Nikola Jokic – The Denver Post https://www.denverpost.com Colorado breaking news, sports, business, weather, entertainment. Tue, 12 Dec 2023 13:33:13 +0000 en-US hourly 30 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.denverpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/cropped-DP_bug_denverpost.jpg?w=32 Nikola Jokic – The Denver Post https://www.denverpost.com 32 32 111738712 Jamal Murray shines, Nikola Jokic bounces back, Nuggets limp across finish line to snap losing streak in Atlanta https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/11/nuggets-beat-hawks-nikola-jokic-shooting-jamal-murray-julian-strawther/ Tue, 12 Dec 2023 03:13:43 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5891825 ATLANTA — Even MVPs need a little affirmation from their coaches sometimes, maybe. Or maybe the Nuggets’ last two games were just a brief glitch in the cheat code that is Nikola Jokic.

After Jokic’s second consecutive poor shooting night Friday in Denver, Michael Malone checked on his star center “to make sure that he is not losing any confidence — which knowing him, I know he won’t,” Malone said. “But I want to make sure he’s not.”

That conversation might as well represent the overall state of the defending NBA champs after a rare three-game losing streak. Jokic, Aaron Gordon and Jamal Murray have all faced setbacks or slumps early this season, but the full trio briefly resembled its 2023 playoff form Monday night during a 129-122 Nuggets win over the Hawks at State Farm Arena.

Jokic bounced back from his 18-for-58 shooting stretch with an efficient 25 points, eight rebounds, eight assists, three steals and two blocks. Gordon, whose scoring has been down at 12.5 points per game entering Atlanta, was in full battering ram mode en route to 17 points and 12 boards. Murray, in his third game back from injury, shined the most with 29 points and nine rebounds, sinking key 3s as Atlanta tried to erase a 20-point deficit late.

“I think the way we played, that’s what makes me a little bit more happy,” Jokic said. “Just, we played the way we are usually playing. And that’s what makes me happy. Of course, a win is a great thing, but the way we played today, that’s how we need to play the rest of the season.”

The trio combined to shoot 28 for 38 from the field, led by Murray’s 12-for-15 night.

“I love when Jamal rebounds,” Malone said. “That to me shows that he’s aggressive, and he’s impacting the game across the board. He’s still on a minutes restriction, so to only play him 29 minutes, I was really happy about that. And to see what he did in those 29 minutes was pretty incredible.”

But for the Nuggets (15-9) to snap their skid and pick up their sixth road win of 2023-24, they needed a spark from a rookie. That’s what Julian Strawther seems to be best at. Denver trailed by as many as 11 in a defensively lackluster first half, but the late first-round pick led a comeback going into halftime with one of his increasingly recognizable heat-check games. Strawther made his first five 3-point attempts to score 19 of his 22 points in 16 first-half minutes, also providing much-needed defensive energy with four of his five steals coming before the intermission. He also won the defensive player of the game chain.

“His activity and not being hugged up, being in the right position, helping and forcing turnovers where we can get out and run … that’s so encouraging,” Malone said.

Out of one Denver timeout during the rally, Strawther scored driving via a designed dribble handoff from Michael Porter Jr., staggering again with the second unit. In their first possession after another timeout later in the quarter, the Nuggets drew up a Jokic handoff that resulted in the rookie’s fifth 3-pointer.

“(The coaches) have so much belief in me,” Strawther said, “and they’ve consistently shown me that if I have it going, they’ll let me rock.”

Denver was also on the receiving end of technical foul free throws this time, three days after mounting frustration with officiating resulted in a Murray ejection. Atlanta star point guard Trae Young was thrown out of the game when he received two swift technicals late in the third, as the Hawks were attempting to slowly climb back. Without Young, they closed the gap to five with 32 seconds left as Denver got haphazard with the ball and sloppy defending the perimeter. Bogdan Bogdanovic scored 40 on a remarkable 10-of-17 outside shooting.

Jokic and Gordon did most of their work bullying Atlanta’s front court in the paint. When they sat, Zeke Nnaji was back in the lineup as Denver’s backup center after Malone opted for DeAndre Jordan four consecutive games. Nnaji’s 12 minutes were largely productive, with four rebounds, two blocks and learning moments. He got isolated in the second quarter against Young, who crossed him up for an easy floater. At the other end, he repented with a put-back and-one.

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5891825 2023-12-11T20:13:43+00:00 2023-12-12T06:33:13+00:00
Opinion: Naughty or nice? Boebert, Coach Prime, Jokić, Casa Bonita and more https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/11/lauren-boebert-coach-prime-jokic-casa-bonita-naughty-nice/ Mon, 11 Dec 2023 12:01:16 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5887100 At the top of Colorado’s naughty list is of course the ever-so-pious U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert. Security footage of the then-still-married woman kissing and groping her date while he rubbed her breast at the Buell Theater was enough to make even Colorado’s hardworking strippers blush. Her divorce was finalized a few months later.

In an astonishing display of perseverance, Boebert has continued to show up at the U.S. Capitol despite the global humiliation that ensued including a Saturday Night Live skit. A sheer lack of shame, however, doesn’t get anyone out of that kind of trouble. The congresswoman is getting nothing but coal this year, and I don’t mean that as a metaphor for kickbacks from the fossil fuel industry for her unwavering boosterism.

And thus, begins my naughty/nice list for 2023, a year when Coloradans of note shone bright as stars or stumbled like a Jerry on the slopes.

If Russell and Ciara Wilson are half the saints in real life that they appear to be in their public personas, then a Tiffany-trimmed tree is in order. The Wilsons run the Why Not You Foundation (read their kid’s book by the same title for some inspiration) that gave out $1 million in grants this year. Russell also could be the Colorado come-back story of the year if he pulls off a few more win this season.

But for all the Wilsons’ ease, charm, and overperformance, there’s Deion Sanders, a complex man who raised expectations sky-high only to fall back to Earth.

On any given week, Sanders could be found on either list. Santa certainly isn’t the type to reward egomaniacs who push student-athletes out of the University of Colorado, but Sanders also uses his public persona for good, sticking up for the Colorado State University player whose dangerous play received widespread condemnation and asking for mercy for the teens who stole jewelry from his players in the Rose Bowl locker room. Two things tip Sanders to the nice list – the poor man recently lost his fiancé in a very public separation, and he elevated CU superfan Peggy Coppom, 99, in a genuine display of kindness.

Nicola Jokić did let those two epic f-bombs slip at the Nugget’s championship parade in downtown Denver in front of families and children, but somehow it seems like a much more innocent word when delivered in a Serbian accent by a man who just wants to get home to his friends and family. Santa is going to be good to the Joker, his wife, Natalija Jokić, and their darling daughter who stole the hearts of the nation during the NBA finals.

I don’t know for certain, but it seems likely that Avalanche forward Valeri Nichushkin is on the naughty list after a woman was found by the team doctor in his hotel room so intoxicated that she left in an ambulance. There’s no indication of a crime or even of a complaint from the woman. But the whole thing was more than a little suspicious including Nichushkin’s conspicuous absence for the next five games. He’s got work to do on his reputation (he could start by addressing the incident publicly and explaining what happened) before he gets off the naughty list.

District Attorney Linda Stanley is facing a formal complaint that she launched a retaliatory investigation into a judge’s personal life and that she violated seven separate rules of professional conduct for attorneys while pursuing the case of Suzanne Morphew who went missing in 2020 and whose remains were found in September. Stanley’s behavior, which she will address in a formal response to the complaint, puts her on the naughty list, and worse it jeopardizes there ever being justice for Suzanne Morphew.

Don Thwaites, one-time kettle corn vendor, poses for a portrait at the parking area of Casa Bonia in Lakewood on Friday, Aug. 11, 2023. The shipping container he operated out of, which was in front of Casa Bonita, was moved across the street. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
Don Thwaites, one-time kettle corn vendor, poses for a portrait at the parking area of Casa Bonia in Lakewood on Friday, Aug. 11, 2023. The shipping container he operated out of, which was in front of Casa Bonita, was moved across the street. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

Don Thwaites, who for two years ran a cheerful little food stand in the shared parking lot with Casa Bonita, goes on the nice list. But whoever was behind his unceremonious ouster from the Casa Bonita parking lot is on the naughty list. Thwaites had a valid lease to sell Sno-Kones and kettle corn and other food out of his shipping container store through May 2024, but his landlords at Broad Street Realty seem to have gone out of their way to terminate the lease just before Casa Bonita’s grand reopening.

Finally, I’m going to put those hard-working strippers I mentioned earlier, far too flippantly, on the nice list. It took real bravery for performers Elyssa Hanley, Vanessa Herr and Rebecca Dolana to speak out about their careers as dancers at Colorado clubs. We hope Santa brings all three what they asked for in The Denver Post story — a way out of the sometimes exploitive, unstable and traumatic work in clubs.

Megan Schrader is the editor of The Denver Post’s opinion pages.

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5887100 2023-12-11T05:01:16+00:00 2023-12-11T05:03:20+00:00
Keeler: No. 1 Colorado School of Mines, John Matocha are men on a mission. Next stop? Turning Golden into Titletown, USA https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/09/colorado-mines-john-matocha-kutztown/ Sun, 10 Dec 2023 03:07:04 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5890069 GOLDEN — The best college quarterback in Colorado drives around Titletown in a Toyota Tacoma. 2012. Two-wheel drive.

“We bought it used. Very used,” Keith Matocha, father of Colorado School of Mines QB John Matocha, told me with a laugh as his son’s top-ranked Orediggers pounded Kutztown, 35-7, to punch a second straight ticket to the NCAA Division II football national championships.

“And we weren’t very smart. We’re from Texas. It’s 2-wheel drive in a pickup, so he gets stranded quite often. So his lineman roommates ended up hauling him around quite a bit.”

As the snow that frosted Marv Kay Field reminded Keith of the worst decision of his son’s young life, the party below us reminded him of the best.

“Definitely the goal was to get back (to the NCAA championship),” the elder Matocha said of his son, who completed 30 of 37 passes, threw for three scores and ran for another to improve Mines’ record to 14-0 and launch them into a winner-take-all title game against Harding (Ark.) on Saturday in McKinney, Texas.

“So they can talk about ‘one game at a time’ all they want. But at the end, it was always about getting back to McKinney. So, yes, very determined. Very focused.”

A friend slid carefully to Keith along the icy bleachers, patting Dad on the shoulder as he passed.

“Bring home one more!”

Then another friend.

“Five years. It’s been great.”

Then another.

“Happy for all of you. Way to go.”

And another.

“You won’t have to fly out again.”

Keith, whose family lives in Houston, smiled at that last one.

“My brother lives very close to (McKinney),” dad explained. “So we get to go sleep on their floor.”

One more. One. More.

At least they know the drill. More to the point, so do the Diggers. In hindsight, John Matocha reflected, just getting to the title game for the first time as a program last December felt like Mines’ big victory.

The Diggers were just happy to be there. Ferris State was angrier. And faster. And bigger. Much, much, much, much bigger.

“When I sat up there (in the stands at McKinney) and (Ferris) ran that first sweep,” reflected Mines alum Tom Dimelow, who sat a few rows over from the Matochas. “I said to myself, ‘My God, Vince Lombardi must be smiling today.'”

Marv Kay, bless his soul, not so much. Ferris went up 27-0 at the half and rolled to a 41-14 victory.

“We felt we’d made it,” the younger Matocha, who just passed Chicago Bears QB Tyson Bagent for the No. 1 spot on the NCAA’s all-time carer passing TD chart, recalled earlier in the week. “We felt like the hype overcame us, and it may have affected our preparation and our execution.

“This year, it’s not a surprise, or ‘Oh my gosh, we made it.’ We have the experience to back it up now. … We’ll be more prepared.”

They’ve got the beef, too, if Saturday was any harbinger.

Mines nose tackle Kyle Bahnsen, a 305-pound ball of angry, split a double-team in the first half and forced Bears QB Judd Novak to throw the ball to the Heavens or risk an early audience with the angels. Novak heaved a wounded duck that got picked off in the end zone by Diggers safety Collin Romero. Kutztown never really threatened through the air again.

And despite the Golden Bears making a concerted effort to load up in the box, Mines racked up 165 rush yards on 29 carries anyway. And the fakes off the read option allowed Matocha to find 6-foot-4 Flynn Schiele (11 catches, 181 receiving yards) either all alone or matched up in single coverage against 5-9 corner Antaun Lloyd, whom he posted up the way Nikola Jokic posts up small-ball centers.

“They’ve got a great offensive line,” Kutztown coach Jim Clements said. “They are going to be hard to beat (in the championship).”

One more. One. More.

Mines athletic director David Hansburg had Texas on the brain Saturday, too. He watched the postgame news conference, leaning against a far wall, in a gray cowboy hat.

“You get that in McKinney?” I asked.

“Aspen,” he said with a grin.

“Is that from the Coach Prime collection?”

Hansburg shook his head, removed his chapeau and pointed at the tiny name burned into the brim: OREDIGGERS.

Welcome to Golden, where the dream lives.

“It’s what they play for,” Keith Matocha reflected proudly. “And a lot of these kids stuck around to go make it happen, right? I mean, you’ve got a lot of kids — I think (Mines coach Pete) Sterbick has said, they’ve got other things to do. And they stuck around to go for it. … I didn’t know if they could make it this far. Certainly not with the consistency that they have. But they’ve proven it.

“All of a sudden, it’s a reality now.”

One more, Blaster. One. More.

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5890069 2023-12-09T20:07:04+00:00 2023-12-10T09:51:17+00:00
Nuggets Journal: Is Nikola Jokic’s poor shooting stretch cause for real concern? Jamal Murray says no: “Not every night’s gonna go your way” https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/09/nuggets-nikola-jokic-poor-shooting-triple-doubles/ Sat, 09 Dec 2023 16:10:40 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5888181 If Nikola Jokic is accepted by now as a bonafide unicorn whose name belongs on any timeline charting innovation across NBA history, then his visit to Los Angeles this week should be acknowledged as a true unicorn of a stat line. Or maybe more like a goblin.

“I’ve never seen that before, and I don’t think I’ll ever see it again,” Michael Porter Jr. told Nuggets coach Michael Malone after Jokic shot 9-for-32 in a loss to the Clippers.

It was the worst shooting game of the two-time MVP’s career accounting for both volume and efficiency (28.1%). Back home two nights later, he shot 9-for-26 in another loss, including a 1-for-10 start. Jokic’s superpower for years now has been his immunity to bad games. A “bad game” for Jokic usually still ends up in the ballpark of a semi-efficient 20-point double-double. He still makes teammates better. Still impacts winning. Even in Los Angeles, he produced his 114th career triple-double.

Make no mistake, though, that was an actual bad game. Denver’s best player uncharacteristically shooting 9-for-32 was the biggest difference between a win and loss. And while it ultimately wasn’t a worrisome bad game — as Porter said, odds are Jokic never misses that many shots in one night again — it did illuminate a recent trend (in exaggerated form).

Jokic’s methods of effectiveness can shift with the ebbs and flows of a season, and lately the shift has been from near-unstoppable scorer back toward dead-eye distributor. Point in case: The 10 assists he managed to scrape together Wednesday even while taking so many shots.

The duality speaks to Jokic’s spike in responsibility lately. The Nuggets relied on him to operate their offense even more than usual as the weeks without Jamal Murray stretched on. Now that Murray (hamstring, then ankle) is back, the theme to monitor will be whether Jokic’s touches can decrease back to a more regular quantity — and regular for him is still a lot. Ideally, he’s scoring and passing at peak efficiency at the same time. Even in another MVP-caliber start to a season, the stars just haven’t fully aligned that way yet.

The dividing point in Jokic’s 2023-24 so far, statistically, is his ejection Nov. 20 in Detroit. It was around the one-month mark. It was Denver’s 14th game. Jokic had played in all of them, albeit limited minutes against the Pistons for obvious reasons. Because a first-half ejection can skew per-game stats, the best lens to use here is a per 36 minutes average.

Start with shooting volume. Through 14 games, when Jokic was already in score-first mode more than usual, he was attempting 15.45 2-point shots per 36 minutes. He was making 66.2% of those shots. As automatic as any interior finisher in the NBA.

In his next eight games after the ejection, Jokic attempted 20.81 shots inside the arc per 36 minutes and only made 51.2% of his 2-point attempts. Five of those eight were on the road, where the Nuggets are prone to lapses in offensive flow. Perhaps Jokic has felt an added responsibility to carry his team’s scoring in those games, when the Nuggets were often playing from behind. He has also grown frustrated by a lack of foul calls. Opponents have guarded him physically. Whatever the case, shooting more frequently has not paid off.

Then again, he has also averaged 11 assists per 36 minutes in this eight-game stretch, a bump from 9.5 per 36 in the first 14 games. His turnovers per 36 minutes have declined from 3.6 in the first 14 games to 2.3 the last eight. When an empty Nuggets possession ends with Jokic right now, it’s because he’s missing a shot, not coughing it up with an over-ambitious pass … even though there have actually been more opportunities for him to cough it up.

Jokic passed the ball on 18.2% of his paint touches his first 14 games; he passed on 23.9% of his paint touches in the next seven, entering Friday night’s game vs. Houston. His pass rate on post-ups also jumped from 28.4% to 46.9% between those stretches, coinciding with a drop in post-up shooting percentage (55% to 42%). For turnovers to decrease despite a notable rise in passing situations is a testament to Jokic’s pedigree as one of the all-time great play-making centers. He and Malone have acknowledged before that turnovers are an inevitable side-effect of his creativity and the type of basketball the Nuggets play. Yet twice in three games last week, Jokic registered a 30-point triple-double without committing a single turnover (ending a 56-game streak in which he had at least one turnover). No other NBA player in the last 40 years has accomplished that twice in their career.

In other words, Jokic has arguably reached a new career apex as a distributor in recent weeks, even while his 2-point shooting plummeted.

Murray came to Jokic’s defense Friday with an impassioned response to a question about the center’s poor shooting nights.

“I don’t shoot well every game,” Murray said. “Jok don’t shoot well every game. Mike don’t shoot well every game. Sometimes we don’t play defense. It can’t be just on: ‘He missed a couple floaters. Why are we down?’ No, it’s not about that. I hate when people keep saying that. Like, so what? He had a bad game. Or a bad shooting night. Whatever the hell you want to call it. He had a triple-double the other night, and you’re saying he had a bad game. I don’t know what player has a bad game after a triple-double.”

How can shooting volume and passing volume both leap so much simultaneously? That gets to the crux of this most recent chapter in Jokic’s season.

Of the Nuggets’ first 14 games, the NBA tracked individual touches in 12 of them (excluding Denver’s wins against Golden State and Chicago). When touches were tracked, Jokic averaged 107.5 per 36 minutes. In the next seven games, he averaged 118.2 touches per 36 going into the Rockets game.

“Obviously, heavy is the head that wears the crown. A lot is being asked of him every night,” Malone said. “To score, to rebound, to defend, to play-make, to be a leader, and he’s never shied away from it. That’s one thing I love about Nikola. … I’ve gotta find ways to maybe get Nikola some rest and lessen his burden, but knowing him and how tough he is, he won’t want that. He won’t even want to hear it.”

Murray’s return should spread out the priorities of opposing defenses, making life easier for Jokic as a scorer again. But the current 18-for-58 stretch has occurred with Murray in the lineup, possibly a reminder that even Jokic needs to rediscover his shooting rhythm sometimes.

“He’s doing everything he can,” Murray said. “Not every night’s gonna go your way.”

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5888181 2023-12-09T09:10:40+00:00 2023-12-09T09:45:15+00:00
Nuggets’ Michael Malone on Jamal Murray’s late-game ejection vs. Rockets: “He was getting choked” https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/09/jamal-murray-ejection-nuggets-referees-fouls-michael-malone/ Sat, 09 Dec 2023 15:43:43 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5889895 Not for the first time this season, the defending NBA champions have gripes with the way they’re being officiated.

Tensions were already high Friday night as the Nuggets were attempting to overcome a seemingly insurmountable 25-point deficit in the last nine minutes. With an 18-0 run, they finally got a stir out of Ball Arena, a justifiably lifeless building for the first three quarters given the home team’s performance. The Rockets were perhaps tensing up a bit. This game had everything. Except a referee controversy.

In the final four minutes, Jamal Murray was ejected after picking up two technical fouls in quick succession, Michael Porter Jr. was handed a technical for slamming the ball in response to a foul call, and it was a miracle Nikola Jokic didn’t get one or two of his own after he vehemently argued whistles (or the lack thereof) during his post battles with Alperen Sengun.

Murray joined Jokic and coach Michael Malone in the Nuggets’ club of ejectees this season. He was tossed with 38 seconds left after Denver (14-9) had cut Houston’s lead to six.

“I just think he got thrown out because he was cutting through the lane and he was getting choked,” Malone said. “So if you have arms around your neck … I would probably get thrown out too. So I fully support Jamal. Though you never want to get fourth-quarter techs. That’s like an unwritten rule. But as I watched that clip, he’s cutting through the lane and he’s being held up the way he’s being held up. And it happens over and over. That causes frustration. I think that’s what happened with that. But I have Jamal’s back, 1,000%. I thought he was a warrior for us tonight.”

Murray had just received his first tech seconds earlier. While Denver had possession, his attempt to cut off-ball was guarded physically, prompting him to turn to the baseline official and yell, demanding a foul call. After Murray’s second technical was issued, he stormed down the tunnel.

“I mean, it’s on camera,” Murray said when asked if his frustration was more related to the one play or an accumulation of calls throughout the night. “The whole game is being recorded. So if you want to go look at it, it’s there for the taking.”

Malone’s comeback lineup

Malone was pointed about the lack of effort and energy he felt the Nuggets had Friday, especially while allowing 40 points to Houston in the third quarter. In a notable move, he subbed out Aaron Gordon and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope with 3:32 remaining in the third, and neither returned the rest of the game. Instead, Peyton Watson played the entire fourth quarter, and Reggie Jackson played the bulk of it during Denver’s comeback attempt.

“I think sometimes it comes down to effort, want-to, fight, care,” Malone said. “And that group that we closed with, I thought they made the game interesting. It was fun to watch. … On a night when you’re not making shots, you have to do other things. And I think that group that was out there, we got stops, we rebounded, we ran, we executed.”

Jokic, Murray and Porter were the three starters who stayed on the floor.

“I give Coach some kudos, keeping the starters in there, keeping whoever’s playing hard in there,” Murray said, “and we were able to make it a game at least.”

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5889895 2023-12-09T08:43:43+00:00 2023-12-09T09:34:19+00:00
Nuggets nearly erase 25-point deficit in fourth quarter but lose first home game of season to Rockets https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/08/nuggets-rockets-jamal-murray-ejection-nikola-jokic-alperen-sengun/ Sat, 09 Dec 2023 04:51:16 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5889812 Mercifully for the Nuggets, they don’t have to play the Rockets anymore.

Four matchups in the first 23 games of the season? That’s more than enough. Three was enough. But in one last clash added to the schedule a week ago after they were eliminated from the in-season tournament, the Nuggets sputtered on offense for a half and defense for a quarter in a 114-106 loss to Houston on Friday night at Ball Arena.

Denver (14-9) trailed 103-78 with 8:26 remaining but mounted a miraculous 18-0 run to get within seven with three minutes remaining. The Nuggets had the ball with a chance to cut it to five, but Alperen Sengun’s chippy defense against Nikola Jokic forced a turnover with 2:32 left. Houston finally scored by getting to the line at the other end, and the Nuggets ran out of gas as Jokic waged war with the officiating crew for how Sengun was defending him in crunch time.

This was the Nuggets’ first home loss since Game 2 of the NBA Finals in June. It’s the first time they have ever lost a Western Conference home game with Jokic, Jamal Murray, Aaron Gordon and Michael Porter Jr. all playing. The Rockets snapped an 0-8 start away from home. They were the NBA’s last winless team on the road this season.

“I thought it was a low-energy night most of the night, to be honest,” Michael Malone said. “The whole arena was very low-energy. We were low energy. … That third quarter, we came out of halftime and just didn’t do anything. Either side of the ball.”

The Nuggets finish 1-3 against Houston in 2023-24.

They entered their 10th game at Ball Arena leading the league in offensive rating (125.3), shooting (52.3% from the field) and assist-to-turnover ratio (2.59) in home games. But none of that mattered in a first half that was sluggish offensively other than brief scoring burst from Murray. After opening a 14-7 lead, the Nuggets went on a three-minute scoring drought as Sengun engineered a 13-0 run. A cutting Peyton Watson bucket snapped the skid, but from there, Denver was playing from behind the rest of the night.

“We made it a game,” Murray said, identifying effort as the key to Denver’s turnaround. “This is one that I feel like we don’t have to be so down on.”

Sengun finished with 17 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists to aid Jalen Green’s 26 points, while Jokic’s struggles Wednesday in Los Angeles carried over in a 9-for-26 outing from the field. He went to the halftime locker room with one assist and a 1-for-10 shooting mark, having missed 20 of his last 22 shots and 31 of his last 38 going back to Wednesday.

His team was fortunate to be trailing only 52-48 in spite of that, thanks to a Kentavious Caldwell-Pope circus three to beat the halftime buzzer. But the Rockets worked Denver’s starters in a 40-point third quarter, shooting 14-for-18 from the field and 6-of-8 from 3-point range. The lead ballooned to 25 before Jokic finally got going and spurred the comeback with an 11-point fourth.

“A couple late rotations,” Murray said. “Give them credit. They played a really good game.”

On the night Nugget-turned-Rocket Jeff Green received his NBA championship ring in a pregame ceremony, Denver’s bench managed to hang with Houston’s. Watson, building on his recent defensive gems that garnered new trust from Michael Malone, led the second unit with 13 points, four rebounds and two assists. He earned his way onto the floor alongside Denver’s starters during the furious fourth-quarter comeback.

Porter and Murray both received technical fouls in the last four minutes after reacting angrily to foul calls. After Murray’s first technical with 41 seconds remaining, he thought he was fouled during Denver’s ensuing possession. He yelled at the referee, “That’s a foul!” and the referee waited for Porter to make a 3-pointer before stopping play and ejecting Murray. Porter’s three before the technical cut the deficit to 110-104.

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5889812 2023-12-08T21:51:16+00:00 2023-12-08T23:17:36+00:00
Nuggets Mailbag: How concerning is Denver’s poor free-throw shooting? https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/08/nuggets-free-throw-shooting-zeke-nnaji-minutes/ Fri, 08 Dec 2023 12:45:40 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5887780 Beat writer Bennett Durando opens up the Nuggets Mailbag periodically during the season. Pose a Nuggets- or NBA- related question here.

When does the free throw percentage become a serious concern? Almost everyone is shooting bricks.

— Danny, Denver

The way it’s concerning is more so the way it’s impacting physicality and confidence about getting to the line. It’s a team-wide issue, but the topic really begins and ends with Aaron Gordon. Michael Malone has said recently he wants Gordon to seek trips to the line more aggressively. Even though he has attempted the second-most free throws on Denver’s roster so far, Gordon’s trips to the line are down significantly from last year, when he was building a strong All-Star campaign.

He has attempted 50 foul shots in his first 18 games of 2023-24, making 26 of them. In 2022-23, he reached 50 attempts during his 13th game and had attempted 80 through 18 games. Gordon is an effective bully-ball scorer when he’s inviting and playing through contact. In those 18 games, he was 61.3% at the line, still not great but a wide margin better than his current 52%. By the turn of the calendar, he was averaging more than 17 points through 30 games. He’s closer to his career average right now at 13.1 per game.

It speaks to the wider trend that is the Nuggets’ inability to get to the stripe: They’re averaging the third-fewest foul shots per game as a team (19.5) and the fewest per game on the road (17.1), amounting to an NBA-worst 70.8% mark (69.4% on the road).

“We’re leaving a lot of points on the foul line,” Malone said. “And you’re in a lot of close games. Very rarely will you just blow teams out. So when games are close, it’s a one- or two-possession game, you don’t want to keep the opposing team in the game because of all these missed free throws. The hard thing is the schedule hasn’t really helped us get in the gym and have any practice, but I do know guys are getting in the gym individually and getting their reps in. And I hope that sooner or later, we’ll find a rhythm.”

Michael Porter Jr. is 5% below his career average; Reggie Jackson is 20% below his; Nikola Jokic is worse than 80% for the first time in his career, even after getting back on track recently. Kentavious Caldwell-Pope has been steady, and Jamal Murray’s presence should correct course for the team somewhat. Still, it’s harder to find a rhythm when you’re not frequently getting to the line to begin with.

So should Reggie Jackson be named to the All-NBA team? Before you say no, how could Murray be named (All-NBA) with similar stats? 

— Edward, via email

Well, the whole point is Murray couldn’t be named All-NBA with those stats right now. You’re referring to the fact that Jackson averaged 16.3 points in his 13 starts while replacing Murray, the exact same scoring total Murray was averaging before his return from multiple injuries Wednesday night. Not only that, but Jackson achieved that average on better shooting (53.8% from the field).

The point of the stat is to illustrate the commendable job Jackson did filling a void that, before this season, was probably fair to question whether he could handle. Murray is one of the best guards in the NBA, and Jackson was someone who wasn’t cracking Denver’s rotation during the playoffs a few months ago. It’s hard to overstate how timely his offensive resurgence has been.

That doesn’t mean 16.3 points per game are All-NBA numbers. Now that Murray is seemingly healthy, he faces a steep uphill battle if he wants to reach that achievement, both in terms of usage and statistics. Even before his hamstring injury in early November, he was excelling most as a play-maker, averaging a career-high 7.1 assists. I’m curious to see if that trend continues, and if so, whether it’s at the expense of higher scoring numbers.

Do you think Jackson’s scoring will start to fade now that he’s back with the second unit and won’t have as many opportunities with Jokic?

— Roger, Denver

I definitely don’t expect him to keep averaging 16, because he’s just not going to keep averaging 30 minutes. But I think the bench does need him to be semi-consistently in double figures. That’s where his value is highest. At the other end, he has defended against 220 field goal attempts through 22 games, which is 39th-most among NBA guards as of Thursday. Opponents are making 52.7% of those shots. Out of the 38 guards who have defended against more attempts, only one has a worse DFG% (Kyle Lowry).

For a volume comparison within Jackson’s own roster, Caldwell-Pope has defended against 219 shots, coming in right behind Jackson at 40th-most among guards. Only two who have faced more attempts have a better DFG% than Caldwell-Pope’s 42.9%: Nickiel Alexander-Walker (38.9% on 226) and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (40.8% on 277). KCP continues to share a shot-disrupting stratosphere with elite backcourt defenders such as Jrue Holiday (42.9% on 280 field goals defended), O.G. Anunoby (43.1% on 216) and Lu Dort (43.6% on 220).

When Jackson plays with Denver’s starters, he’s surrounded by a combination of exceptional defensive players (Caldwell-Pope, Gordon) and offensive players (Jokic, Porter). Everyone else on the floor helps maximize his strengths. When he spearheads the second unit — a collection of players whose primary job is to stave off opponents during Jokic’s rest minutes using hard-nosed defense — the scoring onus is on Jackson. He’s on the floor to provide points even if his defending isn’t on par with Christian Braun’s or Peyton Watson’s. There understandably isn’t as much of a flow to the bench unit’s half-court offense, either, so a point guard with Jackson’s particular gift of one-on-one shot creation can be essential.

What do you make of the Nnaji contract extension at the quarter-point of the season, now that he isn’t even part of the rotation?

— Lee, Golden 

Twenty-two games were never going to vindicate or condemn Nnaji’s contract, which was a preseason box to check among other things. The deal was agreed upon some 48 hours before the deadline for 2020 first-round picks entering the last year of their rookie scale deals to sign extensions.

It’s certainly not ideal for Nnaji to be relegated to third-string center nine weeks after inking a deal worth $32 million. He has been a DNP-Coach’s Decision three consecutive games, and in two of the previous four, he played fewer than four minutes. But I don’t think that’s for lack of effort or energy. I also don’t think it’s permanent.

The ebbs and flows of the season work like this. Rebounding was a mounting frustration for the Nuggets during their lull in November, and Nnaji has not progressed this season as a defensive rebounder. He has two defensive boards in his last eight games. Malone’s instinct is always to lean on veterans, but DeAndre Jordan is a two-time NBA rebounding title holder. Even in decline, Jordan understands how to use his size. It makes sense that he would be Malone’s reaction to a poor stretch on the glass for his team.

An average annual value of $8 million for Nnaji isn’t necessarily an overpay if you anticipate the salary cap increase on the horizon. For that reason, it’s also a very tradable contract.

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5887780 2023-12-08T05:45:40+00:00 2023-12-08T14:04:42+00:00
Nuggets Podcast: Handing out team awards at season’s quarter pole https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/07/nuggets-podcast-team-awards-quarter-pole/ Thu, 07 Dec 2023 12:45:59 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5887538

In the latest edition of the Nuggets Ink podcast, host Matt Schubert and beat writer Bennett Durando catch up prior to the Nuggets’ loss at the Los Angeles Clippers. Among the topics discussed:

  • The fellas catch up on a few superlatives at the quarter point of the season for the Nuggets. What’s the best win of the season to date? Worst loss? Biggest surprise? Biggest disappointment?
  • What’s the verdict on the NBA In Season Tournament? Is this a win for the league? Worth keeping around? Does anyone really want the medals that go to the winning team? Did the Nuggets at all regret not qualifying for the quarterfinals?
  • Is it already time to declare Jamal Murray’s All-NBA chances dead given all of his missed games?
  • We found out Peyton Watson, Julian Strawther and Christian Braun all live in the same apartment complex. So which one is Kramer?

Subscribe to the podcast
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Producer: AAron Ontiveroz
Music: “The Last Dragons” by Schama Noel

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5887538 2023-12-07T05:45:59+00:00 2023-12-07T06:38:46+00:00
Nikola Jokic has career-worst shooting performance as Nuggets fall to Clippers in Jamal Murray’s return https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/06/nikola-jokic-worst-career-shooting-percentage-nuggets-clippers/ Thu, 07 Dec 2023 05:47:02 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5887418 No Lob City vintage magic this time for the Nuggets.

Nine days after going into Los Angeles and beating the Clippers without Nikola Jokic, Jamal Murray or Aaron Gordon, the Nuggets lost 111-102 with all three in the lineup Wednesday.

Denver (14-8) hosts the Rockets on Friday in another rescheduled game for teams eliminated from the in-season tournament.

A Jokic low point

Usually, when Nikola Jokic’s rest minutes are shaky for the Nuggets and the game is closer than they’d like, the two-time MVP re-enters the game and everything fixes itself.

Not this time. Jokic missed more shots than he had ever missed in a single game in his NBA career, finishing 9-for-32 from the field including a stretch of nine consecutive misses in the second quarter, also matching a career-worst streak.

His night spiraled in spite of a promising start in the one area where he has struggled this season: the perimeter. His first two attempts of the game were made 3-pointers, seemingly getting him back on track (he entered the game at a career-low 30.1% beyond the arc).

Ultimately, Jokic still registered his ninth triple-double of 2023-24 by picking up his 10th assist late in the game, but this was arguably his worst — or at minimum his least efficient — game in years.

Porter’s early rhythms

The way Denver rotates its lineups will inevitably have some impact on this — the bench unit carries the first few minutes of the second quarter — but there has been a trend of Michael Porter Jr. getting off to a hot start then falling off his scoring paces when he returns to the floor. The latest: An 11-point first frame followed by a scoreless second in which he barely touched the ball.

This time, he maintained his consistent touch whenever he had the chance, finishing with 18 points and nine rebounds on 7-of-8 shooting. But for a heat-check scorer such as himself who’s at his best when he’s in a rhythm, his sudden all-to-nothing disappearances within a single half have been noticeable on several occasions this season.

Last Friday in Phoenix, he shot 5-for-6 in the first quarter for 10 points, then didn’t score in the second while attempting only one shot. Five days earlier against the Spurs, he had a line of 12-2-2 after one quarter then only added three points without another rebound in the second. In another premier game against Golden State, he had 10 in the first then two in the second on 1-of-4 shooting.

Sometimes it’s a matter of Porter going cold after resting, other times Denver maybe not involving him enough in the offense. But either way, when Porter gets going, ideally that should keep up. Not coincidentally, a 15-point Nuggets lead became a nine-point deficit in the second quarter Wednesday.

Murray looked fresh

After missing the last two games and 13 of Denver’s last 14, Murray was back in the lineup, his hamstring and ankle injuries seemingly behind him. His encouraging night was a bright spot for the Nuggets, as he amassed 23 points and six assists with just one turnover. He played 22 minutes last week against Houston, but this time the Nuggets tested him a bit more with almost 30 minutes.

This was the Nuggets’ first game since Nov. 4 vs. Chicago that their full starting five played. Both Murray and Aaron Gordon (heel strain) had missed recent games. Denver went with a 10-man lineup in its healthiest game in a month.

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5887418 2023-12-06T22:47:02+00:00 2023-12-06T22:47:02+00:00
Jamal Murray ankle injury update: Nuggets point guard questionable for Clippers game https://www.denverpost.com/2023/12/05/jamal-murray-ankle-injury-update-nuggets-clippers-game-reggie-jackson/ Tue, 05 Dec 2023 21:47:58 +0000 https://www.denverpost.com/?p=5885697 Nuggets point guard Jamal Murray participated in parts of the team’s practice Tuesday, coach Michael Malone said, but not in any live portions.

Murray will fly with the Nuggets to Los Angeles, where they will evaluate how his ankle is feeling Wednesday morning and determine whether he’s able to play against the Clippers (8 p.m. MT, ESPN).

“If he’s able to give us some minutes tomorrow night, that’d be great,” Malone said.

Murray’s official injury report designation recently has been a right ankle sprain. He’s missed Denver’s last two games after turning the ankle two minutes and 19 seconds into his first game back from a right hamstring strain last Wednesday. He had been out 11 games due to the hamstring, but Malone confirmed that’s no longer an issue; any absence for Murray is entirely related to his ankle now.

“Hamstring’s fine. I’ve worked enough to get it back to strength,” Murray said after his return last week, frustrated by the immediate setback to his health. “Now it’s just another thing.”

If the 26-year-old point guard misses five more games this regular season, he will be ineligible for end-of-year accolades such as All-NBA teams, thereby also rendering him unable to sign a supermax contract during the 2024 offseason. He was eligible for a three-year, $145 million extension last offseason that would have started in 2025-26, but no such extension was signed.

Murray needs to achieve All-NBA honors for the first time in his career to become supermax-eligible. Under the NBA’s new collective bargaining agreement, All-NBA teams are no longer divided by position starting this season, seemingly increasing Murray’s chances in a crowded competition of elite guards — if he can stay healthy.

So far without Murray, the Nuggets (14-7) have gone 7-6 using Reggie Jackson as their starting point guard. During those 13 starts, Jackson has averaged 16.3 points, 5.3 assists, 2.8 rebounds and 1.9 turnovers on 53.8% shooting (44.4% from 3-point range). Murray has also averaged 16.3 points in his eight games this season, but on 41.4% shooting.

If the starter misses Wednesday’s game at the Clippers, the silver lining is that Jackson’s former teams seem to be his specialty: Last week he registered his fourth career 35-point game along with 13 assists to lead the Nuggets to a gutsy win in Los Angeles without Murray, Nikola Jokic or Aaron Gordon in the lineup. Jackson has upped his game for 24.7 points on 68.9% shooting and 7.7 assists in three games against his former teams (the Clippers and Pistons) this season.

“You have to give Reggie Jackson (credit). I can’t say enough great things,” Malone said. “Just look at Reggie’s numbers on the season and the last five. What he’s doing is just incredible. His efficiency with Nikola and (DeAndre Jordan) in pick-and-rolls. His efficiency in terms of shooting the basketball. Could not be more proud of Reggie and the way he’s played, whether it’s behind Jamal or starting in place of Jamal. So if Jamal’s ready, great. If not, we’ll continue to find ways to go out there and compete.”

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5885697 2023-12-05T14:47:58+00:00 2023-12-05T16:29:37+00:00