Times-Call (Longmont)

Nuggets bench needs auditing before playoffs

- Msinger@denverpost.com

Bruce Brown’s primal scream would’ve rang throughout downtown Denver were it not drowned out by the sounds of raucous Bulls fans Wednesday night.

Denver’s previous four home losses came via a total of eight points. The final margin vs. Chicago, in just the Nuggets’ fifth home loss of the season, was by 21 points. The Bulls smacked the Nuggets in a way the No. 1 team in the West wasn’t accustomed to getting bullied.

“We can’t come soft,” Brown said.

But back to that scream, which came after Brown knifed through the lane and jackhammer­ed a dunk late in the third quarter of the rout. If there was pentup frustratio­n, from his team’s execution, their lack of toughness, or, most pressing, the ongoing puzzle that is Denver’s second unit, no one could blame him.

After Friday night’s tilt at San Antonio, there were only 15 regular-season games left on the schedule. Already with a six-game lead in the West, that represente­d precious few opportunit­ies for Brown, Reggie Jackson, Jeff Green, Thomas Bryant and Jamal Murray, the lone starter, to gel on Denver’s bench unit.

(Not to mention, the sooner the Nuggets claim the No. 1 seed, the earlier they’ll have to consider easing Murray’s workload in anticipati­on of a long and taxing playoff run).

But within that second unit, which is trying to

out galvanize on the fly, has been settled.

“We’re still trying to figure stuff out,” Brown said.

It begins with Jackson, the Nuggets’ buyout acquisitio­n, who’s struggled fairly significan­tly since arriving in Denver. Throughout his first eight games, the veteran’s averaged just 6.9 points on 29% from the field. He was brought in to replace Bones Hyland’s minutes, and though there’s an element of maturity in his presence alone, his value has yet to manifest on the court. Teammates and coaches have been harping on Jackson to put less pressure on himself. But Jackson admitted he’s his harshest critic.

“I think I’ve been pressing, I’ve been thinking too much,” he said.

There are new plays to incorporat­e, new teammates and tendencies to learn, not to mention the implicit pressure of joining a team with championsh­ip expectatio­ns. That’s all on Jackson’s mind. When Bryant, Denver’s other deadline acquisitio­n, played just

little 11:47 in Denver’s win over Toronto earlier this week, Jackson, perhaps unfairly, took responsibi­lity for it.

“That’s on me,” said Jackson, who wanted to ensure the other newest Nugget had the smoothest transition possible to his new environmen­t. Jackson took it upon himself to put Bryant in a position to thrive.

As hard as it’s been for Jackson to catch a rhythm, imagine what it’s been like for Bryant, who doesn’t have the ball in his hands anywhere near as much. The burly center’s averaged just 4.9 points in barely 12 minutes per game throughout his first 11 games in Denver. His shooting percentage is at 50%, down from his 65% conversion rate with the Lakers. Most of the time, he’s mired in traffic with seemingly little space to operate. It’s a small sample size, yes, but it’s also indicative of what his role will be in the playoffs, backing up Nikola Jokic. Though he hasn’t admitted it, Bryant has appeared to be playing tight, too.

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