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Nuggets with Aaron Gordon, Peyton Watson look like NBA champs

by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor marzo 23, 2026
written by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor

For a half, the Nuggets made the Blazers look like Thunder. They spent the rest of the day stealing it.

“Anything said at halftime?” I asked Nuggets forward Cam Johnson after Denver’s 128-112 win.

“Yeah,” said Johnson, who dropped 19 points, five 3-point makes, three assists and two steals on Portland on Sunday at Ball Arena. “A lot.”

“No chairs thrown?”

“No chairs thrown,” Johnson replied. “I think the urgency was voiced earlier than halftime — maybe early second quarter, maybe end of the first quarter. But then we’re talking about the schematics and how the effort needs to be within the scheme.”

The Blazers made 29 buckets and turned it over three times in the first half. Portland made only 13 shots and turned it over seven times in the second.

Denver won the final two quarters, 53-43, after giving up 69 points in the opening two periods. When the Nuggets flip a switch defensively, it’s like pure lightning.

It’s just a matter of whether coach David Adelman can find it when the room and the game go dark.

“The first half, I thought we were going through the motions,” Adelman said after his Nuggets improved to 44-28, 21-13 at home. “We were guarding their plays like it was a walkthrough, not a game. So it wasn’t good enough. But I did like the response. I thought the second unit to start the fourth quarter was awesome. They got into people.”

Leading 75-69 at the start of the second half, the Nuggets outscored Portland 23-11 over the next nine minutes. Donovan Clingan’s make got the Blazers to within 90-80 with six minutes left in the quarter. The Nuggets clamped it down from there, turning two Portland misses and a Johnson theft into an 8-0 run and a 98-80 lead. The Blazers shot 33.3% from the floor (8 for 24) in the third period after shooting 53.7% (29 for 54) in the first half.

After a Blazers bucket opened the fourth quarter, the Nuggets strung together three more straight stops, keyed by two of their best stoppers, reunited. Spencer Jones caused a strip that led to a runout by Jamal Murray. On the Blazers’ second possession, Peyton Watson, in his first game back from a hamstring injury, blocked Scoot Henderson’s 7-footer, starting a break the other way that ended with a Bruce Brown layup.

On Portland’s next possession, Watson kept his hands high to force a Deni Avdija miss and set up an alley-oop from Murray to Jones, a two-handed dunk that put the Nuggets up 113-96  with 9:37 left on the clock.

“One thing (Watson) brings to the table, too, is like an extra rim protector, which is really important,” Johnson noted. “And he does it time and time again.”

Adelman’s “small-ball” unit in the third and fourth quarters harkened back to the Nuggets’ lineups during the 2023 postseason, with Gordon at center while Brown and Christian Braun worked to choke off entry points.

“When you know you’re switching, you know you can press up on the ball because if you get hit by a screen, you’ve got another guy coming and then we can almost trap it a little bit like that,” Jones explained. “Bruce and I love to kind of do that.

“So we had a couple of steals (Sunday) and just knowing that when you go small-ball, you can have more defensive guys out there. And so it’s just all about being aggressive.”

Which is a luxury of Adelman having his first full deck to play with since, what, Nov. 12?

“(Which) was a great feeling,” Jones said. “I mean, we were hyped walking out there. The only bad thing is not enough room on the bench. Can’t really stretch your legs as much as you used to.”

Portland tested those legs early, though. What was the difference between the Nuggets’ defense and traffic cones in the opening 24 minutes? Traffic cones occasionally stop people.

The Blazers came into the afternoon ranked 29th out of 30 NBA teams in field-goal percentage, 29th in 3-point percentage, and 23rd in Offensive Rating (points per 100 possessions, with 112.6)

At the half, they were draining 53% of their attempts and 37% (10-27) of their treys.

The Nuggets’ shooters, meanwhile, had blasted out of the gate hotter than a boa constrictor’s backside. Murray made his first four attempts from the floor. Johnson was perfect on his opening four tries from beyond the arc. The Nuggets made seven of their first 10 from deep.

The problem? Portland’s shooting matched the temps outside Ball Arena. With 5:08 to go in the first period, it was tied at 31-31 — Portland made 13 of its first 19 shots and seven of its first 11 treys. Avdija blew by everybody for a layup to tie the score at 31-31, and Adelman called a timeout.

“But if you have (Gordon) at your 5, and you can slide Spence and Payton at your 3 and your 4, that’s a big small-ball lineup,” Adelman said. “But right now, I like the group, (like) the way they’re playing. Enough ball-handling with Bruce out there, defensive intensity and some guys that can play-make behind Jamal Murray, what he provides when they put two people on him. Those are all good things. We just have to keep progressing and working on it as we go.”

Over their last 25 games, the Nuggets are 13-12, the ultimate rollercoaster ride. They’re 8-2 when the opponent shoots 46% or worse from the field. They’re 5-10 when their foes shoot better than 46%. Sometimes, it’s really not that complicated.

“Yeah, I think (that defensive second half) should be at least the minimum,” Johnson continued. “That first quarter is unacceptable. I think the second half should be, baseline, just what we do on a nightly basis.”

The lightning worked like a charm. You just hope, come May, that it’s not the kind Adelman has to try and catch with a bottle.

 

marzo 23, 2026 0 comments
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Noticias

Lu Dort is lucky Nuggets’ Nikola Jokic didn’t try to rearrange Dort’s teeth after dirty trip

by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor marzo 1, 2026
written by Diego Ramírez – Managing Editor

Nikola Jokic had every right to be M-V-Peeved.

Lu Dort knew exactly what he was doing late Friday night with 8:03 left in regulation of the Nuggets’ loss at Oklahoma City. That collision with Joker? Watch the Thunder guard’s right leg in real time. Then watch in slo-mo. Doesn’t matter.

That’s not a basketball move. It’s a Cobra Kai one.

It’s not a plant. Or a jostle. Or even a trip. It’s a stinking sweep of the Joker’s left leg. The leg connected to Jokic’s left knee.

You know, the one No. 15 accidentally hyperextended in Miami back on Dec. 29.

It’s one thing to play on the edge. To play physically. Thunder players delight in making you earn everything they get. They push. They poke. They prod. They crawl inside your heads and pitch a tent there. They foul so many times that it’s hard for officials to ever administer true justice.

But there’s a difference between dancing on the edge and knifing somebody in the back. There’s a difference between setting a tone, getting a mental edge, and a deliberate cheap shot.

Jokic keeping himself from ripping Dort’s face off — A

Team Grading The Week wants a good, clean hoops game as much as the next stiff. But if we were in Jokic’s shoes, we would have threatened to re-arrange a few of Dort’s teeth, right then and there. The OKC agitator should consider himself lucky that he ran into one of Jokic’s Stone Cold Steve Austin stares and not into one of Jokic’s knuckles.

In fact, the GTW ruffians have to give the Big Honey some props for his relative restraint in the heat of the moment. It was one of those unfortunate incidents in which a star player often retaliates by swinging a justifiable fist. Replays showed that the most threatening thing Jokic did with his arms was try to dislodge himself from the Thunder’s Jaylin Williams.

It was the chippiest moment of a chippy, playoff-ish kind of game. Four techs, two flagrants and one ejection — Dort, for the aforementioned trip, which fit the definition of both “unnecessary” and “excessive,” given the circumstances.

Nuggets’ up-down-up week — C

While we now have a Joker “crazy eyes” meme to play with for the rest of eternity, it was a tough finish to an up-and-down week for Nuggets Nation.

Denver lost at Golden State last Sunday while the Warriors were without Steph Curry, Kristaps Porzingis, Draymond Green and Jimmy Butler. They ended the week by being outscored 20-14 in overtime at OKC while the Thunder intentionally rested Shai Gilgeous-Alexander for the entirety of the extra period. That’s the kind of stuff that can get between your ears. And linger.

Broncos NFLPA grades — A

The NFL lawyered up to keep the annual NFLPA team report cards for franchises from being released publicly, but that didn’t stop reporters from getting copies and publishing the thing, naturally. And if you’re the Broncos, you want those grades on every refrigerator in all 50 states. Especially the fridges that belong to potential free agents.

With the exception of the locker room (‘D’), which is small, cramped and scheduled to be replaced soon, Denver’s player grades were kind to outright effusive.

Head coach Sean Payton received a ‘B’ grade, same as a year ago. Every coordinator received an ‘A’ or A-minus’ grade. GM George Paton received an ‘A.’ Ownership got an ‘A-plus.’

Weight room? ‘A.’ Strength coaches? ‘A.’ Training room? ‘A-minus.’ Team travel? ‘A-minus.’ Home game field? ‘A.’

Pretty good GPA, huh? The kind that tells you that the Broncos are going to have some serious veterans wanting to be a part of The Bo Show.

Summit FC kits — A

The GTW crew has never been praised for its collective fashion sense, granted. We don’t know much about soccer kits — that’s jerseys, to you non-footie fans — but we know what we like.

Green is a tough color to nail. Yet Summit FC’s new primary “Evergreen” kit does it perfectly. Although we’re somewhat partial to the “Snow” secondary kit, which was also revealed last week — especially the way the team’s green/orange/yellow badge, which captures a Front Range sunset, really pops in contrast to the shirt’s white base.

Want more sports news? Sign up for the Sports Omelette to get all our analysis on Denver’s teams.

marzo 1, 2026 0 comments
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Deportes

Canadá: La agonía de la derrota en Milán-Cortina 2026

by Editor de Deportes febrero 23, 2026
written by Editor de Deportes

Las imágenes más impactantes fueron los rostros de los derrotados. Uno por uno, los jugadores de hockey canadienses inclinaron sus cabezas para recibir las medallas de plata, y pocos minutos después, se les entregaron peluches en honor a Tina y Milo, las mascotas de los Juegos Olímpicos de Invierno de Milán Cortina.

Y uno a uno, aceptaron sombríamente estos símbolos de logro como si les estuvieran entregando cigarrillos en los momentos previos a enfrentar un pelotón de fusilamiento.

¿Recuerdan el antiguo eslogan de “Wide World of Sports”, “la agonía de la derrota”? Esos eran los rostros de la derrota. Parecían devastados.

Silver medalist Devon Toews (l. To r.), Cale Makar, Sam Bennett, Nick Suzuki and Sam Reinhart of Team Canada react during the medal ceremony for Men’s Ice Hockey following the Men’s Gold Medal match Getty Images

Un elemento constante de todos los Juegos Olímpicos, tanto de verano como de invierno, que se remonta a Atenas en 1896, es la alegría que casi siempre acompaña la tradición de la ceremonia de premiación. Los ganadores de oro en cualquier evento que se pueda nombrar – decatlón, biatlón, bádminton, bobsleigh, esgrima, montañismo, todos ellos – siempre están eufóricos y llenos de auto-logro, por supuesto.

febrero 23, 2026 0 comments
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Deportes

Stearns y los Mets: ¿Redención o tristeza navideña?

by Editor de Deportes diciembre 27, 2025
written by Editor de Deportes

A menudo se subestima del clásico navideño “Cómo el Grinch robó la Navidad” que el personaje principal finalmente se redime y hay felicidad en Villaquién.

En el universo de los Mets, David Stearns está desempeñando el papel de Grinch este invierno, pero es justo preguntarse si habrá un final tan alegre.

El presidente de operaciones de béisbol del equipo ha despojado al roster de su esencia, generando tristeza e indignación entre una parte importante de la afición que se sentía conectada con el núcleo del club.

Pete Alonso y Edwin Díaz se marcharon a través de la agencia libre. Brandon Nimmo y Jeff McNeil fueron transferidos. Y no hubo ningún regalo especial bajo el árbol de Navidad.

diciembre 27, 2025 0 comments
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