Denver, CO
Preview: Nuggets head out to take on Thunder – Denver Stiffs
After a pair of home games against top Eastern Conference teams, the Denver Nuggets (33-15) are back on the road for a trip to get the upstart Oklahoma City Thunder (32-15) off of their backs. In three games this season, the Thunder lead the series 2-1 with both of their wins coming in Denver, where the Nuggets are 19-2 against all other opponents.
The Nuggets are 7-3 over their last 10 games, with all three of those losses coming on the road, including two of them on a five-game East coast road trip. Denver sits just a half game back from the Minnesota Timberwolves and a half game in front of the Thunder in the standings. A win in this game would go a long way towards their chances of clinching the top spot in the conference at the end of the year.
For the Thunder, they’re 6-4 over their last 10 games, and they’re riding a two-game losing streak entering tonight, which includes an ugly loss to the Detroit Pistons on Sunday. This team is loaded with young talent, and they’ve been a scrappy team all season long. Now, they’re looking to show that they’re really contending with the top dogs of the league with a chance to clinch the season series tonight.
Who: Denver Nuggets (33-15, 14-11 away) @ Oklahoma City Thunder (32-15, 17-6 home)
When: 6:30 p.m. MST
Where: Paycom Center
How to watch/listen: Denver Stiffs does not condone piracy..unless it’s the romanticized 18th-century type. AltitudeTV where available. League Pass for non-Denver market viewers. Show up in Oklahoma City. 92.5 FM KKSE Altitude Sports Radio
Expected Starting Lineups:
OKC: PG Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, SG Josh Giddey, SF Luguentz Dort, PF Aaron Wiggins, C Chet Holmgren
DEN: PG Jamal Murray, SG Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, SF Michael Porter Jr., PF Aaron Gordon, C Nikola Jokic
Injuries: Julian Strawther (knee) OUT, Nikola Jokic (back) QUESTIONABLE, Luguentz Dort (ankle) QUESTIONABLE, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (illness) QUESTIONABLE, Chet Holmgren (ankle) QUESTIONABLE, Isaiah Joe (sternum) OUT, Jalen Williams (ankle) OUT
Non-Jokic Scoring
In the previous matchup between these two teams, Nikola Jokic and Peyton Watson were the only starters that attempted more than five shots while shooting greater than 50 percent from the floor. Jamal Murray and Michael Porter Jr. combined to shoot 8-of-27 from the floor, including 3-of-14 from 3-point range. Those two provide too much of a scoring punch for the Nuggets to just be silent for the majority of the game. With Jokic’s size advantage inside, he should put up points, but he needs the guys around him to do their part as well.
Keep SGA Outside
In the Nuggets’ victory over the Thunder, their hot shooting helped. However, more importantly, they never let SGA get into a rhythm with easy buckets at the rim. His speed and driving ability makes him a tough cover, but, if you can force him into shooting tough jumpers from mid-range and outside, it makes life much more difficult for him. He scored seven points in the first game, and he’s combined for 65 in the last two. Prevent him from driving straight to the rim the entire game. If he beats you with jumpers from the elbow, you tip your cap and move on.
Jokic Does It All
Jokic is questionable entering tonight’s game with a back injury, but I expect him to suit up in this one. I also know that he is the player in the NBA that has the most impact on the game when he’s playing. When he’s running the offense, everything runs through him, and that’s what we’re banking on tonight. His rebounds + assists prop is set at 21.5, and we’re taking the over on this one. In three games against OKC this season, Jokic is averaging 16.3 rebound chances and 14.3 potential assists. That works out to a total of 30.6 potential chances to rack up stats. OKC allows the third-most combined rebounds and assists to centers, and I think Jokic cashes in on that tonight.
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Denver, CO
Denver police investigate early morning shooting in Capitol Hill neighborhood
Police in Denver investigated an early morning shooting on Tuesday at 13th Avenue and Pearl Street. Investigators said officers rushed to the 1300 block of North Pearl Street in the parking lot of Call Your Mother around 2 a.m.
When officers arrived, one victim was rushed to the hospital.
At the scene, one vehicle was seen with its back windshield shattered.
What happened leading up to the shooting is being investigated.
Denver, CO
Filled with stories, Denver’s Rockmount Ranch Wear owner Steve Weil shares inside scoop on famous customers
Nestled in Denver’s oldest historic district is a piece of Americana dating back decades. A new book shares the star-studded history of Rockmount Ranch Wear and its influence on fashion icons.
Current owner Steve Weil grew up inside Rockmount Ranch Wear. Long days in a warehouse and store aren’t unusual for a member of the Weil family, considering his grandfather kept at it until he was 107.
“I have been here pretty much since I was a little kid,” said Weil.
Customer watching at Rockmount Ranch Wear in LoDo is, at times, like a night at the Grammys. Music stars abound. Film stars, too. And regular customers looking for a piece of Americana.
Weil says Rockmount has weathered booms and busts over its eighty years of business.
“Everything was about responding to a changing market. That’s the cycle of business, right?” said Weil, who serves as the company’s President and chief creative officer.
His latest creative effort is a third book, “Rockmount Legends: Celebrities in Classic American Fashion.” The book is a compilation of memories of rock stars like David Bowie, Eric Clapton, and Bob Dylan, who have branded their own look with Rockmount clothing. There are stories and back-and-forth communications, as well as style notes and sightings of Rockmount on film sets and among stars.
Weil first noticed a shirt on Elvis Presley in the movie “Love Me Tender.”
“I looked, and I looked, and suddenly I remembered I’d seen a shirt exactly like that that my father had in the 50s,” he recalled.
Weil re-introduced the shirt, and it was a sellout.
The company was started soon after World War II by “Papa Jack,” who cut out a niche as unique as the sawtooth pockets he popularized. The company was the first to put snaps on shirts. His grandfather figured it would keep men on horseback from getting snagged. His shirts also featured yokes and wider cuffs, a departure from the norm at the time.
“My grandfather and his advertising, ‘Designed in the West by Westerners.’ Distinctive,” Steve Weil summarized.
Over the years, more and more stars looking for western wear eventually came into the store on Wazee Street in LoDo.
“People who write music or movies, I think they’re visionaries. And I think they appreciate that in their clothing, and I think we’ve, that’s what we do,” said Weil.
“Rockmount Legends” follows two other books, “Ask Papa Jack: Wisdom of the World’s Oldest CEO,” which is filled with stories and sayings from Papa Jack, who worked at the store until his passing, and “Western Shirts: A Classic American Fashion,” which puts in print the history of the development of western wear.
“I’m inspired by my grandfather. He could mesmerize you with his stories,” said Weil.
One passage features letters exchanged between Papa Jack and Ronald Reagan. Reagan was decrying the U.S.’s shift toward a service economy.
“And my grandfather writes him and says, ‘Servicing is when they take the mare to the stud,’” laughs Weil.
Weil’s father was also an innovator, taking the company nationwide. Weil says he could tell a story of his own.
Weil says, one Saturday at the warehouse, before there was a store, “There’s a guy peering in the window like this, and he sees my father pull up. Opened the door and he says, ‘Bloody hell, you’re never open when I’m here.’ And it’s a guy with an English accent. And my father’s a nice guy, he says, ‘come on in.’”
Later that day, there was a family get-together, and Steve’s father told him the story.
Weil recalled, “My father says, ‘An English rock star came in and I took care of him,’ and I’m thinking, ‘Yeah, right. Who was it?’”
It took his father a few moments to remember, then he spat out, “David Bowie,” mispronouncing the name. Steve was still skeptical until Monday.
“And then the phone rings, and it’s David Bowie’s secretary. He wants a duplicate of the same order sent to Madison Square Garden overnight,” he laughed.
Weil says they try to respect the stars’ space, adding that there are the friendly ones and the more remote ones.
“Robert Plant was really fun,” explained Weil.
When he arrived in the store, Steve says he received a call from one of the workers. He could hear Led Zeppelin’s Plant in the background, crowing about what he’d found.
“I walk in and here’s this guy like, just beaming. He’s having fun,” Weil shared.
The staff ended up getting invited to three nights of shows by Plant and his band at the Fillmore, and Steve went out to breakfast with Plant.
Eric Clapton’s look seems well-branded by Rockmount. Weil says Clapton has been a regular customer over the years. He sent a picture of himself in a Rockmount shirt at one point.
“Can I use that you know in some of our material?” he recalled asking Clapton. “He says, ‘Yeah, what’s in it for me? I said how about a ten percent discount?”
One time, Clapton emailed that he needed shirts for a Cream reunion in London in two days.
“I said, ‘Well, it takes a week from Denver. But I know where you can have a shirt on Thursday, and that’s if I hand deliver one,” he explained.
And so he did. Weil and a friend, capable of making last-minute travel decisions, flew over, but then doubt set in.
“What if this is bogus?” Weil thought.
He had Clapton’s phone number but was too worried about the cost of calling from his cell phone, so he sought out a British phone booth and rang him. Turned out, it was legitimate, and they made the delivery at the Royal Albert Hall. They went to dinner with Clapton as well.
The book is another way to share the memories that go with the images and the stories about people who have found an image along with the clothing.
Weil says sales have changed over the years, with the web now a big component. But personal engagement is still a big part of the Rockmount experience.
“It’s kind of a rare art. And I don’t know, I hope with the internet we don’t lose that kind of stuff,” said Weil.
Denver, CO
Tour Five of Denver’s Most Stylish Homes – 303 Magazine
Ever wonder what’s behind your neighbor’s front door? Consider this your all-access pass. Furniture Row’s Real Spaces series is throwing open the doors to some of Denver’s most stylish residents – the kind of people who turn a basement apartment into a maximalist playground, layer a Craftsman with heirlooms and velvet, and refuse to live with beige or millennial gray. Here are five Denver-area homes you’ll want to tour twice.
Haley’s Modern-Vintage Craftsman | Platte Park
Haley calls her 1912 Craftsman “a sanctuary that feels both fresh and rooted in history,” and it shows. Original woodwork and thick exposed beams meet warm velvet seating, rich wood tones, and a clever coffee bar where a pantry should be. The best seat in the house is a reading nook by the front window, perfect for cuddling the pup or, as Haley jokes, “creeping on the neighbors.”
Mackinley’s Maximalist Apartment | Denver
Proof that small spaces can carry big personality, Mackinley’s 1920s basement apartment is a love letter to color, texture, and clever layouts. Instead of committing to one big sectional, she layered lightweight, rearrangeable pieces so the living room can shift from movie night to game night to “everybody bring a chair.” Add in moody color, mixed textures, and a few clever storage saves in awkward nooks, and the whole place feels like a maximalist’s dream tucked underground.
See more of Denver’s Real Spaces.
Dakota’s Eclectic-Western Walkthrough | Denver
Dakota’s home is a vibrant mix of western soul and eclectic energy, anchored by a gallery wall of family photos and a leather sofa built to survive real life (and a pet or two). With no formal dining room, his kitchen table pulls triple duty as coffee station, workspace, and gathering spot. “I want there to be things that are true to me and speak to me,” he says, and every layered texture proves it.
Kate’s Cozy, Colorful Family Home | Denver Foothills
Kate took a compartmentalized 1970s house in the foothills and opened it up into a warm, color-drenched family hub. A mossy green island, a matte black fireplace, and pops of striking blue replaced the all-gray palette her home came with. “Gray had its moment,” Kate says, “but it was just so devoid of personality.” Her upstairs deck, complete with a canopied daybed, is the sunset spot of dreams.
Whitney’s Organic Modern Boho | Denver Suburbs
Whitney calls her style “modern natural, a little bit of cottage, a little bit of boho.” Inside her 1,400-square-foot suburban home, soaring ceilings frame an airy, light-filled living room layered in natural wood and soft texture, while a whimsical canopy bed turns her son’s room into a pure imagination space.
Five homes, five very Denver points of view. Tour them all at Real Spaces.
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