NBA Playoffs: Denver Nuggets even series with Minnesota Timberwolves 2-2

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Nikola Jokic burned a double-team by finding Kentavious Caldwell-Pope open for a 3 then notched a steal and hit a streaking Michael Porter Jr. for a fast-break dunk before Jamal Murray collected another steal and swished a 55-foot heave at the buzzer.

In the span of 20 dizzying seconds, the Denver Nuggets scored eight points to sprint into halftime of Sunday’s Game 4 up by 15. The flurry left the Minnesota Timberwolves and the Target Center crowd stunned while propelling Denver to a 115-107 win to even the Western Conference semifinal series at 2-2.

The Nuggets left Denver on Thursday down 2-0 and feeling as if many had counted them out against the upstart Wolves. The Nuggets return to Colorado having reclaimed their championship swagger and with home-court advantage back in their pocket.

Asked what his team found in Minneapolis during these two road games, Denver coach Michael Malone quoted former Houston Rockets coach Rudy Tomjanovich.

Jamal Murray Photo Courtesy: AP

“What I found is Rudy T is right, man,” Malone said. “‘Never underestimate the heart of a champion.’ They were quick to write us off, but these guys, we won a championship a year ago. We went into Miami [in the NBA Finals], won two games in a row. This team has been tested time and time again, and we found a way to solve whatever’s been thrown at us.

Jamal Murray Photo Courtesy: AP

“This series is a long way from being over. We’re not celebrating. It’s 2-2. … But what I found about our group is that they do believe in themselves. And more importantly, they believe in the man next to them. We have a group that is acting as you would hope a championship team would act.”

Anthony Edwards Photo Courtesy: AP

Unlike their debacle in Game 2, when Minnesota’s defense suffocated them 106-80, the Nuggets didn’t just have an answer for everything the opponents threw at them Sunday — they took it to the Wolves.

Despite 44 points from Minnesota’s Anthony Edwards, the Nuggets held Karl-Anthony Towns to 5-for-18 shooting. Aaron Gordon, who led Denver with his versatility, switched between guarding the 7-foot Towns and the 6-foot-4 Edwards.

Anthony Edwards Photo Courtesy: AP

Gordon knew the Nuggets would respond the way they did this weekend.

“I love when people count us out,” Gordon said. “A lot of these guys have been counted out before in their career. They’ve been the underdogs or the dark horse in their career before. They’ve operated from that space before, having their backs against the wall, of being counted out.

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