The Denver Nuggets were beaten in a manner they had never experienced before, and with it, the series and the season ended before halfway. On Monday, the Minnesota Timberwolves destroyed Nikola Jokic’s team 106-80 in Game 2, taking a commanding 2-0 lead away from the defending champions.
The four-time Defensive Player of the Year Rudy Gobert’s absence from Denver did not matter; the NBA’s top defense destroyed the highly regarded Nuggets offense. In the first half, Jokic, Jamal Murray, and Michael Porter Jr. combined for just 12 points on 23 shots, as Denver failed to score more than 20 points in any of the first two quarters.
The Wolves went on a rampage to increase their commanding early lead to 32 points, and things did not get any better in the second half. The Nuggets were lifeless and had no response, never recovering the game within 15 points, despite once going on a 17-4 run.
On the game, the Wolves shot 51%, threw 28 assists to Denver’s lousy 16, and got 16 turnovers out of the Nuggets. It wasn’t even a scorching hot shooting night—nope, it just a butt-kicking from the no longer up-and-coming Wolves but the ones that are here and blew the doors off the banner-raisers.
Without Gobert, it was All-Star Karl-Anthony Towns and NBA’s Sixth Man of the Year Naz Reid, who each stepped up big time. The two combined for 41 points, adding seven of Minnesota’s threes. Anthony Edwards also had a big game, scoring 27 points on 17 shots.
Jokic actually finished with a near triple-double, on 16 points, 16 rebounds and eight assists, but it was easily one of his worst postseason games ever. Denver got 20 from Aaron Gordon 13 of which were in the first quarter. The bad play meant Justin Holiday was actually the team’s third-best scorer at 13 points.
Road teams leading 2-0 in a best-of-seven series are 22-4 since 1984. Denver will need to become the fifth team to come back from a deficit of this kind.
Naturally, the Nuggets core, lead by Jokic, Murray, and Michael Malone, overcame two 3-1 series deficits against Mike Conley, Gobert, the Jazz, and the Clippers in the bubble – a feat only accomplished nine times, much less in consecutive series. When Murray was healthy, the Nuggets last lost a postseason series—that was in the 2020 bubble, falling to the Lakers in the Western Conference Finals.
Also in the bubble was the Nuggets other lowest-scoring playoff game in the Jokic and Malone era, an 80-point effort for a Game 7 win against the Jazz