Mercifully for the Nuggets, they don’t have to play the Rockets anymore.
Four matchups in the first 23 games of the season? That’s more than enough. Three was enough. But in one last clash added to the schedule a week ago after they were eliminated from the in-season tournament, the Nuggets sputtered on offense for a half and defense for a quarter in a 114-106 loss to Houston on Friday night at Ball Arena.
With 8:26 remaining, Denver (14-9) was behind 103-78, but with three minutes left, they went on a stunning 18-0 run to close the gap to seven points. With 2:32 remaining, Alperen Sengun’s abrasive defense on Nikola Jokic caused a turnover, denying the Nuggets the chance to trim the lead to five. After Houston eventually crossed the line to score, the Nuggets were forced to concede as Jokic fought the officials about Sengun’s last-second defense of him.
This was the Nuggets’ first home loss since Game 2 of the NBA Finals in June. It’s the first time they have ever lost a Western Conference home game with Jokic, Jamal Murray, Aaron Gordon and Michael Porter Jr. all playing. The Rockets snapped an 0-8 start away from home. They were the NBA’s last winless team on the road this season.
“I thought it was a low-energy night most of the night, to be honest,” Michael Malone said. “The whole arena was very low-energy. We were low energy. … That third quarter, we came out of halftime and just didn’t do anything. Either side of the ball.”
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The Nuggets finish 1-3 against Houston in 2023-24.
They entered their 10th game at Ball Arena leading the league in offensive rating (125.3), shooting (52.3% from the field) and assist-to-turnover ratio (2.59) in home games. But none of that mattered in a first half that was sluggish offensively other than brief scoring burst from Murray. After opening a 14-7 lead, the Nuggets went on a three-minute scoring drought as Sengun engineered a 13-0 run. A cutting Peyton Watson bucket snapped the skid, but from there, Denver was playing from behind the rest of the night.
“We made it a game,” Murray said, identifying effort as the key to Denver’s turnaround. “This is one that I feel like we don’t have to be so down on.”
Sengun finished with 17 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists to aid Jalen Green’s 26 points, while Jokic’s struggles Wednesday in Los Angeles carried over in a 9-for-26 outing from the field. He went to the halftime locker room with one assist and a 1-for-10 shooting mark, having missed 20 of his last 22 shots and 31 of his last 38 going back to Wednesday.
His team was fortunate to be trailing only 52-48 in spite of that, thanks to a Kentavious Caldwell-Pope circus three to beat the halftime buzzer. But the Rockets worked Denver’s starters in a 40-point third quarter, shooting 14-for-18 from the field and 6-of-8 from 3-point range. The lead ballooned to 25 before Jokic finally got going and spurred the comeback with an 11-point fourth.
“A couple late rotations,” Murray said. “Give them credit. They played a really good game.”
Denver’s bench was able to compete with Houston’s on the evening that Nugget-turned-Rocket Jeff Green received his NBA championship ring in a pregame ceremony. Watson led the second unit with 13 points, 4 rebounds, and 2 assists, building on his recent defensive gems that won Michael Malone’s faith. During the intense comeback in the fourth quarter, he won a spot on the floor with Denver’s starting lineup.
Porter and Murray both received technical fouls in the last four minutes after reacting angrily to foul calls. After Murray’s first technical with 41 seconds remaining, he thought he was fouled during Denver’s ensuing possession. He yelled at the referee, “That’s a foul!” and the referee waited for Porter to make a 3-pointer before stopping play and ejecting Murray. Porter’s three before the technical cut the deficit to 110-104.