The Denver Post

NUGGETS NEED HOLIDAY TO WIN NBA TITLE

- MARK KISZLA Denver Post Columnist

The Nuggets are one player away from winning the NBA championsh­ip. When have we ever been able to say that with a straight face?

Never. Until now.

For first time since joining the NBA in 1976, the Nuggets are one piece shy of legit championsh­ip contention. Even better: Rather than being some crazy, fanciful, never- gonna- happen dream about adding a superstar named LeBron or K. D., what Denver needs to do is acquire a a high- quality complement­ary player to support center Nikola Jokic and point guard Jamal Murray when the going gets tough in the playoffs.

Trade for veteran guard Jrue Holiday and the Nuggets can win the championsh­ip in 2021.

The dalliance between Denver and New Orleans regarding Holiday has been a months- long affair. With the draft rapidly approachin­g and a moratorium on trades expected to be lifted early next

week in an abbreviate­d offseason that will play out at hyper speed, now is the time for Nuggets president of basketball operations Tim Connelly to get serious with the Pelicans.

For a franchise that values cultural fit as much as stand- out talent, the Nuggets would be hard- pressed to find a more ideal player within their reach than Holiday. The 30- year- old veteran of 11 NBA seasons would be outstandin­g for Denver from the court to the locker room to the community.

For all the ways Holiday could help the Nuggets, let’s start with one bold asser

tation. Pair him alongside Murray in the backcourt, with Jokic, Jerami Grant and Michael Porter Jr. manning positions up front, and the strength of Denver’s starting five has the depth and versatilit­y to match any team in the league.

Although he averaged 19 points for the Pelicans last season, the real strength of Holiday’s game? Defense, dimes and all the little things that sometimes get taken for granted by a young team that cannot fully realize how much everything matters until it is down 3- 1 in the Western Conference Finals to LeBron and the Lakers.

Holiday is a beloved teammate often described as selfless, as selfless as the $ 5 million in salary he pledged to Black- owned businesses hit hard by the COVID- 19 pandemic. He’s a combo guard who can run the point, to relieve the court time coach Michael Malone puts on Murray’s shoulders during the playoffs. Holiday believes a winning culture is more than philosophy; he walks the talk in ways that would help Denver teammates grow.

Trading for Holiday is a no- brainer. Getting it done? Well, that’s a whole ‘ nuther thing.

Let’s do the accounting first. The salary- cap math has to match up to allow a trade for Holiday. His current salary is on the glitzy side of $ 26 million. So for the trade machine to greenlight this transactio­n, Denver almost has to include guard Gary Harris and his $ 19.6 million cap hit in the deal.

And that’s where things start to get sticky. Make any excuse for Harris you want, but after two seasons in which his jumper has gone clink, clank, clunk far too often, he’s an over- priced defensive specialist, either as a starter or a substitute.

So Connelly is going to have to part ways with players New Orleans values as much as Denver fans appreciate. Yes, I like the steady hand and steely competitiv­e nerve of point guard Monte Morris as much as Malone does. The big upside of Bol Bol might just exceed his 7- foot- 2 frame.

Do the Nuggets have the talent that can engage New Orleans in serious negotiatio­ns? There’s only one way to find out. If two players ( Morris, Bol) that Denver acquired at rock- bottom NBA prices can be flipped to help land Holiday, Connelly can’t say no if he truly believes Denver’s time to win a championsh­ip is now.

While Connelly has been a masterful talent scout and the Nuggets were built with draft gems rival teams overlooked, his maturation as a wheeler- dealer in the trade market has been slower. We won’t mention swapping the draft rights of Donovan Mitchell to Utah, because that would be cruel.

But many of Connelly’s trades have off- loaded players that no longer fit in the Nuggets locker room, whether we’re talking Kenneth Faried or Jusuf Nurkic. Although to be fair, the acquisitio­ns of both Will Barton and Grant proved to be sweet deals.

For seven years, Connelly has refused to skip steps in nurturing a contender. Is he ready to push his chips to the middle of the table and gamble the Nuggets are one player away from claiming the Larry O’Brien trophy?

Find a way to trade for Holiday.

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 ?? AAron Ontiveroz, The Denver Post ?? If the Nuggets are just one player from winning the NBA championsh­ip, the Pelicans’ Jrue Holiday could be their guy.
AAron Ontiveroz, The Denver Post If the Nuggets are just one player from winning the NBA championsh­ip, the Pelicans’ Jrue Holiday could be their guy.
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