For years, the Denver Nuggets have searched in vain for a reliable backup to Nikola Jokić—someone who could hold the fort during those critical “non-Jokić minutes” and provide true interior presence off the bench. That long-standing problem may finally be over. Jonas Valančiūnas, the Lithuanian veteran center, is officially on board, and Denver may have just made the smartest move of their offseason.

Valančiūnas revealed in a Monday morning interview with BasketNews that he’s fully committed to the Nuggets and ready to honor his contract with championship ambitions. After brief speculation about his future and rumored European interest, JV cleared the air and made it crystal clear: he’s here to win in Denver.

The Best Backup Jokić Has Ever Had

Let’s not understate it—this is the best backup center Nikola Jokić has ever played with.

Standing at 6’11” and weighing 265 poundsValančiūnas brings brute strength, elite rebounding instincts, and a veteran IQ that perfectly complements Denver’s system. While he may no longer be in his prime—where he regularly posted 17 points and 12 rebounds per game—the Nuggets don’t need that version of him.

What they do need is exactly what JV offers now: reliable minutes, physicality, and competence.

Over his 13-year NBA career, Valančiūnas has averaged 13.1 points and 9.3 rebounds, including a five-season stretch of double-doubles with Memphis and New Orleans. Despite his declining offensive role in recent years, he has remained incredibly durable, playing 81 games last season and a full 82 the year prior.

image_687efdae3cc53 Nikola Jokic Finally Has the "Right Hand" He's Been Waiting for His Entire Nuggets Career

Solving the Nuggets’ Biggest Weakness

For a team that boasts arguably the best player in the world, the Nuggets’ Achilles heel has always been what happens when Jokić sits.

Denver’s bench lineups have frequently collapsed without their Serbian superstar on the court, forcing Jokić to log heavy minutes deep into the postseason. With Valančiūnas stepping into the backup role, the Nuggets finally have someone who can stabilize the second unit—something they’ve never had consistently.

And while no one expects JV to replicate Jokić’s otherworldly playmaking, he’s no slouch as a passer. Nuggets assistant coach David Adelman recently hinted at exploring Jonas in a “point-center lite” role, giving the offense some flow and keeping Denver’s ball movement alive in Jokić’s absence.

Even if Adelman’s comments are optimistic, Valančiūnas brings essential qualities:

Low-post scoring

Elite rebounding

Screen-setting toughness

Paint presence on defense

He won’t anchor an offense, but he’ll make opponents pay on the boards and hold his own in the paint, which is all Denver needs.

A Championship-Or-Bust Window for Valančiūnas

What makes this moment even more compelling is Valančiūnas’s personal urgency.

At 33, he knows this might be his last real shot at an NBA championship. With a team option looming next summer, and his own admission that he may soon return to Europe to be closer to familyJV’s time in Denver could be short—but hugely significant.

He’s stepping into a locker room loaded with talent, chemistry, and expectations. The Nuggets still feature the core of Jokić, Jamal Murray, Michael Porter Jr., and Aaron Gordon—a group that’s already proven they can go the distance.

Now, they have the depth piece they desperately needed.

From Wasted Years to a Winning Culture

Valančiūnas’s past few seasons in New Orleans were filled with unrealized potential, constant rotations, and disappointing finishes. Though he still put up solid numbers, he was stuck on teams that lacked identity and structure.

That changes in Denver.

Here, he joins a franchise with a championship culture, elite coaching, and clearly defined roles. He doesn’t have to be a star. He just has to show up, battle in the paint, and give Jokić the rest he needs to stay fresh for the playoffs.

And make no mistake—this isn’t a pity role. Denver needs Jonas to succeed. Their path to a second title runs through bench stability, and JV’s presence turns their biggest question mark into a possible strength.

Jokić and Valančiūnas: A Formidable Frontcourt Duo

While they won’t spend much time on the court together, the partnership between Jokić and Valančiūnas might become one of the NBA’s most underrated stories this season.

Jokić, notoriously selfless, has long shouldered a disproportionate load because of Denver’s lack of reliable big men. With JV now beside him—ready to bruise bodies and eat minutes—it finally gives Denver’s MVP the right-hand enforcer he’s never had.

In some ways, Jonas is the anti-Jokić stylistically: less finesse, more force. But that contrast may be exactly what Denver’s bench has needed all along.

image_687efdae73566 Nikola Jokic Finally Has the "Right Hand" He's Been Waiting for His Entire Nuggets Career

Final Thoughts: Championship Chemistry Incoming?

The signing of Jonas Valančiūnas won’t dominate headlines like a blockbuster trade or superstar signing—but it might be the most quietly impactful move of the offseason.

In Valančiūnas, the Nuggets finally have:

reliable backup to Jokić

seasoned veteran with playoff experience

hungry player chasing his first ring

perfect physical presence to grind out tough minutes

This move checks every box for Denver’s second unit, and more importantly, it may give Jokić his best chance to defend his MVP title and add another championship to his legacy.

After years of carrying the load solo, Nikola Jokić finally has the “right hand” he’s been waiting for—someone strong enough, smart enough, and hungry enough to fight for gold.

Denver, beware. The Jokić-Valančiūnas tandem might be the underrated duo that powers the Nuggets back to the top of the mountain.