Denver, CO
Recap: Nuggets shoot down the Rockets 134-124 – Denver Stiffs
The Denver Nuggets delivered an uppercut to the Houston Rockets in the long-awaited return to the court for Jamal Murray, winning 134-124. It was supposed to be a ring ceremony night for champion Jeff Green, but that was pushed back at his request to the next game between the two teams on December 8th. Denver played like it was a celebration night however, as Jamal Murray returned to the lineup and Denver cruised with big games from Michael Porter Jr. (30 / 10 / 5) and Nikola Jokic (32 / 10 / 15). Jalen Green for Houston played a terrific game with 26 points, 6 rebounds and 9 assists, but nothing was slowing Denver’s assault down on this night.
Jeff Green ring update: it has been changed to the recently added game next Friday December 8th in Denver.
More Nuggets representation will be able to attend and more of Jeff’s family can be in Denver that couldn’t make it tonight.
— Katy Winge (@katywinge) November 30, 2023
Game Recap
The first scoring play of the game was Jamal Murray down to Nikola Jokic, who passed out of a swarm of Houston defenders to an open MPJ for a three, and it felt like Nuggets Basketball was back. Jokic pivoted around Sengun next time down for an open layup, but then Murray went down on a rolled ankle but after a timeout he came back with tighter laces on his shoes and hit a deep three at the end of the clock, a perfect encapsulation of his habit of playing very well when hurting. Porter hit a straight-away 3, then another off a Murray assist. Justin Holiday and KCP both made shots to take Denver to an early 19-7. Houston finally hit a mid-range jumper after some iffy shots and turnovers without Fred VanVleet, but Denver answered with a classic Jokic/Murray pick-and-roll for an easy Nikola bucket and forced a timeout.
FROM THE LOGO pic.twitter.com/OQXBLjd41d
— Denver Nuggets (@nuggets) November 30, 2023
Murray came out of the game at that timeout, but Jokic hit a four-footer and MPJ rattled in a three as the Nuggets put it on the Rockets early 28-11 in just the first 7 minutes. Nnaji – playing some power forward without Aaron Gordon – hit a layup, while Denver made sure Houston didn’t get anything easy. Denver went to Jokic with four bench players with just over 3 minutes to go and pushed the lead up to 19 off eight first quarter assists from Jokic. DeAndre Jordan then came in for Jokic as Jabari Smith Jr. made a three for Houston, but Christian Braun finished a baseline dunk in response. Denver and Houston traded buckets for the last couple of minutes, punctuated by a Reggie-Jackson deep three and ended the quarter up 41-26.
Reggie Jackson banked in a deep 3 and Zeke Nnaji had a couple of good and effective challenges on the defensive end, but the Rockets were still finding easier ways to score early in the second quarter than they had in the first. Jeff Green was making his shots while Julian Strawther had his bounce out. Reggie Bullock Jr. cut the lead to 8, 44-36 as the Rockets went on a 10-0 run to cause Jokic to re-enter the game and immediately scored on a layup and then a put-back on a missed MPJ three. Murray also re-entered the game and buried a three of his own for a 51-38 Nuggets lead. Michael Porter Jr. hit a couple of layups on some great moves and Murray got three free throws on a Sengun foul. He missed a putback but buried another three and then Jokic yammed a dunk on a beautiful cut and MPJ assist.
JOKER POSTER pic.twitter.com/3TGNrV98X6
— Denver Nuggets (@nuggets) November 30, 2023
Jokic tapped in another shot but the Rockets kept making threes every time it looked like the Nuggets might start to extend their lead. The lead was 65-52 when MPJ buried another three, then got fouled on his next attempt for free throws. MPJ finished the first half with 23 points and the Nuggets wrapped with a Jokic step-in three and a 76-59 lead.
Double-double for Joker 🃏
Six deep buckets for MPJ 🎯 pic.twitter.com/OEP5ejyZwN
— Denver Nuggets (@nuggets) November 30, 2023
Jamal Murray was back out with the starters to begin the second half but still played with an obvious limp. Jokic hit a couple of layups to counter Houston’s opening three-pointer, and Murray with the shake-and-bake three made it 83-66 early in the quarter. Jokic his a nice free-throw-level shot, followed by a beautiful pick-and-roll bounce pass from Murray to Jokic for the finish, but again Denver’s defense wasn’t there to slow players like Sengun from getting what they want, “forcing” Malone to take a timeout up 87-72. Right after, Jokic made an incredible pass for a Holiday three.
MPJ hit a midrange shot after some Rockets free throws, but Jalen Green made a couple of Houston threes. Denver answered with another Holiday three-pointer and some Jokic free throws, and a beautiful scoop finish on a drive from Reggie Jackson. A Jokic free throw gets Denver to 100 points with over three minutes to go in the third, but Denver went cold for a couple of minutes and Houston took advantage. Jeff Green had a traditional three point play to cut the Denver lead to 101-89, but Porter ended a 7-0 run with a rim-protected layup. Jaylen Green made two more threes and a free throw and whittled Denver’s lead down to 108-97 at the end of three despite MPJ hitting another three.
After a 38 point third quarter from Houston, Denver opened the fourth with a steal from MPJ and a fastbreak layup for Murray. Houston finally missed a couple of shots but the Nuggets answered with bricks of their own until the alley oop from Murray to Christian Braun. Denver got stuffed a couple times their next time down the court but kept a double-digit lead at 113-100 when Jokic came back in the game. KCP and Braun each hit a three to make it 121-104, and the Nuggets cruised from there, finally able to sustain a big lead. Nikola Jokic got his 70th career triple double at the 4 minute mark and came out of the game to a standing ovation shortly after with Denver up 131-112, and Denver’s final margin was 10 at 134-124.
DENVER NUGGETS BASKETBALL pic.twitter.com/x3ZAZp1VcW
— Swipa (@SwipaCam) November 30, 2023
Three Things
MPJ was outstanding. It wasn’t just the 23 first-half points, it was the way he played: lived up to his size with rebounding and effort, took advantage of the space Houston allowed him to operate, moved off-ball and moved the ball with intent to get some assists. Everything he did felt like he was playing within himself rather than reaching for something that wasn’t there. After the game he said he should have made “9 or 10” three pointers instead of the 7 he did make with how many good setups his teammates gave him, and talked about wanting to bounce back personally after a less-than-stellar performance against the Clippers. Mike’s headspace has been consistent all year regardless of his ups and downs, but his movement looked much better in this game so perhaps his ankle is finally healing up and his confident shot is returning alongside it.
Murray is back! Hopefully his ankle doesn’t cause him any more issues after this game, but 16 points, 6 rebounds and 6 assists doesn’t start to address how great it was to have him back and how much movement and chemistry he brought back to Denver’s offense. It’s not a coincidence that the Nuggets tied their season-high in points with a free-flowing, impediment-free halfcourt game that minimized turnovers and maximized impact. Murray played like he’d never left, and with him back Denver again had that championship offense flowing. About that defense though…
Nuggets will need a to find a little defense on the road. Denver gave up 120 to a Rockets team without Fred VanVleet, it’s point guard who averages 16 points and 9 assists a game this year. Coach Michael Malone cannot have been happy about that, and the Nuggets will need more defense as they leave the comfortable confines of Ball Arena for some more road life. Justin Holiday will have to figure out his rotations with units he has not really played on this year yet, and Denver could use Aaron Gordon’s abilities on that end for sure. But in the end, with their offense re-established, finding some key stops doesn’t seem like the world’s biggest hardship for the defending champs. Welcome back, Mal!
Celebrate with some DeAndre Jordan victory kisses.
My favorite thing on the planet 😚 pic.twitter.com/2jirySeJaH
— Mollie Hunt (@mollzballz84) November 30, 2023
Denver, CO
‘I’m good.’ Bengals’ Amarius Mims says he’ll play vs. Denver Broncos after ankle injury
Amarius Mims thinks he’ll be ready for the biggest game of the Cincinnati Bengals’ season.
In Sunday’s win over the Cleveland Browns, Mims, an offensive tackle, was hampered by an ankle injury. He was in and out of the game as he battled the injury.
With a make-or-break home game against the Denver Broncos coming Saturday, Mims told The Enquirer’s Kelsey Conway he anticipated playing in the game.
“No, I’m good,” Mims told The Enquirer in the Bengals’ locker room post-game.
Absent Mims, the Bengals would be thin at tackle. That would make for less than ideal circumstances for quarterback Joe Burrow in a game of real significance.
After dropping to 4-8 on Dec. 1, the Bengals have played their way back to 7-8 and are attempting to overtake several teams including the Broncos for the final AFC Wild Card spot.
Saturday’s game against Denver is scheduled for a 4:30 p.m. kickoff and will be broadcast on NFL Network.
Denver, CO
Suns lookahead: Phoenix looks to end Christmas skid in holiday matchup vs. Denver Nuggets
Phoenix Suns coming off back-to-back wins
The Phoenix Suns won their last two games despite missing injured guard Bradley Beal. What’s next for the team?
The Phoenix Suns will play in their fourth consecutive Christmas Day game Wednesday against the Denver Nuggets at Footprint Center.
The week begins with a Monday game at Denver and finishes with a back-to-back set: Friday’s home game against the Dallas Mavericks and Saturday’s matchup at Golden State.
It’s nice to play on the most celebrated holiday of the year, especially at home.
Family and loved ones in town. Everyone watching on national television.
A festive time for celebrating and gift-giving, but the Grinch keeps showing up and ruining Christmas for the Suns.
Phoenix is 1-7 in its past eight Christmas games, losing the past three to the Golden State Warriors, 116-107, in 2021; at the Denver Nuggets, 128-125 in overtime, in 2022; and against Dallas, 128-114, last year.
What’s even crazier is the Suns lost to teams that either won an NBA championship or reached the finals that season.
The Warriors won it all in the 2021-22 season, the Nuggets took it in 2022-23 and the Mavericks advanced to the finals before losing to the 2023-24 NBA champion Boston Celtics.
The Suns last won on Christmas in 2009, beating the Los Angeles Clippers, 124-93, at home. Phoenix went more than 10 seasons without playing on the holiday until the 2021-22 season, the year after it reached the 2021 finals.
Phoenix is 12-9 overall on Christmas.
Christmas 2021: Curry leads Warriors past Suns
The Suns played the centerpiece Christmas game in 2021 against the Warriors during their historic 64-win season. They entered the marquee matchup with a 26-5 record and on a five-game winning streak, but lost at home.
Phoenix bolstered the best home record that season at 32-9 with one of those rare losses coming on Christmas. The Suns didn’t score in the final three minutes while Otto Porter Jr. scored the game’s final seven points.
Stephen Curry punched out a game-high 33 points to go with six assists to just one turnover while Chris Paul led the Suns with 21 points and eight assists to two turnovers and six rebounds.
Devin Booker managed just 13 points on 5-of-19 shooting.
Christmas 2022: Booker injured early, Suns fall in OT
In 2022, the Suns lost Booker within the first five minutes of their Christmas loss to the Nuggets at Ball Arena in Denver as he aggravated a groin injury. Scoring just two points, he had missed the previous three games.
Landry Shamet came off the bench to deliver 31 points to match a career-high, and Nikola Jokic posted another insane triple-double of 41 points, 15 rebounds and 15 assists, but the game will forever be remembered for Aaron Gordon’s ferocious one-handed dunk in overtime over Shamet, who tried to take the charge on the play.
Gordon was first called for an offensive foul, but after review, the call was overturned because Shamet was ruled outside of the restricted area.
Gordon missed the ensuing free throw, but his dunk gave Denver a 126-123 lead with 24 seconds left.
Christmas 2023: Doncic 50-piece dooms Suns
Then last season, Luka Doncic cooked the Suns for 50 points in leading Dallas to victory at Footprint Center. Shooting 8-of-16 from 3, Doncic became the seventh-fastest to reach 10,000 career points.
Grayson Allen scored a team-high 32 points to lead the Suns, going 8-of-17 from 3 while Kevin Durant and Booker combined for just 36 points on 10-of-25 shooting.
The Suns were without Bradley Beal (right ankle sprain) and Jusuf Nurkic (personal reasons) while the Mavericks won despite Kyrie Irving being sidelined due to a heel injury.
The Suns now have another chance to win on Christmas.
Have opinions about the current state of the Suns? Reach Suns Insider Duane Rankin at dmrankin@gannett.com or contact him at 480-810-5518. Follow him on X, formerly Twitter, at @DuaneRankin.
Support local journalism: Subscribe to azcentral.com today.
Denver, CO
Esther Romero
Esther Romero
OBITUARY
Esther Romero (Lopez), 84, entered into eternal rest surrounded by her loving family. Born in Mt. Harris, Colorado, a small coal mining town near Steamboat Springs, her family moved to Denver in 1950. She graduated from North High School in 1957 and was the first in her family to attend college. She left for Colorado State College now UNC in 1958 where she soon met the love of her life and future husband Richard Romero. Esther graduated in 1961, married a week later, and together moved to Castle Rock where she began her career as an educator. Before long they returned to Denver where their three daughters were born. In 1972, Esther became one of Denver Public Schools first bilingual bicultural teachers and soon earned her Masters Degree from UNC. A passionate advocate, she understood the value of building a strong educational foundation in a child’s home language and honoring culture while also learning English. She taught at Elmwood, Del Pueblo, and Fairmont elementaries. A founding member of the Congress of Hispanic Educators (CHE), Esther served as president for many years helping to ensure children in DPS had access to a quality bilingual education. She continued this work through her final days. Esther taught for 30 years, was recognized as a master teacher of children, an exceptional mentor and coach to future educators, and served as a liaison between CU-Denver and DPS. She was a member of Delta Kappa Gamma.
Esther enjoyed traveling with family and friends to Mexico, Europe, South America, the Caribbean, and almost all fifty states. She and Richard were avid Broncos fans holding season tickets since 1970, traveling to two Super Bowls. She loved organizing family gatherings, gambling trips, camping, reading, puzzles, and playing games with family. She had the unique ability to make everyone feel seen, heard, valued, and loved.
She was preceded in death by her parents Luis and Tommie G. Lopez, devoted husband Richard Romero, brother Baltazar Lopez ( Lourdes) and survived by her loving daughters Rosana (Dean) Trujillo, Carla (Arturo) Perez, Diana (John) Romero Campbell, and her grandchildren Arturito, Juliana, Claudia, Sofia, Orlando, Geronimo and Alicia, her sister Alice (Joe) Marquez, brothers Louie (Pat dec.) Lopez, Davey (Pat dec.) Lopez, Robert (Shari) Lopez, Ray (Melva) Lopez, and numerous extended family members. Please see www.cfcscolorado.org for service details.
-
Politics1 week ago
Canadian premier threatens to cut off energy imports to US if Trump imposes tariff on country
-
Technology1 week ago
OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever says the way AI is built is about to change
-
Politics1 week ago
U.S. Supreme Court will decide if oil industry may sue to block California's zero-emissions goal
-
Technology1 week ago
Meta asks the US government to block OpenAI’s switch to a for-profit
-
Business1 week ago
Freddie Freeman's World Series walk-off grand slam baseball sells at auction for $1.56 million
-
Technology1 week ago
Meta’s Instagram boss: who posted something matters more in the AI age
-
News1 week ago
East’s wintry mix could make travel dicey. And yes, that was a tornado in Calif.
-
Technology2 days ago
Google’s counteroffer to the government trying to break it up is unbundling Android apps