2021 Playoffs: West Semifinal | Suns (2) vs. Nuggets (3)

Chris Paul's late takeover caps Suns' dominant second half in Game 1

After still appearing somewhat compromised by a sore shoulder in the first half, Chris Paul's clutch gene kicked in right on schedule.

Chris Paul finishes with 21 points while dishing out 11 assists in a Game 1 win over the Nuggets.

You saw the Denver runs.

An 11-4 burst at tip-off, 10-3 at the beginning of the second quarter, and a 12-3 burst to begin the third quarter.

That’s a daunting challenge for most teams, but most squads aren’t steered by Chris Paul. The “Point God” seized control in the fourth quarter of Game 1 of the Western Conference semifinals to push Phoenix to a 1-0 lead in this best-of-seven series by way of a 122-105 win over the Denver Nuggets.

Paul finished with 21 points, including 14 in the fourth quarter alone on 6-for-6 shooting with 11 assists and only one turnover before dishing one last pass to his Suns teammates in the postgame on-court interview.

“Not impressed or surprised, just I’m happy that everybody is getting to see this on a national stage,” Paul said. “[Devin Booker] is special, been special. Now, everybody is just getting a chance to see it. Y’all [are] getting to see stuff that we already knew. Mikal Bridges, Jae Crowder, the grit that he brought to our team, Cam[eron] Payne; we have a real team, a great coaching staff and at the end of the day, we’re just having fun.”

Whether it was Deandre Ayton rolling to the rim or Phoenix's shooters spotting up, Denver seemed to have few answers.

Trailing by 10 points at the 8:13 mark of the third quarter, Phoenix sped off on a 28-9 run over the next 7:02 with Bridges nailing a 26-footer off a Payne assist to give the Suns a nine-point lead going into the fourth quarter.

Bridges connected with laser-like precision in the third quarter, hitting 5-for-5 from the field and 2-for-2 from deep for 13 points of his postseason career-high 23 points. Bridges poured in 11 points during Phoenix’s near-flawless third-quarter run, as the Suns knocked down 11-for-19 from the field and 4-for-7 from 3-point range.

Paul missed each of the three shots he fired in the third quarter. But when winning time came, Paul delivered with back-to-back buckets that punctuated a 6-0 Phoenix run to start the final frame. Paul pulled up for a 15-footer with 10:27 left to play over Michael Porter Jr. that put the Suns ahead by 15 points and prompted a timeout from Denver coach Michael Malone.

Over the first three quarters of the game, Paul shot just 2-for-8 for 7 points, before his fourth-quarter takeover.

“I don’t think not making shots is going to rattle him,” Suns coach Monty Williams said. “I think he’s more concerned with managing the game than his shooting percentage. He made some big shots. That’s who he is, whether it’s facilitating and getting the ball to guys where they need it or in those moments being able to knock down a shot.”

Game 1 Recap: Suns 122, Nuggets 105

Four of Phoenix’s five starters scored at least 20 points, led by Bridges (23 points), Paul (21 points), Booker (21 points), and Deandre Ayton (20 points), who held his own all night against presumptive Kia MVP Nikola Jokic.

Phoenix scored 18 points off Denver’s 12 turnovers on the night while limiting the Nuggets’ main threats in the fourth quarter. Denver’s top scorers Jokic and Porter combined for 37 points over the first three quarters, but the Suns held the duo scoreless in the fourth quarter on a combined 0 for 3 from the floor.

Jokic finished with a team-high 22 points on 23 attempts from the field, producing his final bucket of the night with 1:54 remaining in the third quarter on a putback layup. Ayton outrebounded Jokic 10-9.

By the time former Nugget Torrey Craig caught a lob from Payne with 8:36 remaining, the Suns were finishing up a stunning 42-14 run dating back to that early third-quarter 10-point hole.

“I felt our defense in the first half compared to the second half was night and day,” Malone said. “We knew they were gonna make a run at some point. We did a poor job of handling that run.”

Now the Nuggets need to find a way to rebound for Wednesday’s Game 2 at Phoenix Suns Arena, which hosted a sellout crowd in Game 1 of 16,219.

Malone, JaMychal Green and Aaron Gordon all mentioned the word “soft” in describing Denver’s Game 1 performance.

It’s also worth noting that Malone said that Porter “tweaked” his back in the first half of Monday’s game, but expects him to be ready to play in Game 2.

Porter averaged 18.8 points on 53.8% from the field and 42.5% from range in the opening round of the playoffs.

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Michael C. Wright is a senior writer for NBA.com. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on Twitter.

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