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Kyrie Irving won’t blame Bruce Brown for Nets’ Game 3 loss
Brooklyn Nets head coach Steve Nash sets up a play with forward Bruce Brown (1) and guard Kyrie Irving (11) against the Milwaukee Bucks during Game 3. Benny Sieu-USA TODAY Sports

The Brooklyn Nets dropped Game 3 in the team’s Eastern Conference semifinals showdown with the Milwaukee Bucks, but Kyrie Irving refused to lay the blame on the 86-83 setback solely on Bruce Brown, whose play in the waning moments of the game is under scrutiny.

Brown took two of the Nets’ final shots in Thursday night’s loss at Fiserv Forum, and many are blaming him for inexplicably not finding either Kyrie Irving or Kevin Durant for a potential game-winning shot.

With the Nets up 83-82 and 20 seconds remaining in the game, Brown could not convert on a floater in the lane. Jrue Holiday scored on the Bucks’ ensuing possession, and with the Nets attempting to regain the lead, Brown picked up a loose ball and failed to make a desperation layup. Milwaukee held on to ultimately win the game to avoid going down 3-0 in the series.

The blame game immediately began on social media, with widespread wisecracks and mockery coming at Brown’s expense. Kyrie Irving, however, unsurprisingly declined to call out Brown during his postgame presser.

“Usually, Bruce puts us in a great position to at least have something at the rim that goes in, but tonight it just didn’t go for us,” Irving said, per HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto. “It’s not on him. It’s not on any one person. Just got to execute.”

Nets head coach Steve Nash similarly came to Brown’s defense during his postgame comments.

Brown of course was also pressed on the way the end of Game 3 played out after the loss.

“We had great looks,” Brown said after the game. “We just didn’t make them tonight.”

It certainly merits noting that without Brown’s play earlier in a game where he put up 16 points, 11 rebounds and three assists that the Nets would not have stormed back from a 21-point deficit in the first quarter. Sure, the late-game plays are certainly noteworthy, but as both Irving and Nash noted, the loss does not fall entirely on Brown’s shoulders.

The Nets will look to recover from the loss and take a commanding 3-1 series lead Sunday. Game 4 tips off at Fiserv Forum Sunday at 3:00 p.m. ET

This article first appeared on Sportress of Blogitude and was syndicated with permission.

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