The Nets didn’t just beat the Kings in Las Vegas - they ran them out of the gym early and kept the pressure on long enough to turn the night into a full-on summer showcase.
Brooklyn opened with a 22-6 burst and forced eight Sacramento turnovers in the first six minutes, setting the tone before the game ever had a chance to settle in. Joshua Jefferson, after a rough first outing as a Net over the weekend, jumped in off the bench and immediately got involved.
Mikel Brown Jr. didn’t score during that opening push, but he helped create a few of the buckets that built it. He had two assists in the first quarter, while Darius Acuff answered with six points for Sacramento.
The real first-quarter headline, though, was Egor Dëmin. He came out blazing with 16 points in the opening frame, going 3-3 from the field and 4-4 from the line.
In 10 minutes, he also added three rebounds, two assists, two steals, and no turnovers. It was the kind of all-around stretch that made him look a little too polished for summer ball.
Brown Jr. started finding his own rhythm in the second quarter. After Acuff picked his pocket on the first possession of the period, Brown Jr. recovered to block the shot in transition.
Then he brought the ball up, crossed Acuff over, and buried a smooth midrange jumper. He finished the quarter with five points and two more assists.
Drake Powell’s night was building toward something bigger, too. After going 1-28 from the field across the California Classic and Vegas before this game, he came out firing and was 4-5 from three with a +11 by halftime.
By the break, Brooklyn had stretched the lead to 56-34. Emanuel Sharp was the main reason the margin wasn’t even uglier for Sacramento.
The 45th overall pick out of Houston hit 4-5 from deep in the first half and led the Kings with 14 points. No one else on Sacramento had more than eight at that point.
Dëmin was right there with him offensively. After putting up 20 against New York in his last game, he had 20 again by halftime, shooting 5-9 from the field. He kept Brown Jr. covered through the end of the half.
The turnovers kept piling up after the break, and Brooklyn kept turning them into easy points. The Nets finished with 41 points off 28 Sacramento giveaways. In the middle of all that, Johnson, Dëmin, Brown Jr., and Wolf put together what had to be the play of the summer so far for Brooklyn.
That sequence helped spark a 13-0 run in the third quarter that pushed the lead past 30, and from there the Nets were in control. Dëmin sat for all but one possession in the fourth, while Brown Jr., Powell, and others stayed on the floor.
Brown Jr. got a few more points back on Acuff before checking out a few possessions later. Acuff ended up with the higher scoring total, but he had to work harder for it.
Brown Jr. finished with 16 points, five rebounds, two assists, and four turnovers on 6-11 shooting and 2-5 from three. Acuff posted 26 points, five assists, and five turnovers while shooting 9-18 from the field and 2-6 from deep.
The third quarter also got a little too lively for Brooklyn, which picked up three technical fouls from the bench, Dëmin, and Powell, who was hit for hanging on the rim a bit too long after an alley-oop. In summer, that kind of edge usually gets a pass.
Powell’s final line made the early rough stretch look even more distant. He finished with 18 points, two steals, and a block, shooting 6-10 from the field and 4-7 from three.
From there, Brooklyn’s bench, plus Johnson and Wolf, handled the rest. Sacramento never truly threatened the margin, and Ben Saraf’s steady play helped keep the Kings from getting any momentum.
Saraf finished with 11 points, five assists, four steals, and no turnovers on 3-4 shooting in 20 minutes. Johnson was everywhere, posting 13 points, nine rebounds, three assists, and a steal on 5-7 shooting, and he finished with a game-high +31.
The Nets picked up their second win in Las Vegas and finished just five points short of the Summer League scoring record.
Brooklyn now gets a day off before its final “regular season” Summer League game Thursday afternoon against the Houston Rockets. Tipoff is set for 4:30 p.m.
EST. Depending on how the standings shake out, the Nets will either move on to a four-team playoff or play one consolation game on July 17, July 18 or July 19.
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