Warley’s 22 points and 14 rebounds help No. 7 Gonzaga beat San Diego 99-93

Jalen Warley had 22 points and 14 rebounds as No. 7 Gonzaga held off a late charge to beat San Diego 99-93 on Tuesday night for its 20th straight win against the Toreros. Gonzaga (14-1, 2-0 WCC) was making its final trip to San Diego as a member of the West Coast Conference. Tyon Grant-Foster scored 18 points while Mario Saint-Supery and Braden Huff had 14 apiece for Gonzaga, which won its seventh straight game since its only defeat, a 101-61 loss to then-No. 7 Michigan in the championship game of the Players Era Festival in Las Vegas.

Wooley scores season-high 21 points as No. 16 Louisville beats California 90-70

Sophomore Adrian Wooley scored a season-high 21 points and No. 16 Louisville beat California 90-70 on Tuesday night in the Atlantic Coast Conference opener for both teams. Ryan Conwell made six 3-pointers and had 26 points, and all five Louisville starters scored in double figures. Sanandra Fru added 13 points and 14 rebounds, while Isaac McNeely and J’Vonne Hadley each scored 11.

No. 13 Nebraska pulls away in 2nd half against New Hampshire to go unbeaten in nonconference play

Pryce Sandfort scored 19 points and No. 13 Nebraska shook off a second straight slow start to beat New Hampshire 86-55 on Tuesday night and go undefeated in nonconference play for the first time since 1928-29. The Cornhuskers (13-0) extended the best start in program history but not before the Wildcats (4-9) of America East, like North Dakota of the Summit League nine days earlier, caused some anxious moments. The Huskers led by just three at halftime but were much sharper on both ends after that and will ride momentum into Friday night's Big Ten home game against ninth-ranked Michigan State.

Wilson’s double-double helps No. 12 North Carolina beat Florida State 79-66 in ACC opener

Caleb Wilson had 22 points, 16 rebounds and six assists to help No. North Carolina beat Florida State 79-66 on Tuesday night to open Atlantic Coast Conference play. The 6-foot-10 freshman set a season high on the boards and matched his high in assists as clearly the best player on the floor, from his energy in chasing down rebounds to high-flying athleticism that showed in throwing down four dunks.

Nique Clifford, Maxime Raynaud facing ‘rite of passage' amid Kings' struggles

Nique Clifford, Maxime Raynaud facing ‘rite of passage' amid Kings' struggles originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — At least the rookies look good.

Doug Christie once again was unhappy with the Kings’ effort after a disheartening 131-90 loss to the Los Angeles Clippers on Tuesday night at Intuit Dome. Still, Sacramento’s coach was proud of how guard Nique Clifford and center Maxime Raynaud continued to grow.

Clifford finished with a team-best 18 points on 7-of-12 shooting and three triples, while Raynaud poured in 12 points and grabbed 12 rebounds.

“These players are good, man,” Christie said of the rookies. “They’re trying to do the right things. We’re here for them; we’re going to support them; we’re going to show them film; we’re going to develop; we keep working with them.”

It was the first time the Kings and Clippers met during the 2025-26 NBA season.

That also means that Tuesday night’s 41-point loss was the first time Clifford and Raynaud faced Los Angeles stars Kawhi Leonard and James Harden, who combined for 54 points, 10 assists and eight rebounds, seemingly without breaking a sweat.

Christie discussed his rookies’ growing pains against the Clippers duo, emphasizing that Clifford and Raynaud only will improve as they stack professional experiences.

“You have to go through the league first,” Christie said of Clifford and Raynaud. “You know, that was the first time they have seen Kawhi, that’s the first time they have seen James Harden. Nique got some fouls against [Harden] that he’s like, ‘What did I do?’ And I’m just like, ‘Listen, man, you got to put yourself in the right position … You can’t wait for him to hit you; you have to hit him first.’ There are little things that [Clifford] has to learn; the same with Max. 

“We have to live with some of those mistakes from Max and Nique. But I will tell you that they’re not coming from a bad place. Those kids are just trying, they’re figuring it out, and that’s everything that we can ask for from them. And they continue to improve. The bumps and bruises they’re going to along the way [are] part of what you have to go through in this league to figure it out — and they will; I mean, I’m not worried about that.”

Clifford, whom Sacramento selected No. 24 overall in the 2025 NBA Draft, now is up to six games of double-digit scoring. And Raynaud, who was drafted by Sacramento at No. 42, continues to settle into the starting center spot in place of the injured Domantas Sabonis and is up to six double-doubles.

The Kings aren’t where they want to be as a team, now with an 8-25 record entering the new year.

But Clifford and Raynaud are taking advantage of their respective opportunities, particularly the “bumps and bruises,” as Christie emphasized.

“It really is a rite of passage, man,” Christie said. “Like, you got to go through it. Because a lot of times, what you see in this league is, even with a team, they’ll have success for a year, and then they come back, and you’re like, ‘What happened?’ Because this league figures you out.

“If you don’t take advantage of this time, if you don’t go through and have all of those bumps and bruises, you know, that rookie year kind of drags on into next year. And before you know it, you kind of get labeled, and those are things that we don’t want for our players. Player development is big; they got to take this stuff seriously.”

Christie added that he advises his youngsters to journal their experiences after every game so that they have a “vast amount of knowledge” to reflect on in future matchups.

It seems that Clifford and Raynaud, despite their team’s struggles, have nowhere to go but up.

“The biggest part of all of that is that they are good kids, and they want to be good,” Christie said. “So they stay in the gym, they listen, they do the right things …”

Download and follow The Deuce & Mo Podcast

Observations after Edgecombe sinks game-winning 3-pointer, Sixers beat Grizzlies ih OT

Observations after Edgecombe sinks game-winning 3-pointer, Sixers beat Grizzlies ih OT  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

VJ Edgecombe’s clutch exploits came on the road with the Sixers.

The rookie buried the second game-winner of his career Tuesday night in Memphis. The Grizzlies hard hedged Tyrese Maxey on the perimeter and he dished to Edgecombe, who nailed a go-ahead three-pointer with 2.2 seconds left in overtime. Cedric Coward’s miss at the final buzzer cemented a 139-136 Sixers win.

With their first victory of a five-game road trip, the Sixers moved to 17-14 and snapped a three-game losing streak. They’ll play the Mavs on Thursday night. 

Memphis dropped to 15-17. Ja Morant starred for the Grizzlies with 40 points and Coward posted 28 points and 16 rebounds.

The Sixers got 34 points, 10 rebounds and a season-high eight assists from Joel Embiid. 

Maxey had 34 points and 12 assists. Edgecombe added 25 points, six rebounds, four assists and four steals. 

The Sixers’ two injury absences were Kelly Oubre Jr. (left knee LCL sprain) and Trendon Watford (left adductor strain).  According to a team official, both players are continuing to progress and started to be “reintegrated into team activities” at Monday’s practice. 

Here are observations on the Sixers’ dramatic OT win Tuesday:

Déjà vu at the start

Edgecombe swished a three-pointer for his team’s first basket. Outside of that, there was little to like early on for the Sixers. 

Memphis jumped in front and took a 17-7 lead on Coward’s corner three. The Thunder had opened 9 for 9 from the floor Sunday in their blowout win over the Sixers. Two days later, the Grizzlies started 7 for 8. 

Sixers head coach Nick Nurse called timeout. Though the Sixers certainly did not snap into lockdown defense mode, they at least stabilized the situation overall.

Maxey had a second straight outstanding start highlighted by near-perfect shooting. The 25-year-old scored a dozen points in both the first and second quarters. His only first-half miss was a tightly guarded three on the Sixers’ final possession of the first quarter. 

Maxey-Embiid duo flowing 

Embiid committed two fouls in under seven minutes. Edgecombe picked up his third peronal at the 9:26 mark of the second quarter and sat out the rest of the first half. 

The Sixers still earned their first lead with Maxey sitting early in the second quarter. Embiid drilled a top-of-the-key three and had success on multiple occasions when he popped off of double drag actions. A Jared McCain fast-break layup put the Sixers up 47-46. 

The Maxey-Embiid two-man game was brilliant once the Sixers’ superstar guard checked back in. The duo diced up Memphis’ defense with pick-and-pops, dribble handoffs and heaps of individual talent. The Embiid-Maxey pair posted 43 points in the first half on just 23 field goal attempts and eight assists. 

Nurse played a big frontcourt of Embiid and Adem Bona late in the second half. Largely thanks to Embiid’s defense, the Sixers fared well. The Sixers forced a flurry of turnovers and Embiid had a bright, energetic defensive stretch with two blocks and a steal. Bona did all the dirty work and chipped in four points, six rebounds, two blocks and two assists. He was deservedly the Sixers’ lone backup center and Andre Drummond stayed on the bench.

On top of the production, Embiid’s mobility and minutes were encouraging. He logged a season-high 38 minutes in Memphis.

Maxey capped the first half with a fantastic play when he somehow hit a leaning, double-pump three with 1.1 seconds left in the second quarter. He looked amazed by his own work. 

Maxey made his 800th career three-pointer Tuesday (he’s currently at 802). Allen Iverson is first in Sixers history with 885.

Edgecombe saves the day

The Grizzlies scored the first six points of the second half and the Sixers appeared on their way to more third-quarter misery. Coward and Wells drained threes against the Sixers’ zone defense to give Memphis a 90-81 lead.

The Sixers replied with a much-needed run.

Edgecombe and Quentin Grimes each turned steals into fast-break baskets. The Sixers had a major turnovers advantage (20-9) in Memphis.

They took a slim lead into the fourth quarter, but Morant had a hot start to the final frame. After making a mid-range jumper on McCain, he got Bona on a switch and then drove in for a tough one-one layup with his left hand.

While Edgecombe did not shoot especially well for much of the night, he came through with tons of timely plays in the fourth quarter and OT. George converted a cutting layup and Edgecombe sunk two threes in a row. The Sixers led by seven points with a little over four minutes on the clock. Edgecombe had a 13-point fourth period.

The Sixers struggled to stamp a win, failing to find a decisive basket. Embiid committed his fifth foul on an illegal screen, Maxey missed a mid-range jumper, and Morant made a game-tying floater.

Memphis had a chance to win on the final play of regulation but couldn’t capitalize. Grimes and Embiid swarmed Morant. Jalen Wells and Santi Aldama both missed go-ahead three attempts.

Eventually, the Sixers’ stars saw a few shots drop again in OT. Maxey made a driving lay-in through contact and Embiid hit two mid-range hoops.

Morant jetted past Edgecombe and laid the ball in with 18.3 seconds to go in OT, tying the game up again.

As has become his habit in the NBA, Edgecombe shook the play off and saved the day.

Observations after Edgecombe sinks game-winning 3-pointer, Sixers beat Grizzlies in OT

Observations after Edgecombe sinks game-winning 3-pointer, Sixers beat Grizzlies in OT  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

VJ Edgecombe’s clutch exploits came on the road with the Sixers.

The rookie buried the second game-winner of his career Tuesday night in Memphis. The Grizzlies hard hedged Tyrese Maxey on the perimeter and he dished to Edgecombe, who nailed a go-ahead three-pointer with 2.2 seconds left in overtime. Cedric Coward’s miss at the final buzzer cemented a 139-136 Sixers win.

With their first victory of a five-game road trip, the Sixers moved to 17-14 and snapped a three-game losing streak. They’ll play the Mavs on Thursday night. 

Memphis dropped to 15-17. Ja Morant starred for the Grizzlies with 40 points and Coward posted 28 points and 16 rebounds.

The Sixers got 34 points, 10 rebounds and a season-high eight assists from Joel Embiid. 

Maxey had 34 points and 12 assists. Edgecombe added 25 points, six rebounds, four assists and four steals. 

The Sixers’ two injury absences were Kelly Oubre Jr. (left knee LCL sprain) and Trendon Watford (left adductor strain).  According to a team official, both players are continuing to progress and started to be “reintegrated into team activities” at Monday’s practice. 

Here are observations on the Sixers’ dramatic OT win Tuesday:

Déjà vu at the start

Edgecombe swished a three-pointer for his team’s first basket. Outside of that, there was little to like early on for the Sixers. 

Memphis jumped in front and took a 17-7 lead on Coward’s corner three. The Thunder had opened 9 for 9 from the floor Sunday in their blowout win over the Sixers. Two days later, the Grizzlies started 7 for 8. 

Sixers head coach Nick Nurse called timeout. Though the Sixers certainly did not snap into lockdown defense mode, they at least stabilized the situation overall.

Maxey had a second straight outstanding start highlighted by near-perfect shooting. The 25-year-old scored a dozen points in both the first and second quarters. His only first-half miss was a tightly guarded three on the Sixers’ final possession of the first quarter. 

Maxey-Embiid duo flowing 

Embiid committed two fouls in under seven minutes. Edgecombe picked up his third peronal at the 9:26 mark of the second quarter and sat out the rest of the first half. 

The Sixers still earned their first lead with Maxey sitting early in the second quarter. Embiid drilled a top-of-the-key three and had success on multiple occasions when he popped off of double drag actions. A Jared McCain fast-break layup put the Sixers up 47-46. 

The Maxey-Embiid two-man game was brilliant once the Sixers’ superstar guard checked back in. The duo diced up Memphis’ defense with pick-and-pops, dribble handoffs and heaps of individual talent. The Embiid-Maxey pair posted 43 points in the first half on just 23 field goal attempts and eight assists. 

Nurse played a big frontcourt of Embiid and Adem Bona late in the second quarter. Largely thanks to Embiid’s defense, the Sixers fared well. The Sixers forced a flurry of turnovers and Embiid had a bright, energetic defensive stretch with two blocks and a steal. Bona did all the dirty work and chipped in four points, six rebounds, two blocks and two assists. He was deservedly the Sixers’ lone backup center and Andre Drummond stayed on the bench.

On top of the production, Embiid’s mobility and minutes were encouraging. He logged a season-high 38 minutes in Memphis.

Maxey capped the first half with a fantastic play when he somehow hit a leaning, double-pump three with 1.1 seconds left in the second quarter. He looked amazed by his own work. 

Maxey made his 800th career three-pointer Tuesday (he’s currently at 802). Allen Iverson is first in Sixers history with 885.

Edgecombe saves the day

The Grizzlies scored the first six points of the second half and the Sixers appeared on their way to more third-quarter misery. Coward and Jaylen Wells drained threes against the Sixers’ zone defense to give Memphis a 90-81 lead.

The Sixers replied with a much-needed run.

Edgecombe and Quentin Grimes each turned steals into fast-break baskets. The Sixers had a major turnovers advantage (20-9) on Tuesday night.

They took a slim lead into the fourth quarter, but Morant had a hot start to the final frame. After making a mid-range jumper on McCain, he got Bona on a switch and then drove in for a tough one-one layup with his left hand.

While Edgecombe did not shoot especially well for much of the night, he came through with tons of timely plays in the fourth quarter and OT. Paul George converted a cutting layup and Edgecombe sunk two threes in a row. The Sixers led by seven points with a little over four minutes on the clock. Edgecombe had a 13-point fourth period.

The Sixers struggled to stamp a win, failing to find a decisive basket. Embiid committed his fifth foul on an illegal screen, Maxey missed a mid-range jumper, and Morant made a game-tying floater.

Memphis had a chance to win on the final play of regulation but couldn’t capitalize. Grimes and Embiid swarmed Morant. Wells and Santi Aldama both missed go-ahead three-point attempts.

Eventually, the Sixers’ stars saw a few shots drop again in OT. Maxey made a driving lay-in through contact and Embiid hit two mid-range hoops.

Morant jetted past Edgecombe and laid the ball in with 18.3 seconds to go in overtime, tying the game up once more.

As has become his habit in the NBA, Edgecombe shook the play off and saved the day.

What we learned as Nique Clifford lone bright spot in Kings' loss to Clippers

What we learned as Nique Clifford lone bright spot in Kings' loss to Clippers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — The Kings seemingly had a chance to earn their ninth win of the 2025-26 NBA season on Tuesday night against a Los Angeles Clippers team that entered with 10.

That was not the case — at all.

Two days after losing 125-101 to LeBron James and the Lakers on Sunday at Crypto.com Arena, the Kings were thrashed 131-90 by Kawhi Leonard and the Clippers just 20 minutes away at Intuit Dome.

Los Angeles continued its midseason resurgence and four-game winning streak to cap off Sacramento’s demoralizing stay in the City of Angels.

The Kings battled early, but trailed 34-20 after the first quarter and 73-40 at halftime. Sacramento, which shot an uncompetitive 34 of 83 to Los Angeles’ 46 of 90, never held a lead.

Rookie guard Nique Clifford led the Kings with 18 points on 7-of-12 shooting with a trio of 3-pointers, two assists and one rebound. Fellow rookie Maxime Raynaud and Russell Westbrook followed with 12 points apiece.

Here are three takeaways from the Kings’ 41-point, blowout loss.

Keegan Murray’s Return

Keegan Murray looked healthy after missing the Kings’ last two games with a calf injury suffered in Sacramento’s 136-127 loss to the Detroit Pistons seven days ago at Golden 1 Center.

Despite posting 11 points on a subpar 4-of-13 shooting, Murray more importantly played a team-high 20 first-half minutes and 30 total minutes without visible limitations mobility-wise.

He got up for one dunk, one block and two rebounds. Notably, he often — and relatively comfortably — guarded Leonard, Los Angeles’ top offensive threat.

Kings coach Doug Christie surely wasn’t satisfied with Sacramento’s two-game stretch in Hollywood. But returning home for New Year’s Day with a healthy Murray must be somewhat pleasing.

Hometown Woes

It always is special when DeMar DeRozan and Russell Westbrook, a pair of Los Angeles natives, have the opportunity to play back home in front of family and friends.

Tuesday night, however, did not feature either of the NBA icons’ best performances.

Westbrook, a former Clipper, quietly finished with 12 points on 4-of-10 shooting with four assists and three rebounds. 

And DeRozan, the Kings’ current leading scorer with Zach LaVine and Domantas Sabonis sidelined with injuries, posted a quiet eight points on 2-of-8 shooting with seven boards and three assists.

The Kings needed more out of everybody against the Clippers. Though they could’ve used a boost from their hometown heroes — especially against other big-time local products such as James Harden and Leonard.

Kawhi Keeps Cookin’

Leonard recently has been on a mission, and unfortunately for the Kings, dominating Sacramento was the 6-foot-7 forward’s latest task.

The reigning Western Conference Player of the Week sleepwalked his way into an efficient 33 points in 33 minutes with five assists and five rebounds.

Leonard, of course, was coming off a career-high 55-point game in Los Angeles’ 112-99 win over the Detroit Pistons on Sunday.

“He’s been playing at an incredible level,” Christie said of Leonard pregame. “I had watched some games earlier, and he hadn’t been playing at that level. And I’m looking, it was like 40 [points], then 55, and I was like, ‘Right before you play us.’ ”

There aren’t any superstars that any team wants to face. But at the moment, Leonard is one of the league’s scariest scorers, and the schedule aligned in a way that did the Kings zero favors.

Download and follow The Deuce & Mo Podcast

Warriors star Steph Curry returns to his alma mater Davidson for unique honor

Warriors star Steph Curry returns to his alma mater Davidson for unique honor originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The list of ideas for Davidson College to honor Warriors star Steph Curry has to be running low.

But his alma mater found another way Tuesday afternoon, when they welcomed their assistant general manager of the university’s basketball programs back on campus for the official renaming of I-77 Exit 30 to Stephen Curry Interchange.

“This is my forever home,” Curry said after the new signage was unveiled, via The Charlotte Observer.

“For me to be able to represent so many people that made this possible, I hope that that’s what they feel. A diploma is one thing. An elite achievement is another thing. This [sign] is another. I might be stealing the sign to take it home.”

Curry’s wife Ayesha and his Golden State teammates Draymond Green, Jimmy Butler and Moses Moody were in attendance for the momentous affair, which took place during halftime of the Davidson Wildcats’ 89-83 overtime loss to the Duquesne Dukes.

Curry played three seasons at Davidson from 2006 to 2009, where he was named a two-time Southern Conference Player of the Year, consensus All-American and NCAA Tournament Midwest Regional Most Outstanding Player before he was selected by the Warriors with the No. 7 pick in the 2009 NBA Draft.

In the summer of 2022, shortly after the Warriors’ fourth NBA championship, Curry had his No. 30 jersey retired by the school, was inducted into its Hall of Fame and officially earned his Bachelor of Arts degree in sociology. In March 2025, Davidson named Curry assistant GM of the college’s basketball programs, making him the first active player in U.S. pro sports to take an administrative job with an NCAA team.

“You’ve represented our values of leadership and service,” Davidson College president Douglas Hicks said Tuesday during the ceremony. “You’ve lifted up youth from Ada Jenkins Center here in Davidson to schools across Oakland.

“Everybody knows that the entrance to Davidson is Exit 30, and we hope that your heart will always lead you back to [the town of] Davidson and Davidson College.”

With a fitting ceremony on Dec. 30 for No. 30 officially done, the Warriors now look ahead to facing Curry’s hometown Charlotte Hornets on Wednesday at Spectrum Center.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Draymond Green explains hilarious NSFW chirp at elderly Nets superfan Mr. Whammy

Draymond Green explains hilarious NSFW chirp at elderly Nets superfan Mr. Whammy originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Draymond Green rarely turns down a chance to trash talk opposing players.

Or sometimes — as was the case in the Warriors’ 120-107 win over the Brooklyn Nets on Monday night — opposing fans.

In the third quarter, Green was at the line for a pair of free-throw attempts. That’s when 89-year-old Nets superfan Bruce Reznick, a.k.a. Mr. Whammy, stood up behind the basket trying to distract the Warriors star.

After making his first free throw, Green walked towards the baseline and pointed at Mr. Whammy, who was recognized by the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in October for his well-known fandom.

“Sit your old ass down!” Green yelled, before backing it up with another make on his second attempt.

After the game, Green was asked about the humorous interaction, which had caused a stir on social media.

“Can’t be distracting me on my free throws, man. Go sit down somewhere,” Green told reporters with a laugh.

“That was fun. I had a lot of fun tonight.”

Of course, this isn’t the first time the notoriously outspoken star has made headlines for his interactions with opposing fans.

But this occasion seems to have been all in good fun, though Green eventually did miss a free throw at that end of the court later in the game. So we’ll call this round a 1-1 draw between Mr. Whammy and Green.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Draymond Green responds to Steve Kerr's claim that Warriors are ‘fading dynasty'

Draymond Green responds to Steve Kerr's claim that Warriors are ‘fading dynasty' originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Ahead of the Warriors’ Christmas Day game against the Dallas Mavericks, coach Steve Kerr dubbed his team a “fading dynasty.” 

It seemed like a harsh truth for a team that has won four championships in the last 10-plus years. 

Warriors star Draymond Green, a focal point of that dynasty, did not dispute Kerr’s assessment. 

“When you get down to it, the reality is it’s true. Dynasties don’t last forever. What you do is you try to prolong them as long as you can. You try to build on them as much as you can. But it’s true,” Green said Monday on “The Draymond Green Show.”  

“Now, he didn’t say we’re a dynasty that faded. He said we are a fading dynasty. Guess what? Steph Curry’s in year 17. I’m in year 14. Klay Thompson, who’s gone, would be in year 15. When you talk about the dynasty, Steve Kerr is in his 12th year of coaching …” 

“We’ve been at it for a while. So, when he says we’re a ‘fading dynasty,’ everyone knows that he’s not throwing salt. He’s not putting the team down. It’s true. But it’s our job as the ones inside the dynasty to try to prolong it as long as we’re given the opportunity,” Green continued.

In the three seasons after their 2021-22 NBA Championship, the Warriors have ended with two second-round playoff exits and missed the playoffs once in between. The team has been mired in a continuous hassle to stay above a .500 record and still sit at 17-16 well into the 2025-26 NBA season. 

It’s clear, to Kerr and Green alike, that the once-firm grip that Golden State had on the NBA has been unclenched. 

Nevertheless, the Warriors are not laying down. The blockbuster acquisition of Jimmy Butler last season catapulted a team through the finish line and into a postseason run that arguably ended prematurely with an injury to their superstar Curry. 

“How long can we extend it? How much more can we do? That’s the goal. That’s the mindset. That’s the mission,” Green said. 

The Warriors organization – at least Kerr and Green – are aligned in that mission. 

“We know where we are. We’ve got to know who we are,” Kerr said last week. “We got to know what’s possible, and we have to take pride in the struggle, because this is part of life.” 

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Nikola Jokić sidelined by knee injury: timeline and fantasy impact

Already playing without three starters due to injury, the Denver Nuggets lost their franchise cornerstone, Nikola Jokić, to a left knee hyperextension in the final seconds of the first half of Monday's loss to the Miami Heat. On Tuesday, the Nuggets announced that the three-time Most Valuable Player will be re-evaluated in four weeks.

Given how the injury occurred, with teammate Spencer Jones falling into his knee, things could have been much worse for the Nuggets' star center. It goes without saying that Jokić being out will significantly affect the Nuggets' starting lineup and rotation, not to mention fantasy basketball overall. He's been a fixture atop the rankings in recent years, regardless of league format. Let's look at the impact of Jokić's injury, beginning with the Nuggets' starting lineup.

Who will replace Jokić in the starting lineup?

This is an easy question to answer. Jonas Valančiūnas, who was acquired from the Kings during the offseason to give Denver a reputable backup center, is the next man up. He started the third quarter of Monday's defeat, and in 11 minutes accounted for six points (3-of-3 FGs), three rebounds and one blocked shot. However, all of those minutes were played during the third quarter. Zeke Nnaji replaced Valančiūnas in the lineup with just under a minute remaining in the third, and within the first two minutes of the fourth quarter, the Heat's lead was up to 19, and they would go on to win by a 147-123 final score.

Valančiūnas can undoubtedly provide value as Denver's starting center, but no one is going to expect his production to reach Jokić's floor, much less the former MVP's ceiling. However, it would make sense to add Valančiūnas, who is rostered in 14 percent of Yahoo! leagues.

Who else is affected by Jokić’s absence?

The entire Nuggets rotation is affected by his absence, but hopefully, help will be on the way soon. Christian Braun (70 percent rostered, Yahoo!) and Aaron Gordon (48 percent) have been out since November 12 and 21, respectively, with the former sidelined by a sprained left ankle and the latter a strained right hamstring. While Braun was due for re-evaluation in six weeks, which would be this week, Gordon was given a re-evaluation timeline of four to six weeks. Given the amount of time missed, they're likely to be under minutes restrictions once they're cleared to return. But giving them back would undoubtedly help the Nuggets depth-wise.

As for those who are currently healthy, Jamal Murray (100 percent) will have to shoulder an even heavier workload offensively. Nuggets' lineups with Murray but without Jokić have struggled this season. According to Cleaning the Glass, while Denver has averaged 113.5 points per 100 possessions in this scenario, they've given up 121.5 points per 100 possessions. Given Jokić's importance on the offensive end of the floor, the team's efficiency will take a hit with him unavailable. Murray's scoring may increase out of necessity, but can he function as the hub that the other Nuggets can play off of for an extended period? We're about to find out.

Role players like Peyton Watson (17 percent), Tim Hardaway Jr. (17 percent), Bruce Brown (six percent) and Spencer Jones (six percent) will have to step up offensively. Since moving into the starting lineup after Braun's ankle injury, Watson has averaged 13.5 points, 5.0 rebounds, 1.5 assists, 0.9 steals, 0.9 blocks and 1.5 three-pointers in 30.7 minutes, shooting 53.4 percent from the field and 74.5 percent from the foul line. He may be the most promising option with Jokić out, especially given his defensive value.

Hardaway has been mainly a points and three-pointers option, so losing a playmaker of the caliber of Jokić isn't good. As for Brown, he'll be interesting to watch. His impact as a supplementary playmaker was one factor in the Nuggets' run to the 2023 NBA title and made him a viable standard-league option. However, he hasn't reached those heights in his second stint with the team. Providing 10th-round per-game value in eight- and nine-cat formats over the past two weeks, Denver will need Brown to offer greater value as a playmaker with Jokić sidelined.