Denver, CO
Keeler: Nuggets’ Bruce Brown should call Nazem Kadri. Ask him if money was worth leaving Denver’s newest dynasty.

A year ago Thursday, Nazem Kadri put Tampa on ice. Last week, a columnist in Calgary called Kadri a snowflake.
Before you do anything, Bruce Brown, before you go anywhere, before you sign anything, we beseech you:
Call Naz.
Josh Kroenke’s got the number, somewhere. Probably.
Ask Kadri if, knowing what he knows now, he’d have still taken the money last summer over another ride — or two, or three — with a dynasty in Colorado.
Ask him if he misses Denver.
Ask him if he misses Ball Arena. If he misses that locker room. All that speed. All those legends.
Ask him if he misses the view from a Mile High.
Parades rock. But once that hangover clears, it’s business time. And Brown, the NBA champion Nuggets’ 6-foot-4, no-B.S. do-everything swingman, the glue that bonded a long-suffering franchise’s first-ever title team, made the business decision Wednesday we’d all expected, declining his player option and officially entering free agency.
Look, if someone pulls up to the crib with a Brink’s truck and dumps $50-$60 million guaranteed on your lawn, no questions asked, just sign here, hey … we get it. We understand. Generational wealth should linger for decades, but as an athlete/entertainer, the windows in which to snatch it are short and precious.
Go get that bag, BB.
Just, ya know, call Naz first. Please.
Ask him about life on the other side. Ask him expectations when you show up in a new town with a ring on your finger and gazillions stuffed into your back pocket.
From their early regular-season clinching to their postseason dominance (The Avalanche went 16-4 in the postseason in ’22, same as the Nuggets a year later) to their charm, to their maddening inability to be seen on TV by the very locals who love them, the back-to-back championship runs by the Avs and Nugs shared all kinds of parallels.
Brown became the Nuggets’ Kadri, just as Kadri was the Avs’ Brown. Tough. Smart. Clutch. Fearless. Fun. Playoff gold. Cult legends. Fan favorites.
Both were vets who slotted in perfectly behind a wave of stars, only to become stars themselves. And both put together career years for title winners just as they had a chance to hit the open market.
Kadri set himself up for life, landing a seven-year, $49-million deal from Calgary with an $11 million signing bonus at the age of 31. The man deserved every penny, and the Avs were tapped out. He knew it. The Kroenkes knew it. Everybody knew it.
But after an All-Star appearance with the Flames, the last two months in Alberta started to veer off the rails. Kadri reportedly clashed with veteran coach Darryl Sutter, forcing fans, media, and Calgary brass to take sides.
Although for said brass, when one guy has a guaranteed contract worth $49 million, there’s only one side — the coach has gotta go. Sutter was canned on May 1, replaced by the chummier Ryan Huska.
The Calgary Sun’s Rick Bell responded by branding the anti-Sutter camp as “snowflakes,” and referred to Kadri in a piece published June 13, as a “guy scoring much more at the bank than in the net.” Fun.
And have you seen your most likely suitors, Bruce? As of two weeks ago, the six NBA teams projected to have more than $30 million of cap room to play with this summer were the Rockets, Magic, Spurs, Jazz, Pistons and Thunder. Blecccch.
Seriously, man. Call Naz.
The Nuggets will be fine. More than fine. We’re only one chapter into The Christian Braun Story, and it’s a page-turner. Peyton Watson is 6-foot-7 with a 7-foot wingspan. Calvin Booth is already breathing down Joe Sakic’s neck for the title of best roster-builder in town.
The next decision that blows up in Calvin’s face will be the first. Nikola Jokic might be the express ticket to a hangover in Vegas, but when it comes to the craps table, I’m riding the Booth train to moneytown.
Brown’s riding the money train, regardless — it’s just a matter of whether he wants that payday now or later.
Because when you do call Naz, BB, be sure to explain to him how the NBA allows for some salary-cap loopholes that the NHL doesn’t. Tell him about Bobby Portis in Milwaukee.
How Portis also found his niche as the spark off a champions’ bench two years ago, and the fit was so right, he eschewed the bigger payday immediately somewhere else to ride alongside a superstar (Giannis Antetokounmpo) with Hall-of-Fame bona fides. It took some planning and more opt-outs, but Portis eventually landed a four-year deal with the Bucks for $48.6 million over four years.
How ‘bout that, cowboy? A bag and Jokic. A bag and more rings. A bag and more parades. On a team with no drama. In a place where the only snowflakes in June are the ones that fall at 14,000 feet, from the summit of champions.

Denver, CO
Prolonged ‘Welly weather,’ our first taste of winter and Lisa’s official first-snow prediction for Denver

Lisa Hidalgo and Ryan Warner were ready to bust out the rain boots for their September weather and climate chat.
Denver7’s chief meteorologist and the Colorado Public Radio host delved into a rare, days-long rainy stretch, our first taste of winter and the pair’s official first-snow-date prediction for Denver.
‘Welly weather’
“Two things happened this week that rarely happen in Colorado,” Warner said. “The first is that when I went to bed it was raining. I woke up and it was raining. And two, the rain meant I could wear my ‘Wellies,’ my Wellington boots.”
“These are rare events,” the green-rubber-boot-clad Warner quipped during the conversation.
Warner and Hidalgo held their conversation on the heels of an unusually rainy spell. In Colorado, rain storms often come and go quickly. This week’s rainfall, though, came during a slow-moving storm.
“It’s more the direction of it and where it camps out,” Hidalgo explained. “So as you get a low pressure system rolling through the state, and we get all this moisture that wraps around the back side of it, it jams up against the foothills. It’s called an upslope flow.”
In the winter, such a storm would’ve meant inches of snow in Denver. With September highs in the 50s, though, it came down as rain in town as it snowed in the high country.
First taste of winter
The National Weather Service in Boulder estimated Tuesday that “a widespread 5-10 inches” of snow fell at the highest elevations – above 10,500 to 11,000 feet – during the September 22-23 storm.
For the snow-lovers out there (keep scrolling if that’s not you)…
Some healthy snowfall over the past ~18 hrs for some of our higher elevations (mainly east of the Continental Divide above 10,500′).
Pictured: Dakota Hill (Gilpin Co; left); Killpecker (Larimer Co; right) #COwx pic.twitter.com/46surChItd
— NWS Boulder (@NWSBoulder) September 24, 2025
Hidalgo noted things would quickly warm up after what was the area’s first winter weather advisory of the season.
“But this is just a hint of what’s to come,” she said. “And, obviously, we’re going to see a lot more alerts as we get into fall and into winter.”
When will Denver see its first measurable snow?
On average, the first snowfall in Denver happens on Oct. 18. The window has already passed for our earliest first snow, which happened on Sept. 3. The latest first snow in Denver is Dec. 10 – Lisa’s birthday.
With all of that in consideration, Hidalgo predicted this year’s first snow in Denver would fall on Oct. 24.
Warner’s guess? A potentially soggy evening of trick-or-treating after an Oct. 29 first snow.
More weather in-depth
Lisa and Ryan touched on studies on potential connections between both lightning and snowmelt on Colorado’s year-round fire season. They also discussed a study that suggests the eastern half of Colorado is drying out faster than the western half.
For more in-depth weather analysis, watch their full weather and climate chat in the video player below:
Denver, CO
Denver Zoo animals don’t just do tricks, they help vets with their own healthcare
Denver, CO
Some Park Hill residents feel Denver is failing on minority outreach in golf course discussion

Saturday morning at Park Hill’s Hiawatha Davis Recreation Center, the City of Denver held a community open house to talk about its next big project: the city park and open space that was formerly the Park Hill Golf Course.
“It’s quite rare for a city to have this large of a park coming in. So it’s really important to us that that process is driven by the community,” said Sarah Showalter, director of planning and policy at the city’s Department of Community Planning and Development.
Residents got to see the plans for the park and the future the city has in store for the surrounding neighborhood.
“The voters clearly said that 155 acres should be a park, but the community is still looking for access to food and to affordable housing,” said Jolon Clark, executive director of Denver Parks and Recreation.
It seemed to be a good turnout, which the city likes, but two groups that appeared to be underrepresented were Black and Latino people, which is a problem, since Park Hill is a historically Black neighborhood.
Helen Bradshaw is a lifelong Park Hill resident. She and Vincent Owens, another long-time resident, came to the open house and said the problem is simple: the city isn’t meeting the neighbors of color where they are.
“The people who are just the average go to work, they might be at work or they have to work today or, you know, they couldn’t get a babysitter or something like that,” Owens said. “A lot of the elders on my block, they’re not going to come to something like this. So, you need to canvass and actually go get the voice of opinion, or they don’t know about it.”
Bradshaw and Owens say they want a neighborhood park and space for the neighbors by the neighbors. They also want a grocery store and opportunities for people who were part of the neighborhood long before it became a gem for development.
The city says that’s what they want as well, and that’s why they want everyone in Park Hill to give their input until the project is done.
“People can go to ParkHillPark.org and they can fully get involved and find out what the next engagement is, how to provide their input, you know, through an email, through a survey,” said Clark.