Miami Heat guard Kyle Lowry. David Butler II-USA TODAY Sports

Heat's Kyle Lowry offers high praise to Nuggets duo

The Nuggets are only three wins from an NBA title. If, or, more likely, when Denver finishes Miami off, it won't be due to the Heat giving the Nuggets bulletin board material.

During media availability prior to Game 2 on Sunday night, Heat guard Kyle Lowry heaped praise upon Denver's lethal duo of Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray, putting them in the same class as the all-time great Spurs duo of Hall of Famers Tim Duncan and Tony Parker.

Based on that comparison, the Nuggets are on the brink of the next great NBA dynasty. Duncan and Parker won four titles together, including three in a five-year span from 2003-07.

San Antonio's duo was a part of the franchise's 2014 championship run as well. That team is remembered for its sublime ball movement, something Denver is excellent at as well thanks to Jokic and Murray. 

The pair became the first teammates to have double-digit assists in their Finals debut in Game 1 and only the third overall. The duos they joined are in the pantheon of NBA greats alongside Duncan and Parker.

Jokic and Murray also combined for 53 points on Thursday, with both scoring more than 25 points. That, too, puts them in the upper echelon of NBA duos.

Duncan had one title under his belt by the time Parker was drafted in 2001, and it fittingly came against the only other eight-seed to ever reach the NBA Finals, the Knicks in 1999. 

Duncan was named Finals MVP that year and got things started with 33 points and 16 rebounds. He finished the series averaging 27.4 points and 14 rebounds per game.

Parker scored 26 points in his Finals debut in 2003 against the Nets but struggled during the final three games of the sweep, averaging seven points on 25.8% shooting.

It wouldn't be smart to bet on Murray experiencing similar struggles, meaning the Heat are going to have to find a way to keep up the pace if it wants to pull off the comeback.

Despite Lowry's assurances, we should still anticipate Jokic, Murray and the rest of the Nuggets to rail against people for not believing in them even though most anticipate they will win the series.

No one should bat an eye at Lowry's comparison because he's right. Jokic and Murray are playing like champions.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Yankees star Juan Soto has eyebrow-raising comments on upcoming free agency
Draymond Green shares tone-deaf take on fines from NBA
USWNT coach Emma Hayes instilling right mindset ahead of Olympics
Winnipeg Jets officially name head coach
Injury bug bites Orioles again as another starting pitcher lands on IL
Yankees' Hal Steinbrenner under fire over Juan Soto comments
Lonzo Ball shares eye-opening details about his knee injury
Jets QB Aaron Rodgers insists focus has been football, not politics
Hurricanes general manager steps down, leaving front office in flux
Travis Kelce echoes Patrick Mahomes in response to controversial kicker
Cowboys QB Trey Lance details how he has changed since 49ers stint
Historic NCAA settlement reached allowing schools to pay players
Celtics dominate Pacers in Game 2, take 2-0 ECF lead
Cavaliers fire head coach J.B. Bickerstaff
Connor McDavid's 2OT goal gives Oilers win over Stars in Game 1
Rob Manfred hints at big change coming to MLB
Scottie Scheffler arrest case takes another weird turn with new video
QB Russell Wilson believes Steelers can 'do something special'
Pacers star suffers injury in ugly Game 2 loss
Watch: Jaylen Brown's big second quarter lifts Celtics to halftime lead

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.