Journal-Advocate (Sterling)

Nuggets fall short in shootout with 76ers

Nikola Jokic had a careerhigh in offensive rebounds but Embiid comes out on top in MVP clash.

- By Bennett Durando bdurando@denverpost.com

PHILADELPH­IA >> The 1983 and 1990 Denver Nuggets were sweating at halftime.

A franchise that didn’t possess many records or milestones before last season was at least responsibl­e, on separate occasions, for the highest-scoring NBA game of all time (370 combined points in 1983) and the highest-scoring regulation game (320 in 1990).

Nikola Jokic, Joel Embiid and company were keeping decent pace with history for the first half of a marquee clash of MVP centers. The game eventually slowed down as Denver committed four of its 10 turnovers in the fourth quarter, and the 76ers emerged with a 126-121 win Tuesday at Wells Fargo Center in the first of two matchups this month between teams contending near the top of the standings in their respective conference­s.

“Love how hard our guys played,” Nuggets coach Michael Malone said, pointing to execution rather than effort as the difference. “… Obviously not the outcome we wanted, but proud of our effort.”

After a first half in which neither team could make a run because neither team could get a stop, Denver and Philadelph­ia exchanged haymakers in the second half. The Nuggets (28-14) ended the third quarter on a 12-0 surge after trailing by eight. But the decisive blow belonged to Embiid and the 76ers. The hosts fell behind 111-105 with 8:41 remaining when Reggie Jackson sunk a 3-pointer out of a pick-androll with Deandre Jordan. Then Philly responded with a 16-2 run, featuring a Marcus Morris gametying 4-point play and culminatin­g when Embiid nailed a three over Jokic with 4:53 to go.

“Both teams picked it up a little bit defensivel­y, but we didn’t play with the same pace or rhythm or flow that we had in the first half,” Michael Porter Jr. said. “We’ve just gotta find a way to make teams play our pace.”

Embiid finished with 41 points, 10 assists and seven rebounds. Jokic had 25 points and 19 rebounds, including a career-high 11 offensive boards by the end of the third quarter. Jamal Murray amassed 17 points and 10 assists.

It was 78-78 at halftime after Murray’s buzzer-beater three. All 10 starters were shooting better than 50% from the field. Seven total players were in double figures, including Christian Braun off the Nuggets’ bench. The 76ers were shooting at a better clip as a team, but Jokic negated that advantage by snatching seemingly every Denver miss.

In a maneuver reminiscen­t of what he did as Toronto’s coach last season with O.G. Anunoby, Nick Nurse guarded Jokic with non-centers rather than Embiid for much of the night, mixing up coverages. Jokic exploited the tactic by leaving his biggest imprint on the glass — “I’m kind of used to it,” he said.

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