Lowe: Twenty-three reasons to enjoy the wild Blazers-Nuggets series

6:03 am | May 7, 2019 | Go to Source | Author:


Twenty-three thoughts on the wildest series of a wild second round:

It is easy to dismiss this as the consolation series: Win, and Golden State or Houston tramples you. Yeah, the winner here will be a huge underdog in the Western Conference finals. The Portland Trail Blazers and Denver Nuggets have to be exhausted. Damian Lillard has looked fried for portions of this series, including for the last hour or so (!) of the epic four-overtime Game 3 of this conference semifinal. He spent extended stretches acting as decoy, loitering on the wing as CJ McCollum ran the show.

A willingness to share the stage is part of what makes Lillard a beloved, galvanizing leader. But this looked different. Lillard was passive — standing instead of cutting or screening. Decoy mode lasted longer than it should have.

The Nuggets are also making Lillard work on defense, often trying to get him switched onto Jamal Murray.

• Denver’s resiliency is remarkable. Snagging two borderline must-win Game 4s on the road requires guts and confidence you don’t typically find in teams this green. Portland and San Antonio both went 32-9 at home, tied for the league’s third-best mark, behind only Milwaukee and the Nuggets themselves. Beating both on the road, down 2-1, is a major accomplishment.

From the last week of March to Sunday, the Nuggets played 20 games in 39 days. Denver is tough.

• On the opposite side of the bracket, Kevin Durant is carrying a Golden State Warriors team that suddenly looks thin and a little wobbly. Durant might not be on that team next season. They have no cap space to replace him and almost no bench. Draymond Green is 29 and had to go on a quick-fix diet — planned, but still — to get in playoff shape. Stephen Curry is 31 and dealing with injuries and foul trouble. Those are annual postseason occurrences now.

Curry has another gear in reserve if Durant leaves. Golden State won a championship and then 73 games that way. Curry’s alleged postseason struggles are a little overblown. His numbers are very good, and his impact on Golden State’s offense always extends beyond those numbers.

But it’s hard to watch these Warriors and conclude that the theoretical post-Durant version would be anything like a lock to enter next season as favorites in the West. That is the real backdrop to this Denver-Portland war of attrition, even if it doesn’t seem that way.

• The Blazers and Nuggets are almost mirror images of each other. They lean slightly offense-first, and the series has leaned that way too. The combined score after four games is Denver by two. They tied for the league lead in offensive rebounding rate, and they rank first and second in this round. They both take care of the ball and force few turnovers, and this series has been predictably clean. They prefer a slow pace.

They build their offenses around deadly two-man games and run lots of the same actions. The series can feel like an endless series of pick-and-rolls and handoffs on one side of the floor — with no other players on that same side.

For Portland, the danger is in its guards jacking open 3-pointers behind those picks. For Denver, it is Nikola Jokic — perhaps the most unpredictable and broadly skilled screen-setter in the league — taking whatever the defense gives him, and even some things it doesn’t realize it is giving.

Both defenses are attacking those pick-and-rolls aggressively, though Denver has its big men — mostly Jokic — scampering further to swarm Lillard and McCollum above the 3-point arc: