Saturday, May 9, 2009
Defense Rules For Denver
As a native of Denver and someone who grew up just outside the Mile High City, I'm really stoked about the Denver Nuggets right now. The team's current success takes me back to the glory years of the late 70s and 80s, when D.T., "The Horse," Kiki, Fat and Alex dominated the headlines.
Given the team's big year, I thought a comparison to perhaps the best Nuggets team from that era - or any era in franchise history - was in order. I'm talking about Doug Moe's 1987-88 team (the pic shows dapper Doug on the cover of Denver's slick '88-89 press guide). Now, you can draw a number of parallels between the 2008-09 Denver Nuggets and their 1987-88 forebears, but two noticeable similarities are that each team posted 54 wins (the club's highest peak since it joined the NBA in 1976-77) and squared off against the Dallas Mavericks in the second round of the playoffs.
As for the biggest difference between the teams - aside from fashion (I've got to say that as a teenager, I loved wearing my white hoodie with the Nuggets' rainbow-colored skyscraper design) - it's got to be their playing philosophies.
In '87-88, the Nuggets were led by colorful coach Moe, who preached a run-and-gun offense that lit up scoreboards all over the NBA map. That year, the Nugs ranked first in the league in scoring, averaging 116.7 points per game. Their defense, meanwhile, was fifth-worst, giving up 112.7 ppg.
At the present time, 21 years later, it's all about defense for Denver (along with solid-as-a-rock team solidarity, fortified by hometown hero Chauncey Billups). Head Coach George Karl, who kept with Denver's breakneck offensive tradition for his first four years at the helm, broke with the past before the '08-09 opener.
The new emphasis on D not only resulted in the 54 W's, it also helped deliver the team's first playoff series win since Mt. Mutombo & Co. upset Karl's heavily favored Seattle team in 1994. Get this- through the team's first seven playoff games, they've allowed an average of only 88.7 points per game.
Where do they go from here?
In 1988, the high-scoring Nuggets opened up a 1-0 lead on the Mavs before falling in six games. At the time of this writing, Denver's new defense-first unit was up 2-0 on Dallas in the '09 West semifinals. Does defense really win championships? The Nuggets are putting the old adage to the test. Don't change the channel. I know I'm not.
Labels:
Chauncey Billups,
Denver Nuggets,
Doug Moe,
NBA Playoffs
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