Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Nets’ Irving is the best road act in the NBA

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Call him the road warrior. Or call him the best road act in the NBA.

New York City’s vaccine mandate prevents Nets fans from watching Kyrie Irving at Barclays Center, but the globe-trotting point guard made new fans in San Antonio as he danced around, across and on top of the Spurs to lead the Nets to a 117-102 victory at the AT&T Center on Friday.

In typical Irving fashion, the Nets guard blasted Gregg Popovich’s squad with flurries of scoring barrages. He finished with 24 points and four assists, scoring the Nets’ first eight points of the night, then going for 13 in the fourth quarter..

More importantl­y, Irving saved the Nets from what was shaping out to be an ugly and embarrassi­ng finish in San Antonio.

After all, it’s the superstar power the Nets lean on to mask their deficienci­es. They have 10 new players on the roster this season, a second-year head coach continuing to learn on the job, a defense that — up until San Antonio — had regressed beyond recognitio­n, not to mention they have been targeted by the injury bug floating about New York City.

Case in point: As Irving has gotten his footing as a part-time player, Kevin Durant (MCL sprain) is out until at least the All-Star break, Joe Harris remains out recovering from ankle surgery, and Nic Claxton missed another game with left hamstring tightness.

Yet absences included, the Nets still boast far more star power than the Spurs on a good day, and it’s the reason they won a game that was starting to get away from them in the second half.

That much has been a constant for a Nets team that has played below the heightened expectatio­ns they set for themselves this season: More often than not, the Nets have had more talent than their opponent at their disposal, but have not been able to break-away. Oftentimes, these games have been decided in the waning moments of the fourth quarter, victories that have often been characteri­zed as “ugly.”

The Nets haven’t handled business early. They’ve let teams hang around, and eventually, a more-than winnable game becomes a barnburner in the fourth.

That’s where the superstar-power comes into play, and it’s where Irving’s return opens up the entire offense for his team. Harden played one of his most aggressive games of the season, and the supporting cast picked up the slack.

Even without Durant, Irving has helped restore order. He is as sensationa­l now as he was before spending three months away from basketball to start this season. James Harden finished with a 37-point triple-double and LaMarcus Aldrdige scored 16 points off the bench in

his return to San Antonio. But it was Irving’s aggressive attack that set the tone.

“When you’re that elite, and your skill level is that high, and you’re that accurate and efficient, he’s gonna unlock a lot of things,” coach Steve Nash said of Irving. “We don’t have a ton of guys who can get in the paint; he brings

that. You don’t have a ton of guys that are exceptiona­l pulling up in the midrange, especially with Kevin out; he gives you that. He spaces the floor with his three-point range and accuracy. He’s a terrific finisher. He can be a oneman fast break. So you add it all up, he does add a lot to our program. And when he’s on the floor, whether

he has the ball or not, he makes us better.”

That order, however, was restored against a team well outside the playoff picture, and the Nets have historical­ly struggled against elite championsh­ip contenders, bagging their first victory against one in Chicago against the Bulls.

The Nets are winners of five of their last eight

games — including two wins against the Spurs, one each against the Wizards, Pelicans and Bulls. Next up: a hungry Minnesota Timberwolv­es team with three young stars (D’Angelo Russell, KarlAnthon­y Towns and Anthony Edwards) who will pose a significan­t challenge for these Nets, even with Irving on the floor.

 ?? Eric Gay / Associated Press ?? Brooklyn Nets guard Kyrie Irving (11) drives to the basket against San Antonio Spurs center Jakob Poeltl on Friday.
Eric Gay / Associated Press Brooklyn Nets guard Kyrie Irving (11) drives to the basket against San Antonio Spurs center Jakob Poeltl on Friday.

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