Mark Kiszla: The X factor in Nuggets-Clippers series? Not Joker. Or Bubble Murray. It's Captain Chaos. | Mark Kiszla | denvergazette.com


Russell Westbrook's impactful performance, despite his unconventional style, has become a crucial X-factor for the Denver Nuggets in their playoff series against the Los Angeles Clippers.
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Russ never sleeps. For 17 NBA seasons and every minute of more than 1,300 pro games, Russell Westbrook has embodied the same philosophy:

Better to burn out than fade away.

Westbrook plays basketball with such an intense passion it feels personal. Never more so than now, hellbent on proving he isn’t washed up.

“I live for (these) moments, live to talk a little mess and compete,” Westbrook said Tuesday, after the Nuggets crushed the Los Angeles Clippers 131-115 to take a 3-2 lead in this best-of-seven playoff series.

As Westbrook would gladly tell you, his job is to mess things up on the court.

So trust me when I say: He’s having big fun messing with the minds of Clippers owner Steve Ballmer and former L.A. teammates

But as Westbrook also admits: “My fun may look a little different than everybody else’s. It may not be with a smile.” 

Yes, Nikola Jokic is the most valuable player, not only in Denver, but in the entire basketball universe.

Westbrook, however, has become the X factor in this series.

Who would’ve thunk it?

“The special thing about Russ is how stubborn he is.That’s how he plays,”

Nuggets interim coach David Adelman said. “When it rolls and has it going, it can be so impactful, energy-wise.”

On a spring night in Colorado when Jokic was not superhuman, he didn’t have to be for the Nuggets to rout the Clippers. The stars of this show were Jamal Murray, harkening back to his NBA Bubble days with 43 points, and Westbrook, who was here, there and messing with everyone at once.

It’s also not a stretch to wonder if the Nuggets might already be on summer vacation without Westbrook. The series-opener could’ve easily been an L instead of a W if not for his clutch corner 3-pointer near the end of regulation or  the turnover he forced against James Harden with quick hands on an inbounds pass late in overtime.

The Nuggets definitely missed him in Game 4, which Westbrook sat out with a foot injury. But maybe Westbrook missed playing against his old friends from Los Angeles even more.

After two seasons living in the shadow of LeBron James on Lakers teams that bombed and two more where his primary role was to serve as a scapegoat for the Clippers, Westbrook showed up in Denver on veteran minimum contract at a salary of $3.4 million, in large part because there was nowhere else in the league to go for a point guard approaching his 36th birthday.

Born in Long Beach, an alum of UCLA and more quintessential L.A. than a purse dog sitting at a restaurant table during brunch, Westbrook has been welcomed with open arms in the Mile High City.

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With the Nuggets,he has been Captain Chaos. His energy is always turned up to 11 on a 10-point scale. And the quality of his decision-making? On any given possession, it can be less than zero.

During the first half of Game 5, however, he came off the Denver bench stronger than a can of Red Bull. And the only things more memorable than Westbrook draining 3-point shots or rumbling to the rim for a lay-up plus a foul, were his exchanges with the L.A. bench.

He flexed. He preened. He barked.

It was the full Westbrook experience.

Although the Nuggets stole Game 4 on a Aaron Gordon’s dunk at the buzzer, Adelman nearly had to run his starting five into the ground to get the victory. He played members of the bench a grand total of only 26 minutes, and Denver reserves contributed a meager four points.

In the long and winding road of a seven-game playoff series, wthat’s the word for that? Unsustainable.

“We all know we need more people to step up to win a fourth game,” Adelman said. “Bottom line.”

That’s why the 21 points and 25 minutes Westbrook gave the Nuggets in Game 5 were more essential than what a cursory glance at the boxscore could reveal.

“Something that can will your team to victory,” said Westbrook, citing energy so powerful it’s contagious as “a huge part of the game that the average eye may not see, or the boxscore might not show.”

When Westbrook drilled a 25-foot jumper to put Denver ahead 96-82 with 30 seconds remaining in the third quarter, all 20,005 witnesses in Ball Arena, including those sitting on the Clippers bench, knew it was a dagger.

Now one victory away from advancing in the playoffs to the second round, the Nuggets take this show back on the road.

Westbrook, however, is returning home to California.

And if Captain Chaos can somehow take a wrecking ball to the Clippers first season in their new $2 billion arena on his home turf?

My, my. Hey, hey. 

L.A. might never hear the end of it.

 

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