Skip to main content

3-0, baby!

Carmelo Anthony and the Denver Nuggets continued their torrid start to the season tonight with a 133-123 win at home over the Memphis Grizzlies.

Anthony scored 42 points in an effort that gave flashbacks to last year’s playoffs. He hit 15 of 26 field goals, including a three, and converted eleven of his twelve attempts from the stripe. Totally effective and, as far as I could tell after missing most of the first half, totally in the flow of the game. 26 shots isn’t bad at all, especially when Anthony’s that on. Carmelo’s point totals just keep going up, too: 30 in the opener against Utah and 41 the next night in Portland before his answer to life tonight.

The Nuggets, of course, are 3-0 and looking great. Tonight was a relatively safe win; even though Memphis was competitive in the first half, I saw the scores were in the 60s and knew the pace favored Denver. The opening night win over the Jazz was also lovely, especially when Carmelo missed a three, then tipped away a weak outlet lob and slammed it for a three-point play. But the whole team is playing well. Chauncey Billups had 22 points and 12 assists tonight, and his backup, Ty Lawson, is awesome running the break. (Lawson pulled up for a fifteen-or-so footer on a 3-on-2 against Utah that looked out of place, except he drilled it. Sounds silly but it gave me even more confidence in Lawson; what rookie risks looking foolish on a breakaway unless he KNOWS it’s going in? And great point guards just know sometimes.) Chris Andersen had another awesome Birdman moment where he followed up an Arron Afflalo miss with a tip-in, even though he’d fallen down at the top of the key seconds before. (Sorry that the ad is twice as long as the highlight.) Can’t feel good to have basketball as your profession and still get outworked on plays like that whenever you face Andersen.

The Nuggets are going on a six-game road trip, so they’ll be tested soon enough, not that it means a ton either way this early in the year. Still, it’s exhilarating that the team has continued its standout play from last season.

Comments

John said…
The Nuggets are looking very impressive this season, and appear to have retooled well. I still don't get how Ty Lawson - a solid college point guard at a top program who was the X-factor in a national championship run - falls to #18 int he draft. But all the better for us.
blaine said…
I agree with John on his Ty Lawson point. I thought he was the best point guard in the draft and I couldn't believe that the Nuggets were able to get him!

Melo has looked amazing so far. I wasn't able to watch the first game against the Jazz, but I did watch the subsequent two games and Melo looked unstoppable. What's most encouraging about Melo so far this season is that he's letting his shots come to him and isn't forcing the issue. If he is able to keep this up all season the Nuggets should be a very good play off team.

One thing I noticed in the last two games is that the Nuggets' interior D is much worse than last year. I know the season is young, but that was a problem for them last year too, so it could become a huge weakness for them as the season continues. Birdman is great at help D, but gets pushed around too much covering one-on-one.
Mike said…
The best part about Lawson is he really is a pure point guard. In the early part of the decade passing points appeared to go extinct; while this is no longer the case, it's awesome to have a backup who can keep pushing the tempo. We missed that in the playoffs last year, though J.R. kept the engine running in other ways.

You're right about the D, Blaine. The Altitude men also made note of our poor transition defense. Because we've learned to run the break so well, I think the offense will be fine, and the defense will really determine how far we can go. Fortunately we will never ask Bird to take out Shaq in a big game. K-Mart on the other hand...man, I just don't feel comfortable having that guy out there.
Anonymous said…
I think the Nuggets are on track to beat the Bronco's starting record at this point. And after 5 games Ty only has one turnover! I'm going to enjoy this year.

LT

Wana catch a game this season?
Mike said…
Thought you'd never ask. Absolutely.

Popular posts from this blog

National Basketball Association Finals Preview Blowout!

If you're looking for a stereotypical matchup breakdown for the NBA Finals between the Detroit Pistons and San Antonio Spurs, (Game One is tonight, 7 o'clock Mountain, ABC), you've come to the right place! Center: Ben Wallace, Pistons vs. Nazr Mohammed, Spurs Wallace might be the league's top defender, winning his third Defensive Player of the Year award this season and leading the Pistons in both blocks and steals. It's said he's an improved offensive player, but he still scores primarily on tips and wide-open dunks. "Big Ben" is horrific from the foul line, connecting on 42.8% this season. Also, his brother has taken on NBA players and can probably beat up Mohammed's brother. Mohammed has been a good fit for the Spurs since being traded from the Knicks. It appears Isiah Thomas may have finally made his first mistake as general manager in New York, as Mohammed has started every Spurs' playoff game, averaging 8.1 points to go with a solid seven...

Forget Brett Favre (*)

From my 2007 NFL season preview : Favre's not as good as he once was-who is?-but he's not the disgrace people make him out to be...I don't think he "deserves" to go out with another Lombardi or anything, but I hope he gets to leave on a good note. Oops. What a mistake. And I even knew this day was coming. Let me say that Brett Favre deserves to go down in history with whatever records he earns, so long as a giant asterisk is placed by each and every one of them. As you may have heard, Sunday's victory over the New York Giants made Favre the winningest quarterback in NFL history. I don't know what ESPN did on TV, but this record practically went unnoticed in the places I follow sports. But it's of crucial importance to me. Why? "Maybe someday down the road it will mean a lot," a typically humble Favre said after the 149th win of his career, moving past Hall of Famer [and indisputable greatest quarterback of all time] John Elway. Humble...

Did CU ever win the Pac-12?

In 2010, I bet a college buddy of mine (who longtime readers may remember as the only other contributor to Hole Punch Sports) that CU’s football team would not win the Pac-12 in the next 15 years. Guess what? It’s time for me to gloat, because I was right. Why we were doomed Back in the day, a lot of people made the argument that CU should join the Pac-12 because we’d get so much more TV money there. Of course, given college football is the answer to the question, “what if you had a sport where multiple teams were like the Yankees, and you created a whole universe of haves and have-nots?”, then yeah, you want to be aligned with some of the haves. But the question in my mind wasn’t, “will CU be better off with more money?” That’s an obvious yes. The question I asked was, will CU be any more competitive in their own conference if they’re competing against teams who are also getting more money? I couldn’t see why they would be. The mathematical angle Legend has it that Cowboys runn...