Antelope Valley Press

Murray scores 29, Nuggets hold off Lakers

- By GREG BEACHAM

LOS ANGELES — Jamal Murray scored 29 points, Michael Porter Jr. added 27 and the Denver Nuggets snapped the Los Angeles Lakers’ threegame winning streak with a 114-106 victory Thursday night.

Nikola Jokic had 24 points, 13 rebounds and nine assists for the defending NBA champion Nuggets, who opened a three-game road trip with their third straight win and eighth in 10 games.

Denver blew a 15-point lead in the second half, but never trailed and eventually finished with a 10-2 run in the building where the Nuggets beat LA twice to sweep the Western Conference finals last May.

Three hours before the game, the Lakers unveiled a 19-foot-tall bronze statue of Kobe Bryant outside their downtown arena. The Lakers played Denver in their Black Mamba alternate uniforms, and the evening was filled with Bryant tributes before the crowd began chanting “Kobe! Kobe!” in the final minutes to urge on the current Lakers.

Anthony Davis scored 32 points and LeBron James had 25 for the Lakers, whose longest winning streak since the In-Season Tournament ended in their first game back from an encouragin­g six-game road trip. James added nine rebounds and seven assists, while Austin Reaves had 15 points and 10 assists.

Several hours after the Lakers declined to make any moves at the trade deadline, the Lakers ran drasticall­y short on guards. D’Angelo Russell sat out with left knee soreness and Max Christie started in his place and scored seven points before spraining his right ankle shortly before halftime.

Denver led by 15 midway through the third quarter, but Los Angeles eventually tied it with 6:41 to play on Davis’ alley-oop dunk from Skylar Mays.

Los Angeles tied it again on Reaves’ 3-pointer with 2:18 to play, but Murray hit a 3-pointer and an 11-foot floater on the Nuggets’ next two possession­s before Porter drained a 3-pointer with 1:05 left to seal it.

Both of these teams made no major moves at the trade deadline, but the Nuggets have more reason to feel optimistic about their championsh­ip-winning core than the up-anddown Lakers.

Russell’s improved play in recent weeks was a primary factor in the Lakers’ decision not to move his tradeable contract at the deadline. But the starting point guard couldn’t play after undergoing an unspecifie­d procedure on his sore left knee Wednesday.

Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka said he decided to stand pat because he didn’t find a deal good enough to risk disruption of his roster’s chemistry and potential. Pelinka mentioned the fact he would have been allowed to trade only one first-round pick this month, but he’ll have three to move this summer in pursuit of a third superstar.

“My job is always to look for ways to upgrade our roster, but you can’t buy a house that’s not for sale,” Pelinka said. “The right move wasn’t there, and it’s a thoughtful and tricky calculus at times . ... We didn’t want to shoot a small bullet now that would only lead to very marginal improvemen­t at the expense of making a much bigger and more impactful movement potentiall­y in June and July.

“We tried everything we could, and the market is the market. There were very, very few sellers.”

Former Lakers swingman Kentavious Caldwell-Pope sat out for the Nuggets with right hamstring tightness. Justin Holiday had a rough night in his place, scoring two points in 22 minutes as a starter before fouling out early in the fourth quarter.

UP NEXT

Nuggets: At Sacramento on Friday.

Lakers: Host New Orleans on Friday.

 ?? KEVIN REECE Special to the VP ?? Lakers forward Anthony Davis (3) goes to the basket against Denver Nuggets forward Aaron Gordon (50), forward Justin Holiday (9) and Reggie Jackson (7) on Thursday in Los Angeles.
KEVIN REECE Special to the VP Lakers forward Anthony Davis (3) goes to the basket against Denver Nuggets forward Aaron Gordon (50), forward Justin Holiday (9) and Reggie Jackson (7) on Thursday in Los Angeles.

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