The Denver Post

Defense puts clamps down in third quarter

Hornets missed their first 20 shots of the second half

- By Bennett Durando bdurando@ denverpost. com

Nuggets defenders and Hornets fans held their breath every time a shot went up for a few unusually suspensefu­l minutes at the end of the third quarter.

Would a single one go in before the clock ran out?

The Nuggets had briefly snapped out of holiday back- to- back mode, a malaise that overtook them in the first half and fourth quarter Saturday night. For the time being, that mindset was suitably replaced by relentless defense, aided by unwitting Charlotte shot- missing, in a staggering third quarter that cemented Denver’s fifth consecutiv­e road win, 102- 95, over the shorthande­d Hornets at Spectrum Center.

“Coach ( Michael Malone) laid into us a little bit at halftime, and we knew we had to come out there aggressive on the defensive end,” said Michael Porter Jr., who led the Nuggets with 22 points on 5- of- 8 shooting beyond the arc. “We wanted to win tonight because of our defense, not our offense.”

The Nuggets ( 21- 10) trailed 60- 54 at halftime 24 hours after playing in Brooklyn. They proceeded to score the first 17 points of the second half, part of an extended 25- 1 run in a quarter that ended 30- 9. The Hornets missed their first 20 shot attempts of the quarter, needing 11 minutes, two seconds to finally score from the field and six minutes, 14 seconds to score at all. The latter drought was snapped amusingly by a defensive three seconds in the lane call against Denver.

“That’s one of the more impressive runs that I can remember in my nine years in Denver,” Malone said.

In total, the Hornets went 17 consecutiv­e possession­s without a point.

By the final minutes of the period, the question of whether they would make a basket was the only thing keeping fans on the edge of their seats.

By the late stages of the fourth, it was a question of whether the home team would ever miss a shot. Denver’s 18- point lead was narrowed to 97- 94 with 3: 25 remaining as the Hornets found their stroke again. Excluding the third quarter, they shot 49.2% in the game.

But after the lead was cut to three, Nikola Jokic used a post spin move to get himself an open layup, and Aaron Gordon made two key defensive plays in the last 90 seconds, taking a charge and blocking a perimeter shot. Once more, the Nuggets clamped down on the Hornets for three scoreless minutes.

In its league- leading 31st game, Denver got doubledoub­les from Jokic ( 18 points, 10 rebounds and nine assists) and Jamal Murray ( 20 points and 12 rebounds).

“That’s a great quarter,” Murray said of the game’s defining stretch. “That’s one we can always look back on and try to compare — if we ever have a bad quarter, we can always compare it to where we want to be.”

Ish Smith, who won his first career NBA championsh­ip with the Nuggets at 34 years old last June, got his first start of the season for the Hornets. He had eight assists.

 ?? DAVID JENSEN — GETTY IMAGES ?? Nick Richards of the Charlotte Hornets defends Denver’s Nikola Jokic as he drives to the basket in the second half Saturday at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, N. C.
DAVID JENSEN — GETTY IMAGES Nick Richards of the Charlotte Hornets defends Denver’s Nikola Jokic as he drives to the basket in the second half Saturday at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, N. C.

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