

That goal now is only five wins away, as Murray pointed out after the Nuggets’119-108 victory in Game 3. With one more win over LeBron James and the reeling Lakers tonight, Denver can secure their first trip to the NBA Finals in the franchise’s 47 years in the league.

“We know the next game is going to be another test,” Murray said. “They’re going to come out more aggressive. (Anthony Davis) is going to be more aggressive. LeBron is going to be more aggressive, so the crowd is going to be more into it. We know it’s coming, and we’ve just got to stay locked in and know that we can do it, and we have full belief in that.

Like I said, we’ve got five more to go.”

The Nuggets also can make another bit of history with a win in Game 4: Although this franchise has won 15 play-off series, Denver have never swept an opponent.

While Jokic and Murray are clear stars, their supporting cast is the vital difference between the Nuggets and the NBA’s other star-based teams. Personal stats, playing time and egos simply don’t seem to matter to this group, according to its coaches and players.

“I mean, I never doubted my team,” Jokic said. “We have some really good players that can step up in the right moment, and that’s what we did.”

Just don’t tell the Nuggets they’re the clear favourites to win it all: Denver still seem to be fuelled by an underlying anger and an inferiorit­y complex about their collective success, even after winning three Northwest Division titles and six play-off series (and counting) over the past five years.

That passion sometimes comes out in surprising ways, even during this dominant play-off series. Malone, who complained in Denver about his perception of national media narratives, took time out from praising his team after Game 3 to take a shot at Davis and the NBA officials, claiming the Lakers big man’s defensive play constantly violates the rules by “playing free safety, sitting in the paint for eight seconds at a time”.

Denver are the top seed in the West, yet seem to believe their success is a triumph over innumerabl­e naysayers and stark odds. That fire has kept the Nuggets moving deep into uncharted territory for their franchise.

“We’re the underdogs,”Denver’s Kentavious Caldwell-Pope claimed.“We don’t get enough credit for what we do. Like I said, we’re No. 1 in the West for a reason. Not being talked about a lot, we take that personal. We just use that energy, continue to prove everybody wrong.”

 ?? AP ?? Denver Nuggets head coach Michael Malone ( centre) shakes hands with Denver Nuggets centre Nikola Jokic (15) and guard Jamal Murray (27) in the second half of Game 3 of the NBA Western Conference Final series against the Los Angeles Lakers on Saturday in Los Angeles.
AP Denver Nuggets head coach Michael Malone ( centre) shakes hands with Denver Nuggets centre Nikola Jokic (15) and guard Jamal Murray (27) in the second half of Game 3 of the NBA Western Conference Final series against the Los Angeles Lakers on Saturday in Los Angeles.

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