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Under the bright lights in Dallas, the axis of the entire season seemed to tilt. Jamal Murray limped toward the bench, his right ankle throbbing, and Denver’s offense—usually operating like Swiss machinery thanks to the chemistry between him and Nikola Jokić—suddenly lost rhythm. The camera panned to the worried face of head coach David Adelman, then back to Murray’s grimace. And one question rose above everything: how long can the Nuggets withstand wave after wave of injuries before the foundation begins to crack?
Jokić remains the engine—an endless machine turning every possession into a symphony: a handoff turning into a layup, high-post reads slicing apart double-teams, backdoor cuts he seems to invent on the spot. His numbers—29 points, 12.8 rebounds, 11.1 assists on 62.1% FG—paint a perfect picture of control.
But even a masterpiece needs a frame.
And the frame is shaking.
Murray’s ankle injury adds more weight to an already long injury report. Before going down, Murray was having the best season of his career with 24 points and 6.8 assists per game, elevating the two-man game with Jokić that terrifies drop coverage and switch defenses alike. Without his pull-up threat and late-game poise, Denver must rewrite its entire end-game script—trading certainty for fragile improvisation.
Aaron Gordon’s absence due to a hamstring strain strips Denver of its best wing defender and one of its most important spacing threats. His cuts and presence in the dunker spot always stretch defenses. Without him, opponents freely load up on Jokić, stunting aggressively without fearing punishment at the rim.
Christian Braun’s ankle injury means the Nuggets lose the “glue” of their system—strong pick-and-roll defense, smart off-ball movement, and the ability to salvage broken possessions. With his return pushed to January, the bench is forced into immediate role changes that may or may not work.
Coach Adelman said bluntly after the game:
“If Murray asks out, that means it really hurts.”
The implication: adjustments can’t just be cosmetic.
Denver must rediscover scoring solutions against switches without its best guard creator; and the defense must be solid enough to survive winter road trips with two top perimeter defenders sidelined.
The numbers are brutal: three starters missing in week six means nearly half of the salary cap’s value vanishes from the rotation each night, along with 43% of the team’s regular scoring.
And that’s not just stats—it’s structure.
Who creates? Who rebounds? Who stops the other team’s best player?

Jokić can carry more, but that brings traps: more double-teams, more contact, more pressure. Denver can counter with empty-side pick-and-rolls, expanded weak-side spacing to punish taggers, and inverted handoffs to break matchups.
From here, the supporting cast is no longer the background—they are the story:
Spencer Jones shining when Murray exits—hinting at a shifting role.
Peyton Watson getting more minutes to inject energy and speed.
Cam Johnson, if used properly, stretching the floor.
Tim Hardaway getting increased self-creation reps.
Every minute must have purpose.
Tactically speaking:
– Stagger Jokić with “shooter-heavy” lineups to maximize passing windows.
– Use defensive length in the second half to sustain leads.
– Add Spain P&R to punish overhelp.
– Use go-screens to avoid switches and open early rolls.
Defensively, missing Gordon and Braun forces adjustments:
– More nail help from the wings.
– Selective switching to keep Jokić near the paint.
– Short 2–3 zone bursts to break rhythm.
– Rebounding becomes life-or-death—one extra box-out per quarter can decide games.
In clutch time, the offensive identity must change. Without Murray, Denver must manufacture opportunities through sequencing, not hero-ball: early drag screens, duck-ins to pull defenders, weak-side flares. The goal isn’t highlights—it’s repeatable two-point possessions.
The schedule gets tougher. A 14–6 start can evaporate quickly with travel fatigue and nightly lineup changes. Jokić’s consistency has carried Denver through chaos before, but the coming stretch will test their principles: spacing, passes per possession, paint touches.
Individual awards are context, not purpose. They only matter with wins and seeding. If Jokić increases his numbers, they must come with maintained defense and reduced turnovers. “Empty” stats don’t feed playoff success.
Solutions remain:
– “Ghost” sets for Gordon: fake cuts, baseline action, crash & catch.
– Split Braun’s role between two players—one defensive, one transition.
– Lean on collective IQ—Denver’s greatest weapon.
The strategic vision is clear:
Survive December with discipline.
Wait for reinforcements in January.
Then rebuild the original structure.
The concern isn’t whether Jokić can carry—he absolutely can. The question is whether Denver can maintain its identity while waiting for the stars to heal.
Possession by possession, adjustment by adjustment, they must hold their shape. If they do, the standings will reflect who they are—not who they’re missing.
A quote that shocked the entire basketball world
The words echoed beyond the Denver hardwood:
“If he comes, that means they don’t need me.”
Nikola Jokić—the cornerstone of the Nuggets—said it with a calmness completely opposite to its explosive impact. In a league where every superstar word can become a national headline, the quote instantly detonated across media, locker rooms, and fan forums worldwide.
Jokić is private, quiet, almost drama-proof. Yet this time, his sentence sparked a storm of questions:
– Who is “he”?
– What is Jokić worried about?
– Does this hint at tension inside the Denver locker room?
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