Nuggets use defense to take down Magic
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The Denver Nuggets knocked Dwight Howard out of his comfort zone
with tough, physical defense and by using an array of defenders
against the Orlando Magic's star center.
Howard ended up having one of his worst games of the season,
and the Nuggets fed off their defensive effort, getting 27 points
from Carmelo Anthony and 24 from Chauncey Billups in a 115-97
victory over Orlando on Wednesday night.
"Offensively and defensively combined, it might be the best
game we've played all year," Nuggets coach George Karl said.
Karl said the defensive effort against Howard was especially
important to Denver's dominating performance.
"We were trying to be physical with him," Karl said. "Turning
him over five times and not allowing him to make many shots was
huge. There's not going to be many teams that hold him under 10
points."
Howard, who had 30 points and 16 rebounds in Orlando's win at
Sacramento on Tuesday, had 13 rebounds and three blocked shots but
was held to 8 points.
"They did a good job of mixing it up and trying to have me
off-balance," said Howard, who made only one of seven shots from
the floor while being guarded at various times by Nene, Chris
Andersen and Kenyon Martin.
"They swarmed him and their big guys are very athletic," said
Matt Barnes, who had a season-high 28 points to lead Orlando. "He's
Superman, but when you swarm him with that many guys, it's hard to
get a shot off.
Said Anthony: "Our big guys did a great job tonight making it
tough for him. Each guy we put on him had something different for
him."
J.J. Redick, with 13 points, and Mickael Pietrus, with 12,
were the only other Magic players in double figures.
It was Denver's fourth win in five games, including victories
over fellow division leaders Orlando and Cleveland.
"We've been pretty good against good teams. Our problem has
been that switch of intensity" when facing lower-level teams, Karl
said. "We have to stop messing around with our intensity and play
the same way every night."
The Magic were playing without their leading scorer, Vince
Carter (shoulder), for a third straight game and the second game of
a back to back after winning at Sacramento the night before.
The rugged schedule may have caught up to the short-handed
Magic in the third quarter, when the Nuggets outscored them 35-19,
going from a three-point deficit at halftime to an 85-72 lead
heading into the fourth.
"We clearly got totally dominated in the second half," said
Orlando coach Stan Van Gundy. "I'm very disappointed."
Denver began the decisive quarter with a 12-0 run, finishing
the flurry with consecutive 3-pointers by Anthony and Arron
Afflalo. Rashard Lewis' 8-foot running jumper broke up the string,
but Afflalo, who had 13 points, answered right away with another
3-pointer.
With 4:24 left in the period, Redick connected on a 3-pointer
that cut Orlando's deficit to 72-63. From there, though, Denver
extended the lead, scoring nine of the next 11 points and moving
ahead by 16 when Billups connected from 3-point range with 1:57
left in the period.
By the time J.R. Smith broke free for a fastbreak dunk midway
through the fourth quarter, putting Denver up 101-76, the Nuggets
were coasting.
It didn't begin that way for Denver.
Anthony sparred verbally with officials and was hit with a
technical after they did not call a foul when Anthony felt he was
roughed up trying to drive through a double team for a layup in the
waning seconds of the second quarter.
The Nuggets got the ball to Anthony for a 3-point try from
the top of the key at the buzzer but it bounced off the rim and
Denver trailed at the half 53-50.
Notes: Nuggets G Ty Lawson missed his fourth game
in a row with a left ankle sprain. ... Orlando fell to 9-12 in 21
games in Denver.
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