Nuggets survive Jusuf Nurkic’s big night for 119-111 win over Suns

They needed to fend off a second-half surge from the Phoenix Suns, but the Denver Nuggets held on Friday in Phoenix for a 119-111 win over one of the top contenders in the West. Denver (14-6) shot 57% from the field and only turned the ball over nine times to win its fourth consecutive game.

Next is the end of a road back-to-back Saturday at Sacramento. Jokic v. Nurkic As of late, the assists have been piling up for Nikola Jokic. He matched a career-high with 18 in New Orleans two weeks ago, and he has now averaged 12 in his last five games since getting ejected in Detroit.

The first half in Phoenix was the clearest example so far this season of Jokic opting to fully be a distributor over a scorer. He had a unique line of six points (four shot attempts), two rebounds and 10 assists at halftime.

Things changed in the third quarter. Jokic and former teammate Jusuf Nurkic started to go at it in an old-school, physical post battle at both ends. Jokic attempted nine shots in the quarter, starting 4 for 5 before missing his last four as Phoenix rallied. More pressingly, he was inconsistent at defending Nurkic, who amassed a season-high 31 points on 13-of-22 shooting on the night. But the Joker got the last laugh.

Leading 114-111 and needing a late stop, he caught an elbow in the face from his counterpart. The offensive foul was reviewed and upgraded to a flagrant, fouling Nurkic out with 45 seconds remaining.

Jokic made one of two ensuing foul shots and a driving layup with 24 seconds left, effectively ending the game as Nurkic watched. Jokic finished with 21 points and 16 dimes.

Absences are revealing regarding minutes Michael Malone has said openly this season that his instinct when needing a win is to turn to his veterans more than his inexperienced players.

Case in point was Denver’s front-court on Friday. Zeke Nnaji was not part of Malone’s nine-man rotation, even though there was plenty of room for him with Aaron Gordon (heel strain) missing his third consecutive game. Michael Porter Jr. started at the four again while DeAndre Jordan backed up Jokic at the five, but interestingly, the Nuggets did lean heavily on Peyton Watson to match up on Kevin Durant.

After a 22-point first half in which Durant looked as un-guardable as ever, Watson and company did a respectable job bottling him up by disrupting his shots just enough. He shot 0-for-10 from the field in the second half.

 

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