Soviet Zionology in today’s universities

https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/arts-letters/articles/mahmoud-abbas-soviet-dissertation

Earth Spirit Sandals

LeBron James and the Lakers are coming apart at the seams

LeBron James and the Lakers are coming apart at the seams

Analysis by Ben GolliverStaff writer

April 26, 2024 at 7:02 a.m. EDT

Listen

6 min

Share

Comment66Add to your saved stories

Save

LOS ANGELES — Death came for the Los Angeles Lakers by 1,000 off-ball cuts and what seemed like 100 Aaron Gordon dunks during another effortless Denver Nuggets onslaught.

Good basketball teams can turn a 10-point deficit into a 10-point lead within minutes; great ones can do it without breaking a sweat or pausing to celebrate. At full strength, Nikola Jokic and the defending champion Nuggets are great. So great they had Lakers star LeBron James turning his palms to the sky in a futile search for answers Thursday night during the decisive third quarter. So great they had rappers Snoop Dogg and Lil Wayne heading for the exits by the middle of the fourth.

After sweeping the Lakers out of last year’s Western Conference finals and sweeping all three meetings during the regular season, the Nuggets claimed a 112-105 Game 3 victory at Crypto.com Arena, setting up the possibility of completing another sweep Saturday in Game 4. With brooms looming like guillotine blades, James and the Lakers looked and sounded like a broken team, not just a beaten one.

In pushing the Lakers to the brink of elimination, the Nuggets carved them open and split them right down the belly. On one side: James and Anthony Davis, the only two remaining members of the 2020 title team and the only two consistent producers in this series. On the other: everyone else in a rotation that has fallen to pieces under the playoff microscope.

“You’re supposed to have anxiety and feel the pressure,” James said when asked whether the Lakers were buckling under the stress of trying to keep up with a favored opponent. “That’s what the postseason is about. I don’t know how to answer that question. I don’t know. You’d have to ask the individuals that question to see how they feel. It’s hard for me to be, like, ‘This is what I think a guy feels.’ I can’t do that. I’m not a mind reader. I don’t know. This is the postseason. Me and [Davis] have been playing together six years. We’ve been to the mountaintop. We’ve been close to the mountaintop. We’ve played a lot of games. We know what it takes to win a championship and how damn near perfect you need to be.”

If the Nuggets prevail, James and the Lakers will have failed to advance out of the first round for the third time in the four years since their most recent championship. The 39-year-old star sounded perplexed at the end of another long night, incapable of understanding why the big-game success that was once commonplace for his teams has been so far out of reach.

Advertisement

“That’s not something that’s so crazy to obtain,” James muttered. “I’ve been a part of it four times. … It’s just basketball, at the end of the day. It’s just basketball.”

But playoff basketball has become a slog for the vast majority of a Lakers team that was kept together last summer with the goal of building on its 2023 postseason success. Point guard D’Angelo Russell, who struggled in last year’s West finals, missed all seven of his shots Thursday and had to be benched in key moments. Forward Rui Hachimura was invisible on offense and a nonfactor on the boards, where Denver scored a 51-38 advantage. The Lakers’ thin bench registered no signs of life until garbage time, unable to exploit the Nuggets’ lack of depth. Through three quarters, Los Angeles had made just one of its 14 three-point attempts, registering a 7.1 three-point percentage that might have been mistaken for a mortgage interest rate.

James, who had 26 points, nine assists and six rebounds, appeared exasperated by his team’s lack of defensive connectivity during a third quarter in which the Lakers were outscored 34-22. It wasn’t just a matter of Gordon sneaking to the rim for three baskets in one minute shortly after halftime; it was the series-long accumulation of Denver’s chess master tactics.

When Jokic (24 points, 15 rebounds, nine assists) isn’t plowing through Davis and vacuuming up rebounds, Jamal Murray (22 points, nine assists) is dancing through traffic and drilling a game-winner. When Gordon (29 points, 15 rebounds) isn’t living at the rim, Michael Porter Jr. (20 points, 10 rebounds) is swishing fadeaways with a hand in his face.

“This team is well prepared and well coached,” James said of the Nuggets. “They do not have a weakness offensively. … We expend so much energy in the first half building leads with defensive intensity. We come out in the third quarter with not much energy or lose track of the attention to detail we had in the first half. Give credit where credit is due: Those guys make tough shot after tough shot after tough shot.”

Advertisement

Whenever the Nuggets have turned it up, they have been in too many places at once for the Lakers to handle. The pattern, dating back to last May, is clear as day: The Nuggets take off after halftime, and the Lakers get left in the dust. Through three games, Denver has outscored Los Angeles in the third quarter by a combined 31 points.

“[Denver has] a championship confidence,” Lakers Coach Darvin Ham said. “That starting lineup has been together a long time and has been through some wars together. Their net rating is off the charts. They have playmakers. … They do the little things: crash the offensive glass and screen hard. When you have that type of chemistry, it’s tough. They don’t settle. They impose their will on the game on both sides of the ball.”

Share this articleShare

The Nuggets are in firm control of this series for a litany of reasons: Jokic has outplayed Davis; Murray outdueled James in a thrilling Game 2; Denver has capitalized on its excellent home-court advantage; and, yes, the Lakers’ supporting cast has crumbled.

The key difference, though, has been unity. Denver has dug out of deep holes as a team, while Los Angeles has squandered advantages and responded to adversity by splintering into a collection of — to repurpose James’s term — individuals.

“There’s unbelievable confidence,” Nuggets Coach Michael Malone said. “The scary thing for me is I think we can play so much better.”

Share66Comments

NBA

HAND CURATED

View 3 more stories

Subscribe to comment and get the full experience. Choose your plan →

MOST READ SPORTS

Advertisement

TOP STORIES

D.C. region

Local news, weather, sports, events, restaurants and more

José Andrés eulogizes World Central Kitchen workers killed in Gaza

Efforts to secure hostage deal appear to resume as Rafah invasion looms

Commanders, finally, to retire Hall of Famer Darrell Green’s No. 28

back

Try a different topic

Sign in or create a free account to save your preferences

Advertisement

Advertisement

CompanyAbout The PostNewsroom Policies & StandardsDiversity & InclusionCareersMedia & Community RelationsWP Creative GroupAccessibility StatementSitemap

Get The PostBecome a SubscriberGift SubscriptionsMobile & AppsNewsletters & AlertsWashington Post LiveReprints & PermissionsPost StoreBooks & E-BooksPrint Archives (Subscribers Only)Today’s PaperPublic NoticesCoupons

Contact UsContact the NewsroomContact Customer CareContact the Opinions TeamAdvertiseLicensing & SyndicationRequest a CorrectionSend a News TipReport a Vulnerability

Terms of UseDigital Products Terms of SalePrint Products Terms of SaleTerms of ServicePrivacy PolicyCookie SettingsSubmissions & Discussion PolicyRSS Terms of ServiceAd ChoicesYour Privacy Choices

washingtonpost.com © 1996-2024 The Washington Post

Top post-season Denver sports moments from the past 3 decades.

4.23.24. Last night we had one of those classic Denver sports moments! Jamal Murray’s buzzer beater to complete the 20 point comeback win vs. the LA Lakers. It’s going to be another of those moments that as a Denver sports fan that I’ll never forget, nothing like hearing the fans going “bananas” (to quote Drew Goodman from the Rocktober days) – and being a part of it. I was there for the two Broncos ones! Of course, I’ll always remember “The Drive” as well and stories that my dad and sister told me about going to the old Stapleton airport to greet the Broncos as they returned home from Cleveland (and running into the KIMN Chicken mascot while there, if you were in Denver in the 80’s, you’ll know what I’m talking about) but these are moments in sports that happened here in Denver.

2006 Divisional Playoff Game Broncos vs. Patriots – Champ Bailey 99 yard interception

2007 Rockies vs Padres Play-In Game – Holliday slides, Rockies win in Rocktober!

2011 Wildcard Game Broncos vs. Steelers – Tebow to DT for the game-winning touchdown

2024 NBA Playoffs First Round Game 2 Nuggets vs. Lakers – Murray’s Buzzer Beater to win the game

Last minutes of Nuggets Lakers game

https://youtu.be/6kICwUPaqp8?si=Qm6_9UsSpMt9vmYx

EVERY ANGLE OF JAMAL MURRAY’S INSANE GAME-WINNING BUZZER-BEATER👀 | April 22, 2024 – YouTube

Jamal Murray hits Game 2 winner for the Nuggets

via @ESPN App http://espn.com/app

What It’s Like to Play Putin in ‘Patriots’

Stevie Ray Vaughan, Guitar Great, Dies in Copter Crash : Music: The Grammy-winning performer had just completed a Wisconsin concert. Four others are killed. – Los Angeles Times

https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-08-28-mn-120-story.html

Kenough

Irony in Barbie

https://archive.ph/VshvU

Great piece in the Atlantic.

Previous Older Entries

The Love Pirate

Movie Reviews and Analysis

Humanizing The Vacuum

Alfred Soto's blog about arts and politics.

nitrateglow

I like to viddy the old films now and then

Silent-ology

Uncovering the silent era

Phantom of the Backlots

Meet the real phantom

Hometowns to Hollywood

Exploring the hometowns and legacies of Hollywood's Golden Age stars.

Heavy Topspin

The Tennis Abstract blog

STOP THESE THINGS

The truth about the great wind power fraud - we're not here to debate the wind industry, we're here to destroy it.

The Russian Reader

News and views of (other) Russia(n)(s)

uniqueplacestosee.com

Skip the tourist traps, travel like a local.

D.R.A.S.T.I.C. Research

D.R.A.S.T.I.C. Research

PETER WYNGARDE: The Official Website

PART OF THE OFFICIAL PETER WYNGARDE APPRECIATION SOCIETY

Moniqueclassique's Blog

This website is a tribute that I dedicate, with great love, to the majestic world of classic movies.

John van Dreelen

The John van Dreelen Fan Website

Vivien Leigh - the greatest actress in the world

A fan tribute to the Queen of the Seventh Art

The Lana Turner Blog

A tribute to a true Hollywood legend

My Favorite Westerns

A Celebration of Western Movies... Pardner!

Fire Breathing Dimetrodon Time

Watching classic adventure TV with my kid

Vintage Stardust

Classic Cinema's Art Direction, Culture, and Inspiration

John McEnery Fan Blog

A tribute to the actor John McEnery

Harlow Heaven

Commemorating Jean Harlow, plus assorted reflections by Sophia D'Aurelio

Lizabeth Scott

film noir queen

Fortune Finds

Finding all the things you didnt know you needed

the Carbon Freeze

Eclectic Essays & Art

Northing & Easting

Making sure things are where they really are

Mike's Take On the Movies

Rediscovering Cinema's Past

Riding the High Country

Reviews and ramblings

That's what I'd like to know

some things to wonder about

Audie Murphy Appreciation

a fan appreciation of Audie Murphy's life and films

Cinema Sojourns

Time Tripping Through the World of Film

cracked rear viewer

Fresh takes on retro pop culture

Once upon a screen...

...a classic film and TV blog

(Travalanche)

The observations of actor, author, comedian, critic, director, humorist, journalist, m.c., performance artist, playwright, producer, publicist, public speaker, songwriter, and variety booker Trav S.D.

Joseph Cotten & Teresa Wright Appreciation

Blog appreciating the films of Joseph Cotten and Teresa Wright including Shadow of a Doubt

50 Westerns From The 50s.

Riding the long, dusty trail through 50s Westerns.

Dan Duryea Appreciation

Appreciation of the actor Dan Duryea

Variety

Entertainment news, film reviews, awards, film festivals, box office, entertainment industry conferences

Ian Bannen Tribute Page

A tribute to the Scottish actor

The Tinseltown Twins

Two Film Buffs Are Better Than One

Only a Bloody Blog

Blogging my way through the career of Michael Caine one film at a time

movingtheriver.com

Matt Phillips' website about 1980s music, movies and more

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started