Enthralling series awaits as Nuggets seek revenge on Lakers

By Christian Montegan / Roar Pro

Game 1 of the Western Conference Finals gets underway on Wednesday (AEST) in Colorado as the Denver Nuggets look to topple the resurgent Los Angeles Lakers.

Throughout the season, time and time again the Nuggets have been forced to prove their doubters wrong by being able to stay consistent for a full 82-game campaign to claim the No.1 seed in the West.

It’s been anything but consistent for the Lakers as they abysmally started the season, holding a 2-10 record after 12 games and leaving many involved in the organisation to do some soul-searching.

That led to rapid changes during the trade period as LA boss Rob Pelinka deserves huge praise for the pieces he was able to add. They quickly realised that the Russell Westbrook experiment wasn’t working, trading him to the Clippers and acquiring the likes of D’Angelo Russell, Jarred Vanderbilt, Malik Beasley and Mo Bamba to offer depth on both sides of the floor and assist LeBron James and Anthony Davis.

Both the Nuggets and the Lakers are extremely well coached by Michael Malone and Darvin Ham respectively, adjusting their tactics accordingly to pull off some upsets in these playoffs.

The Warriors had no answers to LeBron and co. as they were beaten in size and in the paint with their inefficient shooting not helping their cause. You could argue that the Nuggets overcame the Suns in the same way, while not underestimating their home record in the high altitude, producing a 34-7 home record in the regular season and taking that form into the playoffs, yet to lose in any of their six home games.

(Photo by Justin Tafoya/Getty Images)

Back in 2020 during the crux of the pandemic, these two teams faced off in the conference finals taking place in the bubble, taking away home-court advantage for both. 

That series ended in a 4-1 triumph for the Lakers where it could be argued that the high altitude of Colorado wouldn’t have been enough as it was simply a mismatch. 



Despite coach Malone having Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray on the roster, they lacked those pieces around them to dominate, especially in the paint where they did not have a recognised rim protector. 



Fast forward to now, the Nuggets haven’t specifically traded in that area, but defensively they are a much more compact unit which should force the Lakers to shoot more perimeter shots and ask the question of the likes of Austin Reaves to answer.

Jokic and AD will be the most talked about match-up in the coming days, and with good reason. It will be the best offensive player battling it out against the best defensive player in the playoffs.

More broadly, it will be a match between the best offence and the best defence. The Lakers already posed the same defensive threat three years ago in the conference finals, but the Nuggets have strengthened around Murray to be a more complete shooting team.

Offensively this season, Denver is averaging 50.4 per cent from the field and 37.9 per cent in three-point attempts, while the Lakers have recorded 48.2 per cent and 34.6 per cent respectively.

Without a doubt, as much as the Lakers benefited from a couple of poor shooting nights from the Warriors overall, they were helped more so by Steve Kerr’s non-shooters in the form of Draymond Green and Kevin Looney. You would expect the Nuggets to punish the Lakers more efficiently both in the paint and behind the arc.

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The spotlight will firmly be on the stars such as LeBron, AD, Jokic, and Murray, but this series could come down to which team can squeeze the most productivity out of their role players. For the Lakers, Lonnie Walker IV, Rui Hachimura, and Reaves have come up clutch in big-time moments, as the Nuggets have experienced the same results from Bruce Brown and Michael Porter Jr.

In Games 3 and 4 in Arizona, the Nuggets’ defence was switched off in allowing Durant and Booker to combine for 86 and 72 points, simply having no answers. That can’t afford that to happen against the Lakers and coach Malone needs to prepare accordingly.

Denver should have the slight advantage with the home advantage, but this is an incredibly tight series to call where it could even be decided in a sudden-death Game 7.

Expect an epic tussle.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2023-05-16T04:30:25+00:00

Christian Montegan

Roar Pro


I think unlike 2020, Denver are in a position where they don’t need to double-team either LeBron or AD. Defensively, the rotation on the floor during play has been great to watch and that’s all down to coach Malone

2023-05-16T04:25:12+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Agreed. That was a high quality series Suns v Nuggets. I thought the same.

2023-05-16T04:24:38+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


The guys at work are backing the Lakers with their heart, and reckon the NBA wants a Lakers v Celtics final. Denver have been very impressive. Phoenix threw everything at them, bt they withstood. Jokic just does what he has to. AD is about as well placed as anyone to defend Jokic. I wonder if Jokic or Gordon will be the primary defender on AD. And Gordon or Porter Jnr has to mark Le Bron. But I think Denver keep home court advantage and win, partly because they have the best pick and roll duo in the league.

2023-05-16T01:15:30+00:00

King of Kings

Roar Rookie


For me watching the Nuggets vs Suns was more impressive and dominant victory than the Lakers over Warriors. There has been talk on sites such as this one questioning the Nuggets defense and 4th quarter abilities, yet they seem to me to work as well as any team defensively and stats show they are the most dominant 4th quarter team. Nugs in 6

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