The Denver Post

Defense holds up in third straight win

- By Mike Singer

NUGGETS 105, THUNDER 98

OKLAHOMA CITY» Torrey Craig had done everything and more in his spot start for the injured Gary Harris, but one final second chance bucket wouldn’t hurt.

He corralled one more miss with just over a minute left, dropped it in and officially curbed the Thunder’s fourthquar­ter run. The Nuggets, who improved to 13-7 on the year, won 105-98 for their third win in a row. The Thunder entered Saturday having won 12 of their last 14 games.

With Harris out due to an ankle injury, Craig was phenomenal on both ends of the floor. He finished with eight points and 10 rebounds, including six demoralizi­ng offensive boards. He also held Russell Westbrook to just 16 points on 6 of 23 shooting.

“Torrey Craig was sensa-

tional tonight,” Nuggets coach Michael Malone said. “I love the fact that he took on the challenge of guarding one of the more unguardabl­e guys in the NBA. As I just told the team, we had every reason to make an excuse for tonight’s game. Three games in four nights, back-toback, Gary’s not playing. I said, ‘We don’t make excuses, we find ways.'”

On a night where their offense went cold in the second half, it was the defense that the Nuggets leaned on. The Thunder shot just 35 percent overall, including 23 percent (9 for 39) from 3point range.

Jamal Murray led the Nuggets with 22 points, followed by Nikola Jokic and Trey Lyles, who had 16 each. Murray also added eight assists and eight rebounds.

Paul George, who finished with 24, nailed a 3-pointer from the wing to make it 80-71, but Jokic and Monte Morris responded with timely buckets to protect the lead. Murray buried a huge 3pointer from the wing with 5:48 to give the Nuggets a 92-79 lead. It was their defense, though, that carried them over the finish.

Frustrated from an abysmal first half, the Thunder chipped away in the third quarter. They outscored the Nuggets 24-16 while Westbrook continued to soften up the defense with downhill drives. He had nine points on 10 shots, and Steven Adams added six points and six rebounds to cut the margin to 79-66 heading into the fourth. Adams finished with a doubledoub­le of 12 points and 14 rebounds.

Thunder coach Billy Donovan sounded prophetic pregame while praising the Nuggets’ multifacet­ed frontcourt.

“You think about an offensive rebounding team and you think you have big, strong guys that play under the basket,” Donovan said, citing Mason Plumlee, Paul Millsap and Jokic. “They’re just the opposite. You’ve got these big strong guys that are great skill players. … It’s a little bit unique when you have the frontcourt guys that are starting the fastbreak. Their bigs are kind of the quarterbac­ks of their offense.”

Jokic, the team’s primary fulcrum, wasn’t nearly as impactful as his frontcourt counterpar­ts, but once again, the Nuggets showed their depth.

Despite their fifth-rated defense one quarter of the way through the season, Malone wasn’t close to declaring his team a defensive stalwart.

“Last year, after 15 games, we were a really good defensive team as well, and by the time it got to February and March, the bottom just fell out,” Malone said. “Nineteen games does not make a season.”

While he was understand­ably wary about jumping to conclusion­s, it was the fourth consecutiv­e game the Nuggets cranked up their intensity on defense. Denver surged in the second quarter, their lead getting as big as 25 while holding the Thunder to just 29 percent shooting in the first half.

 ?? Alonzo Adams, The Associated Press ?? Denver forward Torrey Craig defends Oklahoma City guard Russell Westbrook as Denver center Nikola Jokic looks on Saturday in Oklahoma City.
Alonzo Adams, The Associated Press Denver forward Torrey Craig defends Oklahoma City guard Russell Westbrook as Denver center Nikola Jokic looks on Saturday in Oklahoma City.

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