Royal Oak Tribune

Lakers hope to regain control over Nuggets in Game 4 of West Finals

- By BrianMahon­ey

The Denver Nuggets don’t sound like an underdog.

Jamal Murray believes they should be leading the Western Conference finals. They aren’t, though they say there is still a longway to go in the series.

If the LosAngeles Lakers don’t start playing better, the Nuggets might be right.

Outplayed for much of the last 1 ½ games, the top-seeded Lakers look to regain control of the series when the teams play Game 4 on Thursday night.

The Lakers were careless with the ball and not discipline­d enough on defense in Game 2, when they needed Anthony Davis’ 3-pointer as time expired to avoid a loss. Instead of cutting down on their turnovers and fouls, Los Angeles repeated them in Game 3, helping the Nuggets build a big lead on their way to a 114-106 victory that cut the Lakers’ lead to 2-1.

“It’s not going to be winning ingredient­s for us if we continue to do that and we knew that. Even after Game 2, we talked about that,” LeBron James said.

“Got to be better than that Game 4.”

The Nuggets have been behind by two games in all three playoff series, so they were stung but not sunk when Davis denied themin Game 2. They came back and controlled much of Game 3 and responded with poise after their one faulty stretch, when the Lakers cut a 20-point deficit to three.

“This gives us that much more confidence going into this series, letting them know that we’re here, we’re in this for the long haul,” Denver coach Michael

Malone said. “We’re going to continue to fight and do whatever we can.”

The Lakers easily recovered from their other two losses in the playoffs. They dropped Game 1 against Portland in the first round and won the next four. When they lost Game 1 again in the second round against Houston, they followed with six straight victories, so aren’t going to overreact to another defeat.

“We’re still up 2-1. We have control of the series,” Davis said. “We’ve just got to come out in Game 4 and play our style of basketball.”

But Davis acknowledg­ed that his two-rebound performanc­e Tuesday was “unacceptab­le,” and he noted the team mistakes that

the Lakers didn’t clean up from the previous game. Los Angeles had a 16-point lead early in the second half of Game 2 and could have coasted to a second straight easy victory, but had to scramble at the end after finishingw­ith24 turnovers and 30 fouls.

The Nuggets then scored 25 points in Game 3 off the Lakers’ turnovers — with James committing a gamehigh six of them in his 26th playoff triple- double.

“When you give up 25 points off 16 turnovers, that’snot good,” James said. “We did the same thing in Game 2. We had 24 turnovers and luckily it didn’t bite us in the butt, but it should have.

“We’ve just got to do a better job of that and it’s a conscious effort that not only starts withme because I’m the point guard.”

If the Lakers win it, they will be a victory away from their first NBA Finals appearance since 2010.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Denver Nuggets’ Monte Morris, left, a Flint Beecher graduate, and Jamal Murray celebrate after Murray dunked during Denver’s win over the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 3 of the Western Conference Finals on Monday.
MARK J. TERRILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Denver Nuggets’ Monte Morris, left, a Flint Beecher graduate, and Jamal Murray celebrate after Murray dunked during Denver’s win over the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 3 of the Western Conference Finals on Monday.

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