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Tag: anthony edwards

  • That’s 5 in a row: Atlanta Hawks lose another one, 126-111, this time to the Miami Heat

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    The Atlanta Hawks were off on Christmas Day and back in action on Friday, December 26. The Hawks hosted the Miami Heat, looking to end a four-game losing streak. Atlanta has also lost five out of their last six games, including a pair of games to the Chicago Bulls.

    Well, make that six of their last seven games as the Heat defeated the Hawks 126-111.

    At the end of the first quarter, the Hawks and Heat were tied at 32. The teams came into Friday’s game with similar overall records (Miami was 15-15 and the Hawks were 15-16) and, from the looks of things early on, appeared to be evenly matched. Hawks guard Trae Young scored nine of the Hawks’ 32 points.

    Atlanta had lost eight of its last 10 games, and part of the reason for that slide was slow starts to the games. Against the Heat, the Hawks were down 11-4 before Young made some shots to get them back into the game. Heat guard Norman Powell did the same for his team after making consecutive three-pointers late in the second quarter to give Miami an eight-point advantage. Mirin Fader recently profiled Powell for The Athletic.

    Behind Powell’s 12 points, the Heat extended its lead to 63-51 at the half.

    The second half began with a three-pointer from Young and the Hawks cutting the Miami advantage to five points at the 6:51 mark. A lot of that work was done by forward Jalen Johnson, who forced his way to the basket, scored, and was fouled. His three-point play brought Atlanta within four points, 79-75, with 3:41 remaining in the third quarter.

    The quarter ended with the Heat ahead 90-84, and the fourth quarter began with the Heat extending that lead to double-figures within minutes. A reverse layup from Powell gave Miami a 10-point lead with seven minutes to play in the game. The Heat would have its largest lead of the game, 117-102, with just under four minutes to play. A wild running hook by Heat forward Pelle Larsson found the bottom of the net and sent some Hawks fans heading to the exits of State Farm Arena.

    Hinesville, Georgia native Davion Mitchell, who started at the point for the Heat, led the way with six assists.

    Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    The New York Knicks will be in town tomorrow, Saturday, December 27. These games are the first time the Hawks faced the Heat and Knicks this season.

    Atlanta is now 6-9 at home this season.

    The last home game of the year will take place on New Year’s Eve when the Minnesota Timberwolves and Atlanta native Anthony Edwards will be in town for an afternoon tip-off (2 p.m.). The new year will begin with a three-game homestand. The Hawks and Young will be in New York at Madison Square Garden to play the Knicks on January 2, followed by consecutive games in Toronto against the Raptors on January 3 and 5.

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    Donnell Suggs

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  • Lakers’ Jake LaRavia gets brutal jab from Timberwolves’ Anthony Edwards

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    The recent Los Angeles Lakers clash with the Minnesota Timberwolves provided plenty of drama and a thrilling finish. Another impressive performance from Austin Reaves, including the eventual game-winner in the lane, helped the Lakers grab a necessary win with LeBron James, Luka Doncic, and other key players out.

    Another individual who stepped up mightily and caught the attention of Timberwolves fans is Jake LaRavia. While LaRavia started the season as a reserve who’d step in when necessary, he’s appeared in the team’s starting lineup for multiple games due to the Lakers’ injuries.

    Minnesota’s arena became a stage for LaRavia to show his full abilities. While Reaves finished with 28 points, his friend and teammate was right behind him with 27 points. LaRavia also put on a shooting clinic, missing just one of his eleven field goals, which was one of the six three-pointers he took.

    The result was Reaves and LaRavia combining for an impressive performance in the Lakers’ win. In the process of LaRavia’s fantastic night, he also received some brutal trash talk courtesy of Anthony Edwards, after some assistance from a Timberwolves fan.

    Read more: Lakers’ Bronny James Gets Brutal Reality Check From Former Top Pick

    During a quieter moment during the game’s fourth quarter, a fan blurted out, “Who is number 12?” prompting Edwards to respond from his seat on the bench.

    “That’s what I’m saying. I don’t know!” Ant dramatically yelled out, replying to the fan’s question while looking over towards the players on the court.

    LaRavia was shown on camera during the moment, and seemingly absorbed the wild roast courtesy of one of the game’s biggest and most entertaining rising stars.

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    Ironically, LaRavia was the No. 19 pick in the 2022 NBA Draft for Minnesota. However, he never played for the Timberwolves because they traded his draft rights to the Memphis Grizzlies for other picks.

    LaRavia, a former Wake Forest player, spent three seasons with the Grizzlies before heading to the Sacramento Kings for last season. However, the Lakers’ front office and coach JJ Redick liked what they saw from LaRavia and found a way to sign him.

    Amid Wednesday night’s incredible performance by Reaves and the Lakers, the NBA also shared a highlight clip of LaRavia, giving casual fans a better sense of what he’s capable of.

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    While talking to reporters postgame, LaRavia credited his friend and teammate, Reaves, for finding him for open shots. Reaves finished the game with 15 assists. He also told reporters that members of the Lakers staff wanted him to “be more aggressive.”

    Rob Pelinka and Redick’s instincts seem to have paid off with LaRavia, who potentially showed what he can do in a game when he’s scorching hot from the field. Amid Luka and LeBron’s absences, if LaRavia can compile more big games like that, expect more fans to know exactly who he is.

    Read more: Mavericks’ Anthony Davis Exits Game With Concerning Injury

    For more about the Los Angeles Lakers and the NBA, visit Newsweek Sports.

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  • Nuggets ‘testing the refs’ with more aggressive defense, Nikola Jokic says

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    That old adage about the NBA being a copycat league has aged into cliché at this point. But that doesn’t make it any less true.

    One variable the Nuggets seem to be copying as a new season nears: Defensive physicality and the art of almost fouling. It’s an art mastered by the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder.

    “We are trying to be aggressive,” Nikola Jokic said Friday at Ball Arena. “We’re trying to be, like, close to a foul — testing the refs to call the fouls. That’s something that we’re gonna try to do. That was the emphasis of the practice.”

    The most accurate term for it is probably the one used by coach David Adelman this week: “junking it up” on defense. In two consecutive postseasons, Denver has been vexed by an opponent’s ability to junk it up and unable to return the favor. Minnesota implored Anthony Edwards and Jaden McDaniels to devour Jamal Murray in 2024.

    OKC took the principle to another level last season, collapsing into the paint and recovering to the 3-point line as efficiently as any defense in recent memory. Alex Caruso was the ace in the hole, pestering and prodding Jokic to death in Game 7.

    The Nuggets are searching for ways to renovate their defense after it ranked 21st in the league. Junking it up more is one way to start.

    “Just different ways to shrink on better players. Zone. Working all that kind of stuff, and then when we do zone, who’s on the court, what their responsibilities are at each spot,” Adelman said. “And we’ll continue to work on it. I don’t know if we’ll throw it out there in the preseason, but it’s something we have to continue to improve on, because I feel like in the past, a lot of times you’re trying to get so many things done on the checklist that you kind of tell yourself you’re gonna get to that eventually. And I think if we’re actually gonna do that successfully, we have to work on it daily.”

    Adelman has alluded to zone defense a handful of times this offseason, after deploying it regularly during the playoffs as interim coach. He and his players have also described a structure that’ll be more heavily based around Jokic’s IQ and matchup-dependent decisions. Some games might call for Jokic to be “up to touch” against a ball-handler. Others might be more suitable for various levels of drop coverage.

    “It’s something new, so we are kind of trying to adjust,” Jokic said. “But I think we see that it’s going to be really good, and it could help us a lot.”

    The ideas are complicated, but the overarching theme is that Denver’s scheme will be less rigid than before. Regardless of how it looks in action, peskier ball pressure is a foundational tenet. To put it another way, better effort than last season.

    “There’s gonna be mistakes in this, when we’re not all the way up (the floor) like we’ve been, where the rotations are kind of starting from the get-go of every play, which we were really good at for a long time,” Adelman said. “… We just think this group has the capability of doing some different things, giving different looks, which gives us more flexibility on the defensive end, both man and zone.”

    The end goal is to close the gap, at least marginally, with Oklahoma City — a heavy favorite to repeat thanks to its ability to overwhelm with defense.

    “Hopefully we can be the silent — how do you say it? — the silent knight,” Jokic said. “Silent horse. Dark horse.”

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    Bennett Durando

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  • Believe That: Anthony Edwards Talks Joining Team USA Puts All The Faith In Himself– ‘I’m The No. 1 Option’

    Believe That: Anthony Edwards Talks Joining Team USA Puts All The Faith In Himself– ‘I’m The No. 1 Option’

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    Anthony Edwards – Source: Ethan Miller / Getty

    Anthony Edwards talks about joining Team USA and believes he’s the No. 1 option despite playing alongside LeBron, Steph, and Kevin Durant.

    We are weeks away from the 2024 Paris Olympics and all eyes are on the USA Men’s Basketball team. The festivities begin on Friday, July 26th and end on Sunday, August 11th. The men’s roaster is stacked with all your fan favorites including Anthony Edwards, LeBron James, Steph Curry, Anthony Davis, Joel Embid, and more.

    According to ESPN, fan-favorite Anthony Edwards believes he is the “No. 1 option” on the team despite the immense talent around him.

    “I’m still the No. 1 option,” Edwards said. “Y’all might look at it differently, but I don’t.”

    Edwards believes when the action kicks off this summer he will have a prominent role and he isn’t afraid to work for it.

    “I just go out there and be myself. … Shoot my shots, play defense. They’ve got to fit in to play around me. That’s how I feel,” Edwards said.

    Realistically Anthony Edwards is the youngest player on the team with more Olympic appearances ahead of him. With a team heavily filled with players heading out the door he might get a backseat. However, if that happens it’s surely not because he isn’t made for the game or the best option. It’s a team sport and others have more experience than him which could play a factor.

    You can watch AE talk about this year’s summer games below.

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    Noah Williams

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  • Cam’ron Blames Adidas For His Issues With Anthony Edwards– ‘Y’all Think You Got The B-Ball Version Of Kanye’

    Cam’ron Blames Adidas For His Issues With Anthony Edwards– ‘Y’all Think You Got The B-Ball Version Of Kanye’

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    Cam’Ron & Anthony Edwards – Source: Morgan Engel /Thaddaeus McAdams/ Getty

    After being featured in Anthony Edwards’ new Adidas commercial, Cam’ron responds by placing the blame on the sneaker brand.

    Soon after Anthony Edwards and The Minnesota Timberwolves were eliminated in the NBA playoffs, Adidas dropped off a perfectly timed ad where Edwards, who has a signature shoe with the brand, responded to his detractors including Cam’ron,

    “F*ck, buddy,” said the baller in the ad.

    According to USA Today, Cam’ron didn’t take the disrespect lying down and opened his new episode of his It Is What It Is podcast with a freestyle response.

    While Cam’ron responded to Anthony Edwards, he mostly aimed his shade at Adidas alleging that they would eventually fumble having the NBA player.

    “But f**k wrong with Ant-Man, gave him his props, homie got love from me, new commercial, y’all ain’t got love for me” he rapped. “Adidas I’m blaming you, This is your fault. Y’all think you got the b-ball version of Kanye. Come on stop it dude, y’all just stopping through. He do something you don’t like you’ll drop him too.”

     

    “I ain’t mean no disrespect this morning, but to be totally honest, I thought the commercial was dope. I don’t f**k with the sneakers, but it was dope… I don’t even remember saying [he wasn’t a superstar]… it must’ve been last season because all season I been having Anthony Edwards back. I don’t know where this came from.” Cam said.

    To make matters worse, Cam referenced the history of athletes getting injured in Adidas kicks. It sounds like Adidas officially has a new enemy who won’t let this go anytime soon. Hopefully, for the sake of the culture Anthony Edwards and Cam’ron can get together and patch things up.

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    Noah Williams

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  • Nuggets GM Calvin Booth on 2024 offseason: “We can use a little bit more talent”

    Nuggets GM Calvin Booth on 2024 offseason: “We can use a little bit more talent”

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    As a longer-than-expected offseason tips off for the Denver Nuggets, team officials want to be sure they separate from what coach Michael Malone calls “the emotional reaction to losing” before any major decisions are made.

    “I think you always want to take time to let everything sink in and go back and take a quality look at everything that happened during the season,” general manager Calvin Booth said, “and then make decisions from that point.”

    As those reflections begin, Booth, Malone and team president Josh Kroenke addressed several topics during a 34-minute news conference Thursday. Chief among them: Do the Nuggets need to find a way to upgrade their roster?

    It was telling that Booth focused heavily on advancing the development of Denver’s youngest players.

    “I think (the 2023 draft picks) need more seasoning,” he said. “They need to get in the gym. They need to play Summer League. They need to get stronger. Obviously, maybe in our top seven, we can use a little bit more talent. Maybe there’s a way to upgrade one or two positions. … Get a guy that’s a more accomplished NBA player for whatever (roster) slot they’re taking. But I don’t see anything that’s, like, crazy out of sorts for our roster.”

    All indications from the extensive availability were that Denver isn’t rushing to make drastic changes to its roster. Booth doubled down on his previously stated team-building philosophy, which involves continuity achieved through drafting and developing to fill out the fringes of an expensive championship roster. He acknowledged the need to address the bench this offseason, potentially even with outside acquisitions, but it’s clear the Nuggets would prefer to rely on home-grown depth.

    That Kroenke later expressed faith in the starting lineup — despite its poor showing against Minnesota — was among multiple signs that Denver isn’t rushing to shop Michael Porter Jr. as a trade piece this summer. Malone also rebutted Porter’s own comments taking blame for the early exit.

    “We think we still have the best starting five in basketball, even though we fell just short this year,” Kroenke said. “Could have gone either way up until the last few minutes. So we don’t think we’re far off.”

    Here’s a look at some of the other topics addressed Thursday:

    Will Nuggets cross second apron to keep Kentavious Caldwell-Pope?

    Booth said: “We spend a lot of time looking at the second apron and all this other stuff. I think for me personally, it’s win a championship, one. Two, we have to look at the overall financial picture. And three, second apron. And I know the second apron is daunting, and there’s all kinds of restrictions, but I don’t think that’s first on our priority list. KCP’s been a great addition the last couple years. We obviously would love to have him back. We’re gonna take a hard look at what that looks like.”

    Analysis: Denver’s roster payroll already exceeds the luxury tax line and the first tax apron, resulting in a list of penalties imposed by the new collective bargaining agreement. If Kentavious Caldwell-Pope exercises his $15.4 million player or if the Nuggets re-sign him in free agency, they’ll trigger the second apron next season — meaning even more penalties. But Booth’s comment Thursday indicated that won’t be what stops Denver from retaining Caldwell-Pope.

    Kroenke also said that while he’s cognizant of the long-term consequences of existence in the second apron, he’s comfortable going there to make the most of a Nikola Jokic-led roster.

    Alignment between Michael Malone and Calvin Booth

    Booth said: “We’ve talked about this a lot upstairs. The general manager, front office job oftentimes is to make sure the long-term view is something that we’re satisfied with. And Coach Malone’s down there in the trenches trying to win every night. And a lot of times, those things are aligned, but sometimes they ebb and flow away from each other.”

    Malone said: “I’m thinking how do we win the next game? That’s my job. And Calvin as a GM is thinking about how do we win the next couple of years? That’s his job. And Josh is overseeing all that and understanding how to piece all that together.”

    Analysis: When Booth and Malone made these comments, they were answering separate questions about different topics. So this has clearly been a theme within the organization in the days following the Nuggets’ second-round exit.

    The franchise needs its general manager and head coach to be on the same page in order to maximize all 15 roster spots during the regular season. Most of what that boils down to is Booth’s aforementioned dependence on drafting and developing against Malone’s reluctance to trust young players with extended minutes. (That’s not a tendency that’s exclusive to one NBA head coach.)

    Nikola Jokic’s backup big men

    Booth said: “We’ll get a great chance to evaluate Vlatko (Cancar) this summer. … If (Slovenia is) able to get out of those qualifiers in Athens, he’ll be available to play in the Olympics, and I believe he’ll be playing in those qualifiers. … Zeke (Nnaji) is a young player. He brings energy to the game. He gives effort every night. He’s trying to grow into both sides of the ball. I think originally we drafted him to be a four. He’s ended up playing a lot of five. I don’t think it matters as much off the bench, but there are certain matchups where it becomes a little bit more problematic. But he has to get better. He has to be ready for his opportunities when they come. I think he’s gonna have a good NBA career.”

    Analysis: Cancar missed the entire 2023-24 season after tearing his left ACL during a national team game last summer. His contract has a $2.3 million team option this offseason. The Nuggets need affordable salaries like his, but it would be difficult to justify holding onto him if his health continued to be an issue. If he’s able to make his return in international competition (and maybe even play against Jokic or Jamal Murray in France), it’ll be a huge boost.

    As for Nnaji, his four-year, $32 million contract signed last October has aged controversially due to his lack of playing time. Booth seems to prefer Nnaji as a backup four instead of a backup center to Jokic, but if that’s the case, it still leaves a roster hole at the five. (Especially if DeAndre Jordan doesn’t return.) Nnaji’s contract is tradable until it isn’t. If the Nuggets become a second-apron team, they won’t be able to aggregate salaries such as his to get back a larger AAV.

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    Bennett Durando

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  • Keeler: If Nuggets coach Michael Malone, Calvin Booth aren’t on same page, they’ll burn another year of Nikola Jokic’s MVP peak

    Keeler: If Nuggets coach Michael Malone, Calvin Booth aren’t on same page, they’ll burn another year of Nikola Jokic’s MVP peak

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    Michael Malone didn’t just shorten his bench. He strangled it.

    Christian Braun played a valiant 20 minutes in that scarring, jarring Game 7, much of it spent badgering the heck outta Anthony Edwards. After that, though, the alms dwindled. Justin Holiday got nine minutes for the Nuggets; Reggie Jackson, five.

    The Timberwolves, meanwhile, received 22 minutes and 11 points from Naz Reid, a stretch-4-type post who gave Aaron Gordon and Nikola Jokic more real estate to defend. Nickeil Alexander-Walker played 17 minutes.

    Hindsight makes geniuses of us all, granted. But while Jokic huffed and Gordon puffed Sunday, Peyton Watson became more noticeable — by his absence. As Minnesota chipped away at a 20-point Nuggs lead, one of the best defenders on the roster was nowhere to be found.

    Now in a do-or-die, win-or-else Game 7, you could understand Malone’s reluctance to trust his second-year wing in a pinch. P-Swat was 0-for-7 from the floor in this series going into Sunday night. The Nuggets lined up the chess pieces as if they could afford only one true defense-first option down the stretch — and again, Braun brought plenty of juice.

    Malone said before Game 5 that this was about matchups, and that Minnesota’s defense demands shooters at every spot. That’s not in P-Swat’s arsenal right now, and Holiday brought flashes of brilliance, on the road, when Denver needed it most.

    Mind you, Watson also posted a plus-15.9 net rating over 23 minutes against the Wolves in a seeding showdown at Ball Arena last month, blocking six shots and grabbing four boards.

    Because as the eulogies are read and ballads sung and postmortems written about where a repeat run at an NBA title went sadly off the rails, P-Swat feels like something of a nexus point. Not just for what happened. But for where the Nuggets go from here. And how.

    Nuggets general manager Calvin Booth raised eyebrows this past October when he told The Ringer’s Kevin O’Connor that he “want(s) dudes that we try to develop, and it’s sustainable. If it costs us the chance to win a championship (in 2024), so be it. It’s worth the investment. It’s more about winning three out of six, three out of seven, four out of eight than it is about trying to go back-to-back.”

    Booth walked back those comments (among others) later, but it sure did very neatly explain an off-season of attrition — no more Bruce Brown or Jeff Green, thanks CBA — that came on the heels of the first title in franchise history. If ’22-23 was the masterpiece, then ’23-24 would be the experiment. Namely, can we replace Brown and Green with kids and still reach the NBA Finals?

    Well, no. Heck, no. Not this year, at any rate.

    Booth’s stated masterplan was also curious given that Malone, a stickler for eternal verities such as defense and selflessness, suffers neither fools nor rookies gladly. If Malone doesn’t trust you, you don’t play. Period. The Minnesota series, which started with the Nuggets dropping Games 1 and 2 at home, threw development out a 35-story window.

    I’m not suggesting Malone and Booth aren’t on the same page here, although it’s fair to wonder. However, I would humbly advise the powers that be to pick a lane and stick with it going forward. For the window’s sake. For Joker’s sake.

    The MVP needs help. Now. Jokic, owner of the greatest hands in modern NBA annals, snatched 15 boards in the first half. He finished with 19. Following one misfire in the third quarter, what looked like four Minnesota bodies went up for the carom while No. 15 was stranded at the top of the arc. The Joker seemed positively crestfallen.

    Since April 1 through Game 7, the Big Honey logged 732 minutes in 19 games, or 38.5 per game. From April 1 through the end of the Suns series last spring, he’d played 467 minutes in 13 appearances (35.9 per tilt).

    The Nuggs danced with history last week. And landed on the wrong side of it, face-first. Malone’s had better days. He’ll have better ones in the future. But Game 7’s epic collapse felt an awful lot like coaching not to lose. Which, more often than not, gets you beat on this stage.

    The Wolves, meanwhile, were built by Tim Connelly to dethrone the dynasty he’d started in Denver. See KAT? See Ant, waving and mugging for the cameras? They’re the bar now.

    It’s on Booth and Malone to volley Connelly’s serve. Together. Because the Joker has a ton of MVP seasons left in him. But only so many springs of what-ifs. And only so many summers of doubt.

     

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Jamal Murray’s recent shooting struggles re-emerge early on vs. Timberwolves in Game 1

    Jamal Murray’s recent shooting struggles re-emerge early on vs. Timberwolves in Game 1

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    Prior to the start of their series, Anthony Edwards declared that the Nuggets are not good without Jamal Murray.

    During the opening seconds of Saturday night’s matchup, the Minnesota star guard was determined to prove his point.

    As the shot clock trickled down on Denver’s opening possession, Murray tried to dance around Edwards but couldn’t break loose. Edwards put the clamps on Murray, preventing the Nuggets point guard from moving left before Denver was called for an offensive three second violation.

    In Denver’s 106-99 loss to the Timberwolves in Game 1 of the Western Conference semifinals, Murray went scoreless in the first half. Nuggets head coach Michael Malone revealed after the game that he didn’t practice the entire week while nursing a calf injury — shedding some light on Murray’s rusty start. But that shouldn’t dismiss Minnesota’s defensive effort on Murray that was essential in taking a 1-0 series lead.

    “(Murray) couldn’t make a shot,” Malone said.

    Edwards strapping up Murray to start the game was only the beginning. Murray missed three straight shots before getting sent to the bench as Denver faced an 18-4 deficit with 5:12 to go in the first quarter. The Timberwolves did a solid job at switching up coverages on Murray, putting different defenders on him.

    Early in the second quarter, it was Minnesota guard Michael Conley Jr.’s turn. As Murray tried to back down the veteran guard, Conley stood firm. Once Murray realized there was no room to get by or take a fadeaway jumper, he passed the ball to forward Aaron Gordon, who air balled a jumper.

    On Denver’s next possession, Murray missed a pull-up jumper. Minutes later, his floater was no good. Murray didn’t score a basket on five attempts in the first half, with three missed shots coming from around the free throw line. It was the first time in his career that Murray was held scoreless in a half of a postseason game.

    “(The Timberwolves) know what they are doing in the pick-and-roll, and they put a lot of good defenders on Jamal,” Nuggets big man Nikola Jokic said.

    In the second half, Murray finally hit his stride. He scored 17 points on 6-for-9 shooting, as he tried to keep up with the Timberwolves’ offensive surge in the third and fourth quarters. His four-point play, coming on stepback 3-pointer against Karl-Anthony Towns, gave the Nuggets an 81-80 advantage in the fourth quarter.

    Eventually, Edwards responded by scoring back-to-back baskets to regain the lead. And Murray couldn’t author the same late-game heroics that produced a pair of game-winning shots against the Lakers in the first round.

    “(Minnesota) is physical and (makes) you take tough shots,” Jokic said.

    Murray, who didn’t speak with reporters after the game, struggled for long stretches of Denver’s first-round series against L.A. He shot 40% from the floor and 29.4% from the 3-point line in five games. But when he dropped 32 points and made the game-winning shot in Game 5 against the Lakers, Murray briefly quelled concerns over his lingering calf injury.

    Unfortunately for Denver, that scoring outburst failed to carry over into the first half against Minnesota. And Murray’s 14 shot attempts were the fewest in a postseason game since 2020.

    If Denver is to dig itself out of the 1-0 hole it finds itself in after Saturday night, that will likely have to change when Game 2 arrives Monday night.

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    Ryan McFadden

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  • Christian Braun posterizes Rudy Gobert with left hand to punctuate Nuggets’ last home game before playoffs: “My best sequence in the NBA”

    Christian Braun posterizes Rudy Gobert with left hand to punctuate Nuggets’ last home game before playoffs: “My best sequence in the NBA”

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    Christian Braun didn’t have time immediately to examine every single notification on his phone, but he did notice a text from his mom before he spoke to reporters.

    What did she say?

    “Lord knows,” Braun said solemnly. “I probably can’t say it in here.”

    Reactions were pouring in after his left-handed dunk over three-time NBA Defensive Player of the Year Rudy Gobert on Wednesday night. The poster gave the Nuggets (56-24) a 12-point lead with 3:21 remaining in an eventual 116-107 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves. It upset the previously established order of the Western Conference standings with two games to go. It punctuated a 33-8 season at Ball Arena for the defending champions.

    Next time they play in this building, it’ll be Game 1 of a first-round playoff series (perhaps as the No. 1 seed, if they can hold serve this weekend). The players thanked their 41st sellout crowd in as many games by sticking around to throw souvenir basketballs into the stands. Nobody wanted to leave.

    “We’re on a high right now,” coach Michael Malone said, directing attention toward the two games Denver still needs to win to clinch home-court advantage in the Western Conference playoffs.

    Braun’s showstopper was a tribute to cathartic memories at Ball Arena — the crowd explosions that frequently defined Denver’s 16-4 run to the 2023 title — and a preview of more to come. He was pushing the tempo after a Minnesota miss, driving toward Gobert in transition from the left wing. Peyton Watson, his 2022 draft-mate, was slashing backside toward the rim. Gobert slid back to deny a lob to Watson, seemingly giving Braun a path toward the layup. Then the Minnesota center left his feet, trying to spring back at Braun.

    “I was just telling somebody in the locker room, a lot of the credit goes to P-Wat too, because I think Rudy knew that P-Wat is a high flyer running behind him,” Braun said. “So he was stunting, falling, trying to play both. Which is what you’re supposed to do, obviously, in transition. He was just caught between two guys that attack the rim pretty hard. … Most of the time, he gets those blocks.”

    Before Gobert could meet him at the rim, Braun partially switched the ball to his left hand in mid-air and navigated around the attempted block.

    “Everybody on the team knows I like to dunk with my left land,” he said. “I don’t usually try it in the fourth quarter of a big game like that, but I didn’t want to go up with a layup against the best defensive player in the league. You’ve gotta attack him strong. I don’t know. I didn’t really plan it.”

    Christian Braun (0) of the Denver Nuggets dunks on Rudy Gobert (27) of the Minnesota Timberwolves during the fourth quarter of the Nuggets’ 116-107 win at Ball Arena in Denver on Wednesday, April 10, 2024. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)

    Braun flexed. The entire bench flailed with delight. Play continued. Anthony Edwards missed a quick chance at the other end — part of a scoreless fourth quarter for him — and Michael Porter Jr. carried the rebound through traffic. There was Braun at the backdoor, cutting for a lob.

    Two dunks in 21 seconds for the Nuggets’ sixth man, and it was game over.

    “Probably my best sequence in the NBA yet,” Braun said.

    Same goes for the dunk.

    “Some of the dunks that were being performed and finished and completed — Christian Braun’s left-handed dunk, I’ll be honest, there were a few where I was telling them, ‘Hey, slow up, slow up, let’s work the clock,’” Malone said. “It was a dunk show for a bit.”

    After Braun’s consecutive slams, Watson got in on the action by swatting a jumper for his career-high sixth block of the game then chasing down Jamal Murray’s long outlet pass for a fast-break hammer. Braun, trailing the play, jumped with Watson out of sheer excitement.

    That either of them would be on the floor late in the fourth quarter to begin with was a testament to the playoff blueprint both had followed to near-perfection throughout the game. Watson’s blocks spoke for themselves. Braun’s defense was equally valuable as he challenged ball-handlers at the point of attack, contained Edwards several times and even made life difficult for Naz Reid on a post-up. Edwards had gotten Kentavious Caldwell-Pope in foul trouble during the third quarter, leaving the bench players to fend and defend for themselves.

    Even with just two combined points through three quarters, Braun and Watson earned their place in the closing lineup.

    “(Malone) could have subbed us out for the guys that normally finish the game, but he trusted me and (Watson), trusted our defense, trusted us to get it done,” Braun said. “Those plays don’t happen if we come out earlier, if we check out at our usual time.”

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    Bennett Durando

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