It was past midnight on the East Coast when Nuggets got a fresh start. They didn’t take advantage of it.
The Nuggets came back from down 22 in the second half to force overtime before falling 117-107 to the Suns at Ball Arena, snapping a six-game win streak. Kevin Durant ended his drought with a scoring barrage in the extra frame, and the Nuggets reverted to their second quarter form, turning the ball over twice to start overtime and never recovering.
Denver (42-20) trailed 99-90 with 3:54 left after Bradley Beal made an open three around a ball screen. Then the Nuggets went on a 12-0 run capped by Kentavious Caldwell-Pope’s transition 3-pointer for a late 100-99 lead. Durant tied it with a step-back three with 26 seconds left, and Nikola Jokic couldn’t make a contested baseline runner as time expired.
Jokic’s run of blistering stat lines since the All-Star break was put on pause by old friend Jusuf Nurkic and company. The Suns limited Jokic to 25 points on 8-of-18 shooting with seven turnovers. On the other end, Durant couldn’t get his shot to fall most of the night. It took 34 attempts to reach 35 points.
Offense was a struggle all game, but it completely sputtered for a six-minute stretch in the second quarter without a field goal. Phoenix went on a 19-1 run to blow open a game that had been evenly contested to that point. The Nuggets were outscored 37-18 in the quarter.
Murray and Denver’s defense allowed Grayson Allen, the NBA leader in 3-point percentage this season, to make his first eight 3s in a stunning heat-check performance that outdid Michael Porter Jr.’s 100% game Saturday in Los Angeles. The first four of Allen’s makes were in the first quarter as he was left with clean looks far too often. He established a rhythm.
By the second half, the Suns were determined to keep him hot in order to stifle any momentum before Denver could seize it, even as the Nuggets returned from their locker room expecting to summon more of their recent comeback magic. After the break, Allen scored three more points on the opening possession. He made another, and the lead grew to 22.
However, the Nuggets started to cut down the Suns’ advantage. Their defense held up even through another turnover-prone series of pointless possessions, going more than two minutes without a field goal. Their best offense was getting Nurkic out of the game by drawing his fourth and fifth fouls. By the end of the third, there had been no significant runs and it was down to nine.
The start of the fourth was more of the same. Denver’s second unit couldn’t score. But it could defend. Peyton Watson blocked a shot on consecutive possessions, including an Allen dunk attempt. The swats were sandwiched by a poorly executed fast break in which Murray passed it to nobody, out of bounds for an unforced turnover. After four minutes of back-and-forth, Porter finally drained a catch-and-shoot three from Watson, and it was 94-88. Phoenix needed a timeout.
What followed as the starters checked back in was another chaotic barrage of wide-open missed 3s — by both teams.