Game recap: DENVER – Down 13 at the break. Flat crowd. Shots clanking. Then the avalanche hit.
The Denver Nuggets walked the Golden State Warriors down in the second half Sunday at Ball Arena, ripped off a barrage from deep and ran away, 116-93. Nikola Jokic didn’t chase numbers, they just showed up anyway: 25/15/8, a couple hockey assists, and that usual slow-drip control that breaks teams.
And yeah, it was the threes. Nineteen of them. “That helps,” Jokic said, deadpan, after it was over.
But it wasn’t just bombs away. It was pace. Hands. Pressure. Denver looked awake after halftime. Warriors didn’t.
Why did the game flip after halftime?
Denver’s energy spike
“We were fine in the first half… just missing,” Jokic said. Then he shrugged and pointed to everything that changed: “Intensity, energy, running, shooting.”
It showed. Denver started flying into early offense, spacing the floor, punishing switches. Jamal Murray got downhill. Wings filled lanes. The ball didn’t stick. It popped.
And once a couple threes fell, the whole building tilted.
Warriors’ offense stalled out
No Stephen Curry, no easy gravity. And when Denver turned up the ball pressure, Golden State’s reads got muddy. Late-clock stuff. Forced drives. Turnovers that turned into leak-outs the other way.
Jokic called it “hands activity.” Translation: dudes were reaching, deflecting, making every pass annoying. It worked.
Key performances
jokic doing jokic things
Not loud. Not rushed. Just surgical.
Jokic talked defense like a checklist: stay disciplined, guard your yard, contest, rebound. Then he went out and did exactly that. No hero ball. Just controlled the tempo, cleaned the glass, kept Denver organized.
And the fouls? He brushed that off too. “Sometimes you have energy, sometimes you don’t… sometimes you make stupid fouls.” Fair enough.
Murray brings the punch
Murray chipped in 20, but it felt bigger. He sparked the third-quarter push, hunted mismatches, and got Denver into rhythm when they needed a jolt. When he’s cooking, this offense hums different.
Podziemski and porzingis carry the load
For Golden State, Brandin Podziemski and Kristaps Porzingis both dropped 23. Solid nights on paper. But the flow never felt right. Too much grind, not enough clean looks.
Turning point
Third-quarter blitz
Simple. Denver came out of halftime and punched first. Then again. Then again.
A quick run stretched the floor, Warriors started scrambling, and the game got away. By the time Golden State tried to settle, it was already a double-digit hole heading the wrong way.
Ball Arena got loud. Nuggets smelled it. That was it.
How did denver clean up the mistakes?
Only 12 turnovers. That matters.
Jokic even owned it: “I did a little bit better job.” The ball security showed up in the second half especially. Cleaner entries, sharper decisions, fewer live-ball giveaways. Against a team that wants to run, that’s half the battle.
What about the injuries?
Denver did this short-handed. No Aaron Gordon, no Spencer Jones, no Cameron Johnson. Didn’t matter Sunday. Depth held. System held.
Golden State, still without Curry, felt that gap all night.
The streak – real or just a heater?
Six straight now for Denver. Jokic didn’t dress it up.
“We found a way,” he said. Some high-scoring games, some weird ones. Doesn’t care how it looks. Just stacking wins.
At 48-28, the Nuggets are sitting fourth in the West, a couple games clear of the pack chasing them. Not flashy. Just steady.
Quick Hits
Caitlin Clark called him her favorite NBA player. Jokic’s response? Classic.
“We have the same agent. That’s why she said it.”
No notes.
tim hardaway jr.’s energy
Jokic actually liked the chaos. “Sometimes he’s good, sometimes he’s bad… but even bad energy can be good energy.”
That’s a locker-room quote right there.
what’s next?
Denver hosts the Utah Jazz on Wednesday, looking to keep the run alive.
Golden State heads home to face the San Antonio Spurs on Tuesday. And yeah, they need Curry back. Badly.