Anthony claims altitude a factor

Nuggets, Lakers series moves to Denver

? It’s all even between the Nuggets and Lakers, with Denver’s thin air awaiting these two teams in their breathless Western Conference finals showdown.

The Nuggets earned an elusive playoff victory over the Lakers, 106-103 Thursday night to end an 11-game winless streak against Los Angeles in the playoffs dating to 1985.

The best-of-7 series resumes at 7:30 tonight with Game 3 at Pepsi Center, a mile above sea-level Los Angeles.

“It’s tough for me to run up and down that court in the altitude and I’m here all year long,” said Carmelo Anthony, who had 34 points and nine rebounds in the win. “It is a factor being 5,280 — that’s tough for anybody.”

Kobe Bryant had 32 points, including making all 10 of his free throws, Trevor Ariza scored a career playoff-high 20 points and Pau Gasol had 17 points and 17 rebounds for the Lakers, who dropped to 7-2 at Staples Center this postseason.

“They have home court advantage now. Now it’s time to go to Denver, see if we can do the same,” Bryant said. “We’re not the best road team in the NBA for no reason.”

The Nuggets rediscovered their toughness in the closing minutes Thursday, an attitude they lacked in their two-point loss in Game 1.

They were talking tough, too, fed up with all the hype about the NBA finals being a star-studded showcase for Cleveland’s LeBron James and Bryant.

“It’s not going to be us and Orlando laying down so those two could play in two weeks. It ain’t going to happen,” Denver’s Kenyon Martin vowed. “I’m going to make sure it don’t. Y’all can go home and play ‘NBA Live’ if y’all want to see that matchup.”

Martin had a say in the final 29 seconds Thursday, making a layup in traffic off a pass from Nene and Chauncey Billups hit 3 of 4 free throws to close out the win.

“To get one on the road is always tough. We came in and got it,” Anthony said. “We’re mentally tough and we showed that in this game coming off the loss that we gave away in Game 1.”

Anthony twisted his ankle in the game, but he said he would be fine for Game 3.

The Nuggets recovered from poor free throw shooting in a two-point loss in Game 1 to make 17 consecutive foul shots until Billups missed one with 4 seconds remaining. He made the second for the three-point lead.

Derek Fisher launched a three-pointer from the right corner that Nene got a piece of as time expired.

“I figured they were going to try to foul to prevent us from shooting a three,” Fisher said. “I got rid of it a little quicker than I probably had to. Definitely don’t want to put yourself in a position where you need that kind of shot to try and tie the game.”

Tied at 101, Martin made the layup off Nene’s assist that gave the Nuggets the lead for good.