Denver, CO
Preview: Nuggets fly up to SF to face Warriors
After a couple days of rest the Denver Nuggets are back on their schedule grind with another difficult back to back in front of them. The first leg involves flying to San Francisco to face the Golden State Warriors. It’s been a bumpy start for the once mighty Warriors. Still rocking the core of Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and Draymond Green that delivered them four championships, it appears father time has finally caught up with Golden State. Draymond has been suspended indefinitely for trying to turn NBA games into UFC fights, Klay has accepted the futility of man’s efforts to slow the process of aging and Steph has to try to put up forty points every game to keep the Warriors heads above water. Still, the Chase Center remains one of the toughest places to play and the Warriors are still dangerous with two future hall of famers on the roster. Nikola Jokic and company will need to be ready.
The Essentials
Who: Denver Nuggets (24-11) vs Golden State Warriors (16-17)
When: 8:00PM MST
Where: Gentrified Oracle Arena. San Francisco, CA.
How to watch/listen: Denver Stiffs does not condone piracy….unless it’s the romanticized 18th century type. TNT. NBA League pass for those not in the Nuggets market. Altitude Radio 950AM. Show up dressed as a guru and explain to security you are here to reset Klay Thompson’s chakras to regain his youthful energy.
Rival Blog: Let’s Go Warriors
The Matchup
| Position | Nuggets | Warriors | Advantage |
| PG | Jamal Murray | Stephen Curry | Warriors |
| SG | Kentavious Caldwell-Pope | Trayce Jackson-Davis | Nuggets |
| SF | Michael Porter Jr. | Klay Thompson | Nuggets |
| PF | Aaron Gordon | Johnathan Kuminga | Nuggets |
| C | Nikola Jokic | Kevon Looney | Nuggets |
| Bench | Reggie Jackson, Julian Strawther, Christian Braun, Peyton Watson, Zeke Nnaji | Chris Paul, Andrew Wiggins, Dario Saric, Brandin Podziemski | Warriors |
Injury report: Reggie Jackson – probable (calf), Vlatko Cancar – out (knee), Jalen Pickett – out (G-League), Hunter Tyson – out (G-League); Draymond Green – out (punching players), Gary Payton II – out (hamstring)
The Three Things
The thing to watch for: bench play
Dec 25, 2023; Denver, Colorado, USA; Golden State Warriors forward Dario Saric (20) drives past Denver Nuggets guard Christian Braun (0) in the first half at Ball Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-USA TODAY Sports
If you remember between all the presents and eggnog and rum haze, when the Nuggets played the Warriors on Christmas the bench was absolutely abysmal. First half shift the Nuggets were up nine when the bench came in and with less than for minutes gone in the second quarter Michael Malone was forced to bring back the starters with the Warriors leading by two. Second half Jokic exits with the Nuggets up by five, comes back in during the fourth quarter with them trailing by one. Now, not many benches are bringing guys like Chris Paul and Andrew Wiggins to the table but the Nuggets absolutely need to get a better effort from their reserves unless they want all the momentum to swing to Golden State’s side when Jokic goes out. It will be an incredibly difficult task to get it back on the Warriors homecourt.
The thing to remember: the Nuggets don’t lose to bad teams
Whether or not Golden State is a bad team is subjective but they do currently hold a sub .500 record. That’s good news for Denver who is yet to lose to a team with such a record. As I highlighted in the intro, this is a dynasty at the end of their rope. In all likelihood Green is playing his last season in Golden State (maybe the NBA entirely) and Klay has openly admitted to not being the player he used to be. It’s somewhat striking to see a team once so mighty regress the way they have (remember this core is still just a season and a half removed from winning a title) and perhaps that makes many, including myself, hesitant to believe they truly are a team who loses more games than they win and ultimately headed to the lottery. Tonight will be the toughest test yet to Denver’s perfect record against losing teams.
The thing to bet: Jokic triple double (+145)
Alright, it’s been a rough stretch for TTTB so we’re going to gambler’s fallacy this thing and say we’re due, as is Nikola who has just one triple-double in his last nine games. It’s been the assists that have kept him from getting it done with him hitting double digits on those just twice in the past nine games (one of which being the aforementioned triple-double game). I’m definitely gambling on this one but with the Warriors lack of size the points and rebounds will find their way to double digits naturally so really we’re only gambling on him diming it up tonight. At +145 it’s good enough for me to take the chance.
Denver, CO
Denver Broncos mock draft: Post-Jaylen Waddle trade
We’re coming back to the mock draft simulator this weekend. The Denver Broncos said ‘f dem picks’ and acquired wide receiver Jaylen Waddle from the Miami Dolphins this week. That trade provided a big boost to the offense, but it will make their 2026 NFL Draft much more challenging. With the reduction in draft capital, I decided to run several AUTOMATIC draft simulations through PFN to see what kind of players get mocked to them in the first two days of the draft.
Denver Broncos mock draft simulations
Broncos mock draft #1
In this first simulation, the Broncos drafted Arkansas running back Mike Washington Jr. People will say this would be a huge reach in the second round, but I think getting a guy who can be a first down, second down type back like J.K. Dobbins is a vital need for Denver in 2026.
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Broncos mock draft #2
In the second simulation, the Broncos drafted offensive guard Keylan Rutledge out of Georgia Tech. This one surprised me and I don’t think I’d like this move very much if that’s what happened on draft day with just one pick in the first two days.
Broncos mock draft #3
In the third simulation, the Broncos traded up to the 54th spot in the second round to take defensive tackle Lee Hunter out of Texas Tech. They would give up pick 62 and pick 108 to secure the move. In a draft with so few picks, this would sting, but I wouldn’t hate it. Though Hunter is a 24 year old rookie, he is likely NFL ready in year one.
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Broncos mock draft #4
In the fourth simulation, the Broncos drafted Arizona safety Genesis Smith in the second round. While I like JL Skinner and his special teams ability, Denver likely could use a long-term addition to the safety group. Smith would add a dynamic in coverage that the defense has often lacked — covering those tight ends and running backs.
Broncos mock draft #5
In the fifth and final simulation, the Broncos went with cornerback Keith Abney II out of Arizona State. People would probably hate the idea of taking a cornerback, but the Broncos have a decision to make between Ja’Quan McMillian and Riley Moss by next season. If they take a guy like Abney in the second round, it would give them tons of flexibility to make a trade somewhere else in the position group.
Of the five mocks, I only got excited over the Mike Washington Jr. outcome. Though I could see the reasoning behind all of the rest outside of taking a guard in the second round when they have decent depth already at that position.
What do you think? Or, better yet, run your own mock draft simulation and share it.
Horse Tracks
Denver, CO
University of Denver hockey’s unbeaten streak entering NCHC championship fueled by lights-out freshman goalie
Johnny Hicks couldn’t care less that he stands 5-foot-10. He was born that way, after all.
There is a growing stigma in the hockey world, Hicks said, about size and height. The long-limbed keepers are prevalent. DU hockey just had a two-year run behind local legend Matt Davis, who was 6-foot-1. And the Pioneers went into the season with 6-foot-3 freshman Quentin Miller as the heir apparent to Davis, with Hicks, the other freshman goalie, waiting quietly in the wings.
Well — not too quietly, if you happened to observe a Denver practice anytime since Hicks arrived from the WHL’s Victoria Royals this summer.
“There’s obviously some lazy goalies out there,” star defenseman Eric Pohlkamp smiled on Thursday. “But (Johnny) doesn’t take a shot off. He’s blocking every shot, whatever it is. And no, he’s been super fun to watch. He competes every single day.
“And it’s tough for us, in practice, because we want to score.
It’s become quite tough for opponents, too, since Hicks first stepped in the goal for an injured Miller in late January. From that point on, an underwhelming DU squad — sitting at just 14-11-2 and 2-6-1 in their last nine matches — has gone streaking. Denver hasn’t been beaten across its last 12 matches heading into Saturday’s NCHC championship against No. 6 Minnesota Duluth, as a deep squad has finally found a flowing offense.
And Hicks has been the lynchpin in the goal, with a truly remarkable stretch since stepping in for Miller: an 11-0-1 record in 12 starts, with two shutouts and a .961 save percentage on the season.
“If they do get a breakaway, you know he’s got it,” Pohlkamp said. “So the confidence he gives you is unbelievable.”
Injury creates an opportunity
That offensive freedom, perhaps, wasn’t quite there early in the season for a historic program coming off another Frozen Four run in the 2024-25 season. Denver was averaging just two goals per outing over that nine-match slump, entering a Jan. 24 matchup with St. Cloud State, where Miller exited with an injury a few minutes into the game. The roster was gripping their sticks “a little harder,” as Keiran Cebrian said, to try and find net. A vicious cycle.
And the group didn’t quite know what to expect from Hicks when he first took up the mantle, Pohlkamp said.
“But then, he came in and was excellent right from the start, which is honestly really hard to do,” Pohlkamp said. “To get thrown in the fire like that and do what he did.”
DU’s staff knew plenty well what Hicks was capable of. Head coach David Carle and goaltenders coach Ryan Massa recruited Hicks out of Canada around this time last year, as Hicks was rehabbing from an injury. Carle noticed one key fact: once Hicks got hurt, his Victoria Royals club started to “nose-dive,” as Carle remembered.
“The teams he was on,” Carle said, “anytime he was in the net, were winning games.”
History is repeating itself, with Hicks in Denver. Shots are finding the net with more regularity across the past couple of months, as Carle’s 2025-26 group wields a remarkably balanced attack: 12 different Pioneers have more than 15 points, with the NCHC championship match and an NCAA tournament run still left to come. Pohlkamp, who leads Denver with 17 goals and 37 points, was named a top-10 finalist for the 2026 Hobey Baker Award, which recognizes the best men’s college hockey player in the country.
“If I get it, I get it,” Pohlkamp said. “But, really looking at this weekend, and Saturday, and then (NCAA) regionals in Loveland, so. Hopefully, I’ll put a ring on my finger. That’d put the cherry on top, for sure.”

That stretch starts Saturday against the sixth-seeded Bulldogs (23-13-1), as Hicks’ role takes on greater importance. Minnesota Duluth will trot out a formidable and wholly contrasting man in the goal: Adam Gajan, who was named to Slovakia’s Olympic team in January. He stands 6-foot-3. He is long where Hicks is shorter. And yet Hicks has already beaten him twice before — a Friday-Saturday back-to-back in late January, as Denver beat Minnesota Duluth 4-3 and 1-0 to realign their season at the start of Hicks’ dominant stretch.
Hicks, for one, has paid particular attention to not paying attention to his numbers. Or his prospect profile, with his height. Or any external chatter about his performance. He is trying to focus, moment-to-moment, on the patch of ice that he patrols directly below the crossbar.
“If I can do that, I can do anything,” Hicks said. “And I know this team has the exact same mindset.”
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Denver, CO
Theater backed by DDA delays opening after convoluted city loan process
Blair Russell and Steve Wargo kicked off their LoDo theater with a song and a dance.
It wasn’t their first production, but rather, the overly elaborate and frustrating process of getting money from the Denver Downtown Development Authority.
“By the end, it was like CC’ing just 10 people on emails, just hoping that one of the people was the right one,” Russell said.
The duo were awarded a $400,000 loan from the city affiliate last July to help them launch the Denver Immersive Repertory Theater at the corner of 15th and Blake streets. They said what ensued was months of back and forth, with redundant questioning and confusion from city staff.
“Some of them, it didn’t feel like they even knew who we were or what we were asking for,” Russell said.
The men finally got their loan last month. But they said the ordeal pushed back the theater’s opening date by at least two months.
“How do we plan to open a business when we have no idea how many more steps this is going to take, what the process is and what they really, truly expect the timeline is?” Wargo said.
DDA tasked with revitalizing downtown
The DDA has existed since 2008, when it was formed to redevelop Union Station. In the wake of the pandemic and years of construction along the 16th Street Mall, a small group of voters extended the organization’s mandate to the whole of downtown, approving $570 million in bond funding.
That money will be used for a variety of things intended to revitalize the area, from helping launch retailers to renovating parks and partially financing the conversion of offices into apartments. The money is generally expected to be repaid from the increase in taxes created by the new investments.
About $155 million has been awarded so far.
When Russell and Wargo applied for DDA funding in early 2025, their business plan was largely ironed out. The two were looking to open an “immersive” theater, where people come to participate in the play, not just watch. Its first production, “Midnight’s Dream,” will feature 11 rooms with scenes happening simultaneously — 18 hours of acting in each show.
The pair hoped to put DDA money toward the $750,000 build-out of their location at 1431 15th St. When they applied, they were under the impression that the award would be a grant.
“I think everybody went into this not knowing how the funds were going to be delivered,” Russell said. “So you just make some assumptions. And we heard that there were grant funds, we heard that there were loans — that they had different ways of implementing this.”
Ultimately, a loan is what they got. The terms: 10 years at 3% interest, better than they’d be able to get elsewhere. Mayor Mike Johnston announced July 30 that Russell and Wargo’s theater, along with nine other projects, would be awarded a combined $100 million.
“Today launches downtown Denver’s economic recovery into overdrive,” Johnston said at a news conference.
First recipients just now getting money
But as the mayor was speaking, the DDA had yet to even source the money it was awarding.
Among the funding recipients announced in July was Green Spaces, a recently shuttered RiNo coworking, event and retail space that’s opening at 16th and Welton streets.
“It wasn’t smooth, but it wasn’t a terrible, strenuous process,” Green Spaces CEO Jevon Taylor said of working with the city and DDA.
The 30-year-old entrepreneur said his opening date for Green Spaces was pushed back from spring to this summer. But he doesn’t attribute that to one party, instead saying that he faced difficulty getting everyone — the city, his landlord, his subtenants — on the same page.
“I was just playing middleman,” Taylor said.
The city approved DDA for its own loan in November, giving it the first tranche of funds to dole out. PNC Bank provided the authority with a $160 million loan expiring in July 2038 and a short-term, $50 million line of credit.
“When [the award] was announced, and when we applied, we went into it with the idea that we would use it to finish the core and shell construction on our space,” Russell said. “Because we didn’t get the money in September or October, we had to just move with our own funds to do that work.”
That’s when the conversation shifted from Russell and Wargo being asked by city officials how the business would operate and use the funds to how they wanted to receive the money. That stage of the process also took months.
“We couldn’t have done that before?” Russell recalls thinking.
Now, with the loan in hand and the build-out well underway, they plan to use the funds to pay actors and for other ancillary expenses.
Mosher: Process ‘was too cumbersome’
Bill Mosher, Denver’s chief projects officer and a primary architect of the DDA, told BusinessDen in an interview that the process could have been better.
“I cannot refute, disagree, or say anything they said is not true,” he said of Russell and Wargo.
The hang-up, Mosher said, was that the DDA put the recipients of the awards through a city program that distributes loans to small businesses. But that process was far more complex and intensive than needed, he said.
“It was too cumbersome, and we need to be more flexible,” he added.
Going forward, Mosher said, the DDA will play a larger role in administering its loans to businesses directly. That means having a primary point of contact and establishing guidelines on how the funds ought to be distributed.
Mosher pointed to the DDA’s process for office-to-residential conversion loans, which are outlined in a simple, one-page document on its website.
Despite their frustrations, Russell and Wargo said they’re grateful for the DDA funding. They said the involvement of the city affiliate even helped them pick up investors. The two had previously been self-funding the entire endeavor.
“It’s so rare to get that type of support for a project of this nature that [it] was actually a plus to investors,” Russell said.
Read more from our partner, BusinessDen.
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