The Denver Post

Jokic dazzles in front of flag-waving crowd

- By Mike Singer msinger@denverpost.com

The five- city, two- country road trip ended here Wednesday night with more than a dozen Serbian flags surroundin­g the court from doting fans.

In what occasional­ly sounded like a Nuggets home game, twotime reigning MVP Nikola Jokic gave some of his countrymen reason to cheer as he destroyed Washington’s meager defense. The Nuggets, following his lead, cruised to a convincing, 118-104 win to cap their road trip at 3-2.

It wasn’t until the second half that the Nuggets even feigned interest in being there.

“We cared, finally,” Nuggets coach Michael Malone said after the game. “I challenged our guys in a big way at halftime.”

Jokic ended the evening with 31 points, 12 rebounds, and seven assists, eventually subbing out with under three minutes remaining, perhaps to avoid any accusation­s of stat-padding.

“The postseason’s gonna be really short if we play like we played in the first half,” Jokic said.

Jokic couldn’t hide his admiration for the hundreds of fans that came out to support him.

“I always say, the Serbian fans are probably the best fans in the world,” he said.

At 49-24 and 19-18 away from home, the Nuggets can finally take solace in that their longest remaining road trip of the year is over.

Michael Porter Jr. buried six 3-pointers, as the Nuggets caught fire from beyond the arc. Denver shot 15 for 32 from 3-point range, overwhelmi­ng Washington’s scoring punch. Kristaps Porzingis had 25 points, but no other Wizard managed more than 16.

Jamal Murray added three more 3s to supplement the barrage.

The third quarter began, and the Nuggets were, finally, engaged. Their defense was physical and tenacious, while their offense unleashed its full capacity. Porter ripped two steals that led to runouts. Kentavious Caldwell-pope did, too. It was as if Malone’s ever-present message — defend and run — clicked.

The game marked a home

coming of sorts for former Wizard Caldwell-pope, who was part of an offseason trade Denver made to bolster its perimeter defense.

“We didn’t get him for the regular season,” Malone said, underscori­ng how valuable they viewed him while sending Monte Morris and Will Barton to Washington.

The defense led to offense, and Denver’s attack took of f. Porter drained three 3- pointers in the third, and Jokic racked up 10 points in the quarter alone.

A 27-12 run blew the game open. Malone even found a moment to steal a smile on the visiting bench with some of his veterans.

The 39-16 pounding opened up a 94-73 lead going into the final quarter, and the Nuggets finally looked like a team primed for the postseason in a few weeks.

Malone spent Wednesday’s pregame talking about his team’s maturity and wondering whether they’d ease into a contest against a team likely headed for the draft lottery.

That came following Tuesday’s practice at Georgetown, which was scheduled to “sweat out New York City,” and get his team moving again amid an extended road trip.

“The time is now,” Malone said. With only nine games left in the regular season, the expectatio­n of championsh­ip habits — not to mention an interest in playing well — should’ve already been establishe­d.

And yet, the Nuggets stumbled their way through an underwhelm­ing first half against the Wizards, entering halftime down 57- 55.

Jokic was assertive, dumping in 16 points and snatching seven early boards.

A pro-jokic crowd watched him soar for a first-half dunk, and then roared when he buried a 3-pointer. They even raised their tenor at the prospect of him hoisting one from beyond the arc.

But outside of Jokic, the Nuggets weren’t sharp in their execution and weren’t dedicated in their defensive commitment.

Porzingis paced Washington with 15 first-half points, shredding Denver’s interior defense.

For a half, Denver’s interest in establishi­ng championsh­ip habits looked half-hearted, at best.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic (15) grabs a rebound over Washington Wizards guard Monte Morris, right, and forward Deni Avdija during the second half Wednesday in Washington.
CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic (15) grabs a rebound over Washington Wizards guard Monte Morris, right, and forward Deni Avdija during the second half Wednesday in Washington.

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