Loveland Reporter-Herald

Murray leads Denver to a win

- By Bennett Durando bdurando@denverpost.com

SALT LAKE CITY >> Two of the Nuggets’ worst irrational nightmares converged for a chilling period.

The second quarter and the state of Utah.

In a shaky performanc­e, the result was all that mattered Tuesday night as Denver conquered both fears in a 111-95 win over the endof-year remnants of the Utah Jazz. It was just the second win for Michael Malone and Nikola Jokic at Delta Center in their respective Nuggets tenures, snapping a sixgame losing streak in Salt Lake City.

The Nuggets (55-24) remain deadlocked with the Minnesota Timberwolv­es for first place in the Western Conference with three games remaining for both teams — most importantl­y the one Wednesday, when the Timberwolv­es visit Denver in a showdown that will break the tie. If the Nuggets lose, they’ll be positioned to finish as the No. 3 seed unless they get help from Oklahoma City.

To make it to that premier matchup unscathed, Jamal Murray had to definitive­ly shake off the rust from the seven games he recently missed. He registered four steals and three blocks at the defensive end, while shooting 11 for 20 en route to a game-leading 28 points. Those included a career-high five dunks — all by halftime. A vicious reverse slam stood out in particular as a sign of his health while Denver was building a 19-point lead in the first quarter.

Only for the dreaded second to enact its usual reversal of fate. The Nuggets entered this game ranked 21st in the NBA in secondquar­ter net rating (minus-3.5) and 29th in second-quarter defensive rating (119). After doubling up Utah’s 17 points in the first frame Tuesday, they allowed 36 in the second. That establishe­d the tenor for the rest of the game, as Utah scrapped to stay within single digits.

Late in the third, a 3-pointer from the hot hand of Talen Horton-tucker sliced Denver’s lead

in half. It remained a onescore game for only a few seconds; Reggie Jackson answered with the only three of his 1-for-6 night, jump-starting a useful 7-0 run.

Horton-tucker was a physical force for the Jazz, scoring 24 points to keep the game interestin­g with Lauri Markkanen, Collin Sexton, John Collins, Walker Kessler, Kris Dunn and Jordan Clarkson all sitting out.

The Nuggets, meanwhile, were missing only Aaron Gordon as they continued their push for the top seed.

The most beneficial goal they can accomplish this week aside from earning home-court advantage is getting Murray reacclimat­ed before the playoffs. As he warmed up, Malone popped out to the court to check on him and watch the pregame routine from the bench for several minutes, dribbling a ball between his legs while observing. Murray is still on a minutes restrictio­n — Malone played coy when asked for the number — but he looked as fresh as he had all game when Denver needed him most in the fourth quarter.

Leading 95-88, Murray sank three consecutiv­e 3-pointers in as many possession­s to self-engineer a 9-2 run and finally help his team see the light outside Utah’s house of horrors. He clocked a total of 27 minutes.

Jokic added 28 points, 13 rebounds, seven assists and three steals in an imperfect performanc­e for his standards. Christian Braun fueled the Nuggets early with 11 points on a trio of 3s.

 ?? RICK BOWMER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Denver Nuggets guard Jamal Murray drives as Utah Jazz Darius Bazley defends during in the first half Tuesday in Salt Lake City.
RICK BOWMER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Denver Nuggets guard Jamal Murray drives as Utah Jazz Darius Bazley defends during in the first half Tuesday in Salt Lake City.

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