Nuggets change focus for Game 4

Denver laments ill-advised three-pointers in previous contest

? The Denver Nuggets don’t just need work on their inbounds plays. If they’re to bounce back from a second last-minute loss to the Lakers, they’ll also have to play to the rim tonight and not the crowd as they did in Game 3.

The Nuggets didn’t spend their Sunday lamenting Trevor Ariza’s deja vu steal in the final minute to help the Lakers snare a 2-1 lead in the Western Conference finals.

Instead, they talked about how they tried too hard to rile up their crowd, an ill-suited strategy that resulted in them missing 22 of 27 shots from outside the arc and shooting a playoff-low 39 percent while losing at home for the first time in 75 days.

The Nuggets’ three best three-point shooters were all off the mark: Carmelo Anthony was 1-for-7, Chauncey Billups 2-for-7 and J.R. Smith 2-for-10.

Kenyon Martin said he couldn’t believe the Nuggets fired up that many three-pointers, “but we were trying to put them away.”

“We’d go up seven, eight points and trying to get the building to erupt,” Martin said. “We’ve done that so much during the season and throughout the playoffs. So, we figured that’s the way it was going to be. And it’s not always going to be that way. You’ve got to grind it out sometimes, take the tough two or get to the line and score points that way.”

Billups agreed the Nuggets “shot some bad three-point shots at bad points of the game, just taking chances, trying to hit the dagger,” and vowed that would change for Game 4 at 8 tonight.

In their half-dozen blowouts at the Pepsi Center in these playoffs, the Nuggets had turned their crowd into a major factor by using their transition game, pull-up threes, kick-outs and rim-rattling dunks to turn tight games into runaways.

Against Los Angeles, however, the three-pointers rimmed out all night, allowing the Lakers to stick around long enough for Kobe Bryant to win it for them in the fourth quarter with a little help from Ariza, who also stole the Nuggets’ inbounds pass in the final minute to seal Game 1.

“I think we got caught up in the emotion of the moment of a great crowd, a great challenge,” Nuggets coach George Karl said. “I think we tried to hit too many home runs rather than just take a single here, a double here and win the game that way.”

“We’ve got to challenge the Lakers to play defense on every possession. I think we took too many shots where they didn’t have to play defense.”

The Nuggets were simply too excited about playing in front of their boisterous crowd for the first time since eliminating the Mavericks 10 days earlier, and that resulted into too many bricks.

“Being home and just knowing how great this crowd is when we make threes, when we make dunks, I think we may have put too much into that and wanted to feed off of that too much instead of playing a little smarter,” Billups said.

The Nuggets had hoped playing at the Pepsi Center would give them some leeway to atone for mistakes, “but we can’t bank on that,” Billups said.

Which means being more patient, getting to the basket and attacking the rim.

The Nuggets had come to expect big games from Anthony, who had averaged 35 points in his previous five games, but he had an off night, shooting 4-for-13 for 21 points, just three after halftime.