Wolves rally from down 20, oust
Nuggets in Game 7
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[May 20, 2024]
Mike Conley looked at Minnesota's 20-point deficit early in
the third quarter with one thought.
"Man, not again."
Conley entered Sunday night 0-4 in Game 7s, but the visiting
Timberwolves rescued their veteran guard from a fifth loss with a
dominating second half, wiping out that 20-point hole to beat the
Denver Nuggets 98-90 in Game 7 of a Western Conference semifinal
series.
Karl-Anthony Towns had 23 points and 12 rebounds and Jaden McDaniels
also scored 23 for Minnesota.
The Timberwolves are headed to the Western Conference finals for the
first time in 20 years after winning in Denver for the third time in
the series. Minnesota won Game 7 against the Sacramento Kings in a
second-round playoff series in 2004 to reach the conference finals.
The Timberwolves, the No. 3 seed, face the fifth-seeded Dallas
Mavericks in Game 1 on Wednesday night in Minneapolis.
"I don't think they understand what they just did, getting to the
Western Conference finals," Conley, whose only other trip to the
third round came with Memphis in 2013, said about his young
teammates. "It's a great opportunity; don't take it for granted."
Anthony Edwards was 6-for-24 shooting but finished with 16 points,
eight rebounds and seven assists to end the Nuggets' bid for a
second straight NBA title. Rudy Gobert was big down the stretch,
scoring eight of his 13 points in the fourth quarter, including a
12-foot turnaround jumper to beat the shot clock and put Minnesota
ahead by four with 7:43 left.
"When Rudy hit the turnaround, I was like, 'Yeah, we probably got
it,'" Edwards said.
Nikola Jokic had 34 points, 19 rebounds and seven assists, and Jamal
Murray scored 35 points for Denver. It is the second time in six
seasons the Nuggets have lost a Game 7 at home.
"Season's over, that's what's hard," Denver coach Michael Malone
said. "(Heck) being up 20; season's over."
The Nuggets struggled against a tough Timberwolves defense all
series, but none more costly than the final 22 minutes when they
scored just 32 points.
They are the fifth straight reigning champion to exit the playoffs
before the conference finals.
"It's hard because the teams are hungrier, better talented than last
year probably," Jokic said. "Everybody got better, everybody wants
to beat us. That's my thought process."
[to top of second column] |
May 19, 2024; Denver, Colorado, USA; Minnesota Timberwolves forward
Jaden McDaniels (3) line up a three point shot in the first quarter
against the Denver Nuggets in game seven of the second round for the
2024 NBA playoffs at Ball Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-USA
TODAY Sports
Minnesota took its first lead since the first
quarter on Gobert's floater 12 seconds into the fourth, and it later
found itself up 77-72 after two Gobert free throws with 8:23 to go.
Jokic missed his first seven 3-pointers of the game but hit two
shots from deep to keep the Nuggets close, pulling them within 81-78
with 6:46 remaining.
Naz Reid, who scored 11 points, hit two free throws, blocked Jokic's
fadeaway and had a putback dunk later in the fourth. Edwards drained
a 3-pointer off a Murray turnover to put the Timberwolves ahead
92-82 with 3:07 left.
Denver closed within 93-88 with 1:02 left, but Towns' dunk sealed
Minnesota's trip to the conference finals.
"I've been here nine years. I've talked about wanting to win and do
something special here with this organization," Towns said. "I've
seen everything and seen it all and being here this year, with these
guys, this team, after all that, it's super special."
The Nuggets staged a 16-0 run bridging the first and second quarters
and led 53-38 at halftime. They pushed their advantage to 58-38 with
10:50 remaining in the third quarter, and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope
missed a 17-footer that would have made it a 22-point lead.
The Timberwolves came storming back, using a 19-3 run to get within
61-57 with 3:05 left in the period. Towns then hit a pair of free
throws to get Minnesota within two, and Edwards drained a 3-pointer
with 1.6 seconds to go to make it 67-66 Denver heading into the
fourth.
"It showed us who we are," Edwards said. "The coaches believed in
us, even in the third when we were down 20. Once we really lock in
on the defensive end, we're a helluva team to beat."
--Field Level Media
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