So far the Denver Nuggets have all the answers they need for the Los Angeles Lakers, and now they’re one game away from sweeping.
With a 37-point lead over Jamal Murray, the Nuggets won Game 3 119-108 on Saturday to take a 3-0 lead in the Western Conference Finals. If the Nuggets win Game 4 in Los Angeles on Monday, they will face the Miami Heat or Boston Celtics for the first title in franchise history.
No team has ever come back from losing 3-0 in an NBA playoff series.
It wasn’t an easy win for Denver, who played a chip on their shoulder in every series against an NBA marquee team.
runner-up Nikola Jokic had perhaps his quietest game in the postseason (which is saying something considering he still has 24 points, 8 assists, and 6 rebounds) and dealt with trouble. Most of the game error. The Lakers once again enjoyed free-throw variation, this time outscoring the Nuggets 29-19. LeBron James (23 points, 12 assists, 7 rebounds) and Anthony Davis (28 points, 18 rebounds) both looked intimidating, or at least a step away from it.
The Nuggets won by avoiding the fouls the Lakers usually force, committing only 5 turnovers, and by getting solid games from nearly every member, most notably Bruce Brown and Kentavious Caldwell Pope, who combined for 32 points.
A great half from an All-Star Nuggets didn’t hurt either, nor another horrible game from D’Angelo Russell (3 points on 1-of-8 shooting).
Jamal Murray scores 30 points in the first half
The first half was Murray’s show, as the Nuggets’ standout guard followed up an unreal Game 2 performance with 30 points on 13-of-20 shooting in the first two quarters. for every NBA numbersHowever, Murray had 53 points in the fourth quarter of Game 2 and the first half of Game 3, the most by a player in a three-quarter stint in the playoffs since 1988.
A blazing Murray put the Nuggets up by 14 points in the first quarter, but they didn’t knock out the Lakers. Thanks to a quiet half from Jokic (five points on 2-of-8 shooting), free-throw disparity (18 attempts to the Nuggets’ 7), and a stellar start from Davis, the Lakers trailed only 58-55 at the half.
The second half was different in many ways. For starters, Murray completely disappeared, and was held scoreless until the middle of the fourth quarter. Jokic got up a bit, as did James, who made his first two pitches of the series on back-to-back plays.
The Nuggets led for most of the second half, finally starting to pull away midway through the fourth quarter with a 13-0 lead.
At that point, Jokic had fully come to life, scoring 15 points in the fourth quarter. Laker fans have been storming out of the Crypto.com Arena for the last two minutes, and you have to wonder if they’ll be back on Monday.
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