Denver, CO
Keeler: Nuggets’ Christian Braun wants to start. Michael Malone should let him.
Like a good ranch dip, Christian Braun goes with anything. And anyone.
He runs through screens the way the Kool-Aid Man used to run through walls. He cuts to the rim like a Ginsu knife through a block of frozen spinach. He finishes Russell Westbrook pitches with grace and Nikola Jokic lobs with rage.
When Nuggets general manager Calvin Booth says he has seven starters, that includes Braun, who’s done everything asked — and more — to fill Kentavious Caldwell-Pope’s Nikes.
“If everyone’s healthy,” I asked Braun last week, waving at the empty locker stalls of Aaron Gordon and Westbrook, “do you care whether or not you start?”
He does.
“I’m not going to sit here and say I don’t care. I do care,” Braun told me. “I do want that job. That’s the job I compete for and compete for every day. It’s a competition every day. But that doesn’t change my approach.”
And if Nuggets coach Michael Malone wants to keep this party going, he won’t change his starting five once Beastbrook’s left hamstring is healed up.
Denver (36-19), which hosts Charlotte (13-39) on Thursday to open up the post-All-Star-Break stretch run, hasn’t lost since Braun went back into the starting lineup on Feb. 1.
They’re 7-0 this month. Since resuming a starter’s role because of Westbrook’s hammy, CB’s been averaging 20 points, eight boards, four assists, two steals and roughly one 3-pointer.
Sure, the Nuggets’ opponents haven’t exactly been world-beaters — they’ve seen the Pelicans twice, Blazers twice and the Hornets once. And yeah, context matters. At the same time, 20 and eight is 20 and eight.
“It’s not up to me,” Braun continued. “That’s a coaching decision, and I trust whatever the coach’s decision is every night.
“I don’t know. It doesn’t matter — start, come off the bench. If they choose for me to come off the bench, then that’s what’s best for the team. If they choose me to start, then that’s what’s best for the team. It doesn’t really matter, in my opinion. That’s their decision. My job is to come out and play good basketball every night.”
The Nuggets let KCP walk and challenged Braun, already an elite, emphatic closer at the rim, to step up his spot-up game, especially from the wings. So far, so good. Per NBA.com tracking data, only Peyton Watson (14) has nailed more treys this season from the left corner than Braun’s 12 on the Nuggets’ roster.
And while CB’s 36.2% make rate on corner 3s (17 for 47) trails fellow guards Westbrook (45.2), Watson (45.3) and Julian Strawther (50.0), it’s also a jump of more than five percentage points off his accuracy on corner treys last season (31.0).
With Jokic, Jamal Murray and Michael Porter Jr. green-lit to fire at will, the other two spots in the starting five have to be crazy efficient on the offensive end in order to hold up their ends of the table. We already know the kind of havoc Aaron Gordon can wreak from the “dunker” spot. The bar for Braun is to try and replicate KCP’s accuracy on those corner 3s, and he’s been creeping closer by the month — Caldwell-Pope was a 42.1% shooter on corner treys during the ’23-24 regular season and a 40.7% converter in ’22-23.
“Never an easy decision,” Malone said last month when asked about moving Braun to the bench. “I think the Russ-and-Nikola (Jokic) dynamic is the best two-man combination in the NBA right now, and I didn’t want to disrupt their rhythm. Knowing that CB, whether he comes off the bench and plays 29 minutes like he did tonight or he starts, he’s going to give us the same thing every night. We need that. … I applaud CB’s understanding of what we’re trying to do.”
And you get it. The Nuggets are 19-8 (.704) when Westbrook starts, 17-11 (.607) when he doesn’t. It’s about the big man, and Westbrook and Jokic looked practically telepathic in January. Russ is a future Hall-of-Famer, a veteran with a national cache. His ability to bring the ball up the floor theoretically lightens the load on Murray, who needs to be right as a shooter for this train to reach those elevated stations in May and June.
Although let’s be real about this, too: Everybody looks better playing with the Joker. Everybody. Heck, Ronnie 2K would look better playing with Jokic. According to NBA.com, the Nuggets’ three-man lineup of Joker-Murray-Braun has put up a better Offensive Rating (127.9) and Net Rating (plus-10.8) than Jokic-Murray-Westbrook (125.6 and plus-9.9) as a trio.
“If I come off the bench or if I do start, I’m still approaching the game the same way,” Braun said. “I’m not going to change who I am as a player. I’m not going to force anything. I’m going to continue to be who I am every single day, every single game, regardless if I start or come off the bench.
“But I’d be lying if I told you that didn’t (matter).”
At least he’s honest. Malone should be, too. And leave things where they are.
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Denver, CO
Swan, dragon and duck boats are back pedaling around City Park
Pedal boats are back at City Park in Denver this week and they come in more shapes than just swans.
On Wednesday, the city of Denver opened its newest so-called Adventure Hub where visitors can rent gear to enjoy on Ferril Lake. That includes pedal boats shaped like swans, dragons, ducks and flamingos, as well as kayaks, canoes and stand-up paddleboards. If you’d rather pedal on land instead of the water, the hub also has beach cruiser bikes and surrey bikes, which hold up to six people, available for rent.
City Park’s Adventure Hub is the second to open this year, following another at Washington Park in early June. Stephanie Figueroa, spokesperson for Denver Parks and Recreation, said rentals were supposed to start sooner at City Park, but that the electricity powering the point-of-sale system needed to be replaced after a fire at the historic bandshell there.
Water sport rentals cost range from $15 per hour for a SUP or single-person kayak to $35 per hour for swan, dragon and duck pedal boats, which fit up to four people. Bikes are similarly priced at $15 per hour for a single-person beach cruiser up to $45 per hour for a surrey “stretch limousine” for six riders. Figueroa noted that it is a flat fee and not a per-person charge.
“For families, as long as you fit, you can go,” she said, adding that gear is available for rent during the City Park Jazz series this summer.
This year marks the first time in at least two decades that Denver officials have managed gear rentals in City Park. The city ended its longtime contract with vendor Wheel Fun Rentals, which previously supplied things like swan pedal boats, in early 2026 after more than 20 years, Figueroa said.
Denver’s decision to take over operations was both more cost-effective and enabled the city to have more control over the experience, she added. Part of the impetus was a recent initiative called the Outdoor Adventure and Alternative Sports Strategic Plan, which sought to identify how Denver could offer more recreation opportunities to residents.
“That gave us the tools and knowledge to bring this in-house,” Figueroa said. “We have historically been amazing at indoor recreation and now we want to bring more of those opportunities outside.”
The Adventure Hub at City Park is open every day from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., while the one at Washington Park is open every day from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. They are both closed on city-observed holidays.
Another Adventure Hub, currently under construction at Ruby Hill, is expected to open late this year or early next, Figueroa said.
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Denver, CO
RTD considers ending Denver’s 16th Street FreeRide shuttle due to budget issues
Downtown Denver’s 16th Street FreeRide service is a staple. In fact, more than 2 million people hop on every year. Now, the service could be in jeopardy as RTD tries to figure out ways to fix its $200 million budget deficit.
“The demand for the FreeRide is at the highest level it’s been since the pandemic, and it’s the cheapest service that we run in terms of per passenger cost,” RTD board member Chris Nicholson said.
Nicholson was shocked when staff made budget suggestions that would end the FreeRide service, one of the highest ridership lines in the system.
Not to mention, 70% of RTD’s budget comes from sales tax, and downtown Denver is one of the biggest economic engines in the district.
“We are so caught up in the conversation about cuts across the entire region that that opportunity for conversation with the downtown community really didn’t get the chance to happen, and a lot of people were surprised to see that in there,” Nicholson added.
For him, the proposal is personal. Nicholson says he uses the service daily.
“When I need to go up to Union Station, when I need to go to meet somebody for coffee, when I need to get groceries,” Nicholson said.
CBS Colorado took a trip using FreeRide to hear from passengers.
“Gone out drinking, out eating, back and forth from the hotels,” said one passenger visiting downtown for a work conference. “So yeah, it’s been useful for that.”
While some riders use it for leisure, others say they depend on it.
“I use it for transportation to Union Station to get to and from doctor’s appointments to and from work is actually one of the reasons why I chose to live downtown,” downtown resident Jovelle Brown said.
And with millions of riders, the numbers speak for themselves.
“I’ll be at City Hall fighting against the proposal,” Brown added.
“We need to look at this from the perspective of the communities we operate in, and I think that those communities made their voices heard on this one,” Nicholson said.
A spokesperson for Mayor Mike Johnston’s office told CBS Colorado, “We are deeply sympathetic to RTD’s budget situation, but cutting a popular service used hundreds of thousands of times a month and millions of times a year isn’t the answer. As RTD itself noted recently, the 16th Street FreeRide is vital to supporting downtown and fills a crucial need in helping people navigate between Civic Center Station and Union Station at no cost. It’s the kind of thing we need more of if we want people to use public transportation, not less.
“We know RTD shares in our affection for this service as well as our belief that Denverites and visitors alike deserve cost-efficient and safe public transportation, and we look forward to working together as this process unfolds.”
Denver, CO
Boys, 12 and 14, arrested in deadly shooting in Denver’s Sunnyside neighborhood
Denver police arrested two boys on suspicion of first-degree murder after detectives said they shot and killed a 33-year-old man in Sunnyside.
Investigators believe Christopher Nabors confronted the boys, who are 12 and 14 years old, after he found them either breaking into or trying to steal his vehicle in the 4300 block of North Pecos Street on June 30.
The boys, who have not been publicly identified because they are juveniles, were arrested by Denver Police Department officers on July 1 after police spotted them in a stolen vehicle and they fled when officers tried to pull them over.
Denver police also accused the 14-year-old of being involved with a shooting about 15 minutes before the Sunnyside shooting, when the teen and two other juveniles shot a fourth juvenile near Park Avenue and East 20th Avenue. The juvenile victim was injured but survived, agency officials said.
Detectives are still investigating a homicide that happened under the same circumstances in the 15000 block of East Olmsted Drive in the early hours of June 24.
Jacob Lopez, 19, was killed in that shooting, according to the Denver Office of the Medical Examiner.
Following the deaths of Nabors and Lopez, Denver police warned the public against confronting would-be car thieves.
“We offer this warning, in no way to shame the victims for their attempts to protect their vehicles, but to bring awareness to this disturbing trend and to encourage everyone to call 911 if they see something suspicious or a crime in progress,” Chief Ron Thomas said in a statement on July 2. “The brazen actions of these suspects go against the fiber of our community, and our investigations teams are working to identify and arrest them.”
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