Nuggets pull out win in Game 3


DALLAS (AP) — No matter how many things the Denver Nuggets did wrong Saturday, they somehow always remained within striking distance of the Dallas Mavericks.

And with a second left, Carmelo Anthony struck.

Anthony broke free of a defender trying to foul him and swished a 3-pointer, giving the Nuggets a 106-105 victory over the Mavericks and a 3-0 series lead that has been insurmountable in NBA history.

About two hours after the game ended, the NBA announced that the officials goofed. President of league operations Joel Litvin put out a brief statement saying “the officials missed an intentional foul committed by Antoine Wright on Carmelo Anthony, just prior to Anthony’s 3-point basket.”

Denver trailed only 105-101 with 31 seconds left, then Anthony got a quick dunk off an inbounds play. Dallas’ Dirk Nowitzki missed a 13-footer with about eight seconds remaining and the Nuggets called timeout. Anthony then took an inbounds pass and Wright tried to foul him — twice — since the Mavericks had a foul to give.

Anthony lost his dribble the first time, then bounced off the second bump to find himself wide open. He buried the 3 from right in front of the Mavericks bench, where everyone was going bonkers over the lack of a foul call. It was pretty ironic considering there had been 61 fouls called to that point, keeping either team from ever getting into a flow the entire game.

“I didn’t see a foul,” Nuggets coach George Karl said. “It seemed like he fumbled the ball.”

Dallas’ last-gasp chance was a high-arching 3 from Nowitzki that was nowhere close to going in. At the buzzer, the crowd fell silent, the Nuggets began to celebrate and the Mavericks began to gripe.

Team owner Mark Cuban had an incident with a cameraman — Cuban said he moved the camera out of the way, the cameraman says he was pushed — and Josh Howard was among several clusters of Dallas players who appeared to be exchanging words with Denver players and staff. Cuban continued his tirade behind the scorer’s table, his face reddening.

“Officiating has to be a science, not an art,” Mavs coach Rick Carlisle said. “If I sit here and belabor this it’s not going to be good for our league. It’s one of those times where it’s really an unfortunate thing.”

The Nuggets won the first two games with ease, thanks to huge fourth quarters. They were better by a basket in the final period this time, and that was enough — despite having as many fouls (34) as field goals, making only two shots longer than 5 feet in the first half.