New York Post

Nets squander Russell’s 32 in loss to Raptors

- By BRIAN LEWIS brian.lewis@nypost.com

The Raptors are trying to break through and show they can win a ring. The Nets are just trying to show they can win a game.

Tuesday night, the Nets couldn’t even do that, despite letting a monster game from D’Angelo Russell go to waste in a 116-102 loss before 16,654 at Barclays Center.

Russell had a game-high 32 points, thanks to a nuclear first quarter. He hit four quick 3-pointers to spot the Nets to a 17-6 lead, and he had 24 points before checking out with 7:40 left in the first and the Nets up 29-22.

But Russell had just eight points on 3-of-15 shooting the rest of the way. Eastleadin­g Toronto (50-17) blitzed him on the pick-androll and Fred VanVleet (a staggering plus-31) came off the bench to harass Russell the rest of the night. In the end the Nets had no answers, and no hope.

The Nets allowed a 15-0 Raptors run in the third quarter. After a Russell pull-up jumper, they didn’t hit a single basket in the game’s final 6:09. And even within 103-100 with 5:48 left, they capitulate­d and coughed up another 11 unanswered points.

“VanVleet came in and changed the game. I just think his pressure, his aggressive­ness, his grit, he really changed the game,” Nets coach Kenny Atkinson said. “Behind him they have two great rim protectors in [Serge] Ibaka and [Jonas] Valanciuna­s. … A sign of a great team is a team that can beat you in different ways.

“VanVleet, he was a plus-31 for the game. he was all over the place defensivel­y. There’s not a ton of guys that can change a game defensivel­y. He did it. Got to give him credit.”

The Nets (21-47) got beat in a host of different ways. Russell’s seven 3-pointers in the first quarter were the most by any player in the NBA this season, and tied for the fifth-most during any quarter in league history. And the Nets wasted it.

“They trapped me, forced me to pass it,” Russell said. “We just missed shots down the stretch. I think if we make those shots it might be a different game. … [VanVleet is] pesky. I give him a lot of credit. He plays solid defense.”

Sure, the Nets did a decent job keeping Toronto stars DeMar DeRozan (15 points) and Kyle Lowry (11 points, 11 assists) in check. But with starting center Jarrett Allen out with a sore left foot, Atkinson opted to go small and started Dante Cunningham. It spaced the floor, but Valanciuna­s, the center, scored 26 points, snatched 14 boards and wore them out on the pickand-roll.

Russell hit four 3-pointers for a 17-6 lead within the first 3:47. His 24 points in the opening quarter were the most by a Net in any quarter this season, and matched the highest-scoring half of his career — which came March 1, 2016 for the Lakers against the Nets.

Brooklyn led 67-57 at the break, and was rolling along with a 74-59 cushion after a Cunningham tip-in. But that’s when they let Valanciuna­s and Ibaka eat them alive inside during a 15-0 run, capped by VanVleet’s game-tying 3-pointer.

With the Nets clinging to a 91-89 edge after Caris LeVert’s free throws with 9:50 to play, CJ Miles answered Russell’s run with one of his own. Miles was scoreless before reeling off 12 points in a 14-4 two-minute blitz, but his 3-pointer put Toronto ahead 103-95 with 7:15 remaining.

The Nets got it to 103-100, but they couldn’t get over the hump. DeRozan hit a pair of free throws and then a 3-pointer to pad the gap to eight with just three minutes left. His cutting layup pushed it to double-digits, and Valanciuna­s’ bucket made it 112-100. There were two minutes left, but they were perfunctor­y.

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