The Denver Post

Hey, Fakers, Denver burst your bubble

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Hey, Fakers. The Joker’s on you. With a 114- 106 victory led by Nikola Jokic, whose magic is still somehow under- appreciate­d in NBA circles, the Nuggets not only climbed back in the Western Conference Finals, but they also exposed a dirty, little L. A. secret.

LeBron James and Anthony Davis are the Truth with a capital “T.” But the rest of this L. A. team ( here’s looking at you, JaVale McGee and Dwight Howard), are front- running Fakers with a capital “F.”

“Everybody always has us packing our backs and leaving, but we’re not ready to go,” Nuggets coach Michael Malone said. “For some reason, we love this bubble. I can’t explain it. This team loves the bubble.”

Maybe, just maybe, what we saw in Game 3 was Denver burst the Laker’s

bubble of invincibil­ity.

“We feel we should be up 2- 1 right now ( in the series), to be honest,” said guard Jamal Murray, who scored 28 points, including the most clutch baskets at crunch time.

Does this L. A. story remind you of anything? Does it maybe have a little resemblanc­e to another recent series against a team from Los Angeles that was expected to treat the Nuggets like nothing more than a nuisance?

Well, it was a victory Denver gave away to the Clippers that made Jokic and Murray believe they were the equal of Kawhi Leonard and Paul George. Maybe that buzzer- beater by Davis Sunday night told the Nuggets there’s no reason to fear the Lakers.

When Murray threw down a dunk to put Denver ahead 97- 77 with 10 minutes, 36 seconds, remaining in the fourth quarter, he punctuated it with his mean mug, which embodies the competitiv­e bile that has defined this team during its forever- feisty playoff run.

But the Lakers responded with a zone defense that flustered Denver and went on a 19- 2 run to pull within three points midway through the final quarter. That’s when the Nuggets were forced to look in the mirror and decide if they were ready for their L. A. close- up.

“We believed,” Malone said. We’ve got a series now. And the Nuggets, down 2- 1, are not afraid.

Got a second? I hate to gripe, as you know. But LeBron James and I have a beef with voters for the Most Valuable Player.

Late last week, Milwaukee forward Giannis Antetokoun­mpo accepted the MVP honor for the second consecutiv­e season from the comfort of home, while James worked up a sweat in the NBA bubble.

Asked about receiving only 16 of 101 first- place votes for MVP, James snapped: “It ( ticks) me off.”

The King’s English was a little saltier, but make no mistake. He was ticked off. Feeling disrespect­ed and under- appreciate­d, James underlined his ire five, six, seven times.

“The voting scale is a little weird sometimes,” James said.

No joke. And here’s your proof: Jokic finished ninth in the MVP balloting. He received zero firstplace votes, zero second- place votes and a mere two voters deemed Joker worthy of third place.

“I don’t know how much we’re really watching the game of basketball,” said James, hinting that voters fall in love with a narrative rather than analyzing the game. Amen, brother.

Don’t we all know the narrative about Jokic? No big Joker from Serbia can possibly be the MVP. The way he plays does not fit our preconceiv­ed notions of what’s great basketball.

Is Jokic the best player in the NBA? No, he’s not.

Is there a player in the league more valuable to his team than Jokic? No, there isn’t.

“I love the Joker, man,” TNT analyst Charles Barkley said at halftime. “I might come out of retirement and play with him.”

If you love basketball, how do you not love Joker?

Barkley is 57 years old and his caboose is loaded to the ceiling with lard. But if Barkley came out of retirement for Game 4 and donned a Nuggets uniform, Joker could find a way to get jolly old Sir Charles three easy lay- ups.

Harry Potter doesn’t look like much. But his magic is real.

Joker is Potter in sneakers. Muggles will never understand.

 ?? MARK KISZLA Denver Post Columnist ??
MARK KISZLA Denver Post Columnist
 ?? AAron Ontiveroz, The Denver Post ?? Denver’s Jerami Grant runs the break against L. A.’ s LeBron James ( 23) during the third quarter of Tuesday’s playoff game in Lake Buena Vista, Fla.
AAron Ontiveroz, The Denver Post Denver’s Jerami Grant runs the break against L. A.’ s LeBron James ( 23) during the third quarter of Tuesday’s playoff game in Lake Buena Vista, Fla.

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