The Arizona Republic

Irving, Durant too much for Suns

- Duane Rankin

Phoenix was already going to have a tough time handling Kyrie Irving.

Proved to be true as Irving finished Sunday’s showdown at Brooklyn with a team-high 34 points.

Then Kevin Durant was added to the equation as he returned after missing three games with a thigh injury. Uh oh.

Durant churned out 33 points in 28 in minutes as the Suns lost back-toback games for the first time since January, 128-119, at Barclays Center.

Phoenix lost Thursday night at Boston.

“It was a dogfight,” Suns All-Star guard Devin Booker said. “Obviously, they’re a very talented team that’s playing well. I thought we started off pretty well. They just continued to make shots. We had a lot of miscommuni­cation on a lot of our switches.”

The East-leading Nets (41-20) led by as many as 16 points in the second half after trailing by as many as 13 in the first half.

Down 56-43 with 3:34 remaining in the second quarter Brooklyn closed the half on a 16-5 run trailing by only two, 61-59, at the half.

Irving and Durant combined for 10 of those points as Irving hit two 3s.

“If we could’ve scored and gotten stops, we could’ve gone into halftime with a double-digit lead,” Suns coach

Monty Williams said. “Instead we went in with a two-point lead. I thought that kind of changed the momentum a little bit.”

Then trailing by five to start the fourth, Phoenix surrendere­d another 16-5 Brooklyn run to fall behind, 113-97, with 6:52 remaining.

Durant scored nine points in that run.

“They were huge,” said Suns forward Torrey Craig about the 16-5 Brooklyn runs. “When we get a lead, we’ve got learn how to play better with the lead and just learn how to keep it and stay composed. Credit to those guys. They made plays. They made shots the whole game. They were the better team tonight.”

Booker scored a game-high 36 points after scoring a total of 34 points in his previous two games, Deandre Ayton finished with a double-double of 20 and 13 boards, but Irving and Durant combined for 67 points for the game as the Nets hit 8-of-12 from 3s in a 69point second half.

“It’s just a tough game, a tough team to play against when you can’t generate the kind of offense you need in moments,” Williams said. “We scored 119 points, but a lot of those points were long 2s or 2s in the paint that weren’t by the rim. We have to be able to generate 3s (shot 12-of-34) and take advantage of DA at the rim. I didn’t think we did that well enough tonight and two guys had really good nights for them and their other guys were really physical on defense. I thought that took a toll on us.”

The Nets shot 52.9% from the field for the game against the NBA’s fifthbest defense.

“We could’ve been better defensivel­y, but a lot of good stretches,” Nets first-year coach Steve Nash said. “We created separation with our defense. Offensivel­y, we were able to score. Tonight was good. Lots to build on. Lots of positives, but for me, it’s never this is where we are. It’s where we’re going.”

The Nets were without All-Star James Harden, who remains sidelined with a hamstring injury, but managed to sweep the season series over the Suns.

Harden scored 38 points in leading Brooklyn to a 128-124 comeback win back in February at Phoenix after trailing by as many as 24.

“They’re fresh on the scene as an elite team so this is pretty new to them,” said Durant, who along with Irving were sidelined for the first meeting. “So we wanted to gauge and take that physicalit­y that they bring and that toughness and that quickness that they bring.”

Phoenix was also without Dario Saric (injury management, ankle) and Jae Crowder (ankle), who missed his second straight game after suffering an injury at Philadelph­ia.

“Those guys have to get well,” Williams said. “We can’t have them out there playing sore. So we have what we have and what we have is enough.”

Cam Johnson, who got a second straight start Sunday, shot just 1-of-5 from 3 in scoring nine points after going 0-for-6 on 3s in Thursday’s loss at Boston while Mikal Bridges managed only seven points, going 0-for-4 from 3, after a 1-of-9 effort on 3s Thursday.

“You have to trust the work, reps remove doubt,” Williams said. “The guys have gotten their reps in. It happens to everybody over the course of the season and your career. You’re going to run into moments in your career or seasons or a week or so or a couple of games you don’t knock down shots, but you have to trust all the work that you put in.”

The Suns, who are 19-9 on the road, squandered a chance to pull within a game of West-leading Utah (44-16), which lost in upset fashion at home Saturday to Minnesota (17-44), which has the second-worst record in the Western Conference.

The Jazz play Minnesota again Monday in Minneapoli­s.

Utah is still without Donovan Mitchell, who has missed its last four games with a right ankle sprain. He’s scheduled for an re-evaluation Friday when the Jazz play the Suns for third and final time this season at Phoenix Suns Arena.

The Suns hold the tiebreaker as they’ve won the first two matchups.

Now two games behind the Jazz, Phoenix will conclude the five-game road trip Monday against the league’s hottest team, New York (34-27), winners of nine straight, in the second of back-to-back games.

“We’re going to be ready,” Booker said.

The Suns will have faced five of the top six teams in the East on this trip as they began it with an overtime win Monday at Milwaukee and a 116-113 thriller at Philadelph­ia that ended with Joel Embiid barely missing a full-court heave at the buzzer.

They’ve since lost their last two at Boston in the second of a back-to-back and at Brooklyn. The Suns will now look to avoid losing three straight for the first time since that January stretch when they fell to Denver twice in overtime games and Oklahoma City.

Booker didn’t play in the latter two games as he suffered a hamstring injury in the first OT setback against the Nuggets.

The Thunder loss dropped Phoenix to 8-8.

The Suns have gone 34-10 since, but lost their last two and now find themselves tied with Los Angeles Clippers (43-19), who own the tiebreaker over them.

Phoenix has a .006 better winning percentage than the Clippers, but both teams trail Utah by two games. They’ll face each other Wednesday in Phoenix.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Devin Booker (1) of the Phoenix Suns goes to the basket as Joe Harris, left, and Jeff Green of the Brooklyn Nets defend Sunday.
GETTY IMAGES Devin Booker (1) of the Phoenix Suns goes to the basket as Joe Harris, left, and Jeff Green of the Brooklyn Nets defend Sunday.

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