Manila Bulletin

Tie NBA mark with 24 triples in 132-110 win

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DENVER (AP) — The sellout crowd at the Pepsi Center came to see the sharpshoot­ers, and they did. Only, it wasn't the Golden State Warriors hitting from long range, but the shorthande­d Denver Nuggets.

"Once we saw a few go in, we just wanted to keep going, see how many we could hit," Will Barton said after the Nuggets tied an NBA record with 24 3-pointers while shocking the Warriors 132-110 on Monday night.

The Nuggets beat the Warriors at their own game, but it wasn't by design.

"We just wanted to get after them, challenge them on offense and defense. It just so happened that we hit a lot of 3s. So, we just kept rolling with it," Barton said. "But we never come into a game, especially with a team like that and just want to outshoot them from beyond the arc because that's what they do."

The Warriors couldn't counter Denver's dizzying display, sinking just 8 of 32 3-pointers.

Even Stephen Curry couldn't keep up with Denver's surprise sharpshoot­ers, finishing 1 of 11 from beyond the arc.

"I felt confident, every shot I took felt like it was going in," Curry said. "Just got served a humble slice of cupcake." The only Denver player who didn't join the longrange barrage was Nikola Jokic, who was too busy setting career highs with 12 assists and 21 rebounds to go with 17 points in his second career triple-double.

The Nuggets tied the 3-point mark set by the Rockets in December against New Orleans when rookie Juan Hernangome­z sank his sixth three at the 2-minute mark.

"Yeah, we knew it at the end," Gary Harris said. "We were trying to get one more."

But their last two 3-pointers in the final minute rattled out, and Jamal Murray passed up an unconteste­d 3 to dribble out the clock. Denver finished 24 of 40 from beyond the arc.

"Every time somebody shot, it just felt like the ball was going in," Harris said.

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