Game Recap: PHOENIX The math’s getting tight. The margin? Thinner by the night.
The Denver Nuggets roll into the desert Tuesday sitting 44-28, same line as the Minnesota Timberwolves, breathing down the neck of the No. 3 Los Angeles Lakers. And yeah, every game feels like a four-point swing now.
Meanwhile, the Phoenix Suns? Stuck in that awkward middle 40-32, staring straight at the play-in, trying to pretend there’s still a late push left in them.
Denver got right Sunday. Handled the Portland Trail Blazers 128-112, businesslike. Not flashy. Just efficient, cold, Jokic doing Jokic things.
Phoenix finally exhaled, too. Snapped a five-game skid by running the Toronto Raptors out of the gym, 120-98. Wire-to-wire. No drama. Honestly, overdue.
But this one? Different stakes. Different feel.
One team climbing. One team trying not to slide.
Why This Game Matters in the West Race
Can Denver crack the top three?
They’re right there. No mystery.
The Nuggets have won five of seven, offense humming, defense showing flashes when they actually care. That second half against Portland 43 points allowed that’s the version that scares people.
And with 10 games left, Denver knows what’s up. No load management nonsense now. No coasting.
“We’ve got some good teams left… we need these,” said Cameron Johnson, the former Sun. Translation: no freebies left on the schedule.
Are the Suns already locked into the play-in?
Short answer? Yeah, probably.
Long answer… they’d need a heater and help. Neither feels likely.
“We put ourselves in a tough position,” Devin Booker said, not sugarcoating it. And he’s right. Phoenix dug the hole during that ugly five-game slide bad defense, stagnant offense, too much iso ball.
Now it’s about survival. Not seeding.
Key Performances
Nikola Jokic doing MVP math again
Nikola Jokic didn’t even break a sweat getting another one.
22/14/14. Triple-double No. 28. Had it wrapped by the end of the third. Casual.
That’s the scary part it doesn’t even look like he’s pushing. Just picking teams apart, punishing switches, threading passes that shouldn’t exist.
But after the game, he went defense first. Not stats.
“We need to use fouls, be aggressive,” he said. Basically: stop being soft.
When Denver ramps up physicality, their defensive rating drops fast. When they don’t? It’s a layup line.
Devin Booker managing the ankle, and the moment
Booker needed that Raptors game. Not for the points for the rest.
Tweaked the ankle last week. Sat the entire fourth quarter Sunday. That’s gold this time of year.
“Much needed,” he said.
And yeah, Phoenix goes as he goes. If he’s even 80%, they’ve got a shot in any single game. If he’s hobbled? Play-in gets dicey real quick.
Coach Jordan Ott didn’t hide it either Booker’s body isn’t right. But he’s still their engine. Always has been.
Turning Point to Watch
Denver’s second-half defense vs Phoenix’s shot diet
This is the whole game.
Denver locked in after halftime against Portland physical, disruptive, borderline annoying. Fouls, bumps, hands everywhere.
Phoenix hates that.
The Suns want rhythm. Mid-range touches. Pick-and-roll flow. Let Booker and company get to their spots, rise up, cook.
Disrupt that? Force turnovers, blow up actions, make them play late-clock basketball? That’s where things get ugly.
Fast.
Injury Watch & Rotation Notes
Peyton Watson back but don’t expect miracles
Peyton Watson is back after six weeks (hamstring). Big for Denver’s wing defense… eventually.
Coach David Adelman pumped the brakes hard.
He’s not playing 40. Not guarding the best guy every night yet. This is a ramp-up.
Still, even 15–20 minutes of length and energy? Helps.
Phoenix banking on rest, not reinforcements
No major cavalry coming. This is the group.
They’ll lean heavy on Booker, try to manage his minutes, hope the supporting cast hits enough threes to keep defenses honest.
Simple plan. Hard execution.
Around the League (Monday)
- The Detroit Pistons clipped the Lakers 113-110. Rookie guard Daniss Jenkins went off career-high 30. Yeah, that happened.
- The Oklahoma City Thunder? Still rolling. 12 straight after smashing the Philadelphia 76ers 123-103. Six guys in double figures. Machine basketball.
- Shai Gilgeous-Alexander didn’t even need to go nuclear 22 and done. MVP stuff without the noise.
- The San Antonio Spurs kept pace, blasting the Miami Heat 136-111. Victor Wembanyama dropped 26 like it was light work.
The Bottom Line
So yeah. Nuggets trending up. Suns trying to stabilize.
One team eyeing home-court. The other just trying to avoid a one-and-done nightmare.
And in late March? That’s everything.