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Nuggets Grind Out 116-105 Game 1 Win Over Timberwolves

Jokic’s triple-double and Murray’s 30 points propel Denver past Minnesota in a physical playoff opener.

In a game defined more by bruises than highlight reels, the Denver Nuggets proved why they remain the team to beat in the West. Despite trailing by as many as 12 points early, Denver used a dominant third-quarter surge to pull away from the Minnesota Timberwolves for a 116-105 win at Ball Arena.

The contest was a throwback to physical postseason basketball, featuring 42 called fouls, multiple technicals, and a bloody nose for three-time MVP Nikola Jokic.

The Stars Shine Through the Scrape

The Nuggets were led by their cornerstone duo, who found ways to produce despite a difficult shooting night from the perimeter.

  • Nikola Jokic: Finished with a commanding 25 points, 13 rebounds, and 11 assists. Jokic took several hard hits to the face throughout the evening but anchored the Nuggets during a crucial five-point stretch in the fourth quarter to keep Minnesota at bay.
  • Jamal Murray: Led all scorers with 30 points. While Murray struggled from deep (0-for-8 from three), he was clinical at the charity stripe, going a perfect 16-of-16 from the free-throw line.

The Third Quarter Shift

Minnesota controlled the tempo early, led by Anthony Edwards, who scored 22 points while battling a sore right knee. However, the game turned in the third quarter when Denver ignited a 17-2 run. The Timberwolves went scoreless for over four minutes during that stretch, allowing the Nuggets to turn a deficit into a double-digit lead they would never fully relinquish.

Physicality and Friction

The Northwest Division rivalry was on full display as tensions boiled over multiple times:

  • Jaden McDaniels was assessed an unsportsmanlike technical for a shove on Jokic.
  • Nuggets coach David Adelman and Minnesota’s Julius Randle both picked up technical fouls in a heated second half.
  • Aaron Gordon provided 17 points but struggled with early foul trouble, a testament to the game’s aggressive officiating.

Looking Ahead

For Minnesota, the loss is a reminder of the discipline required to take down the champs. Coach Chris Finch noted post-game that the team must be “more composed” in high-pressure moments. For Denver, the win marks their 13th consecutive victory dating back to the regular season.

Game 2 is set for Monday night in Denver, where the Timberwolves will look to even the series before heading back to Minneapolis.


Stay tuned to A.T.L. N.E.W.S. for continuing coverage of the Western Conference’s most physical first-round matchup.

Miles J. Edwards

Founder & Creative Chief Architect, Art, Trade & Lifestyle Media Group Miles J. is an award-winning professional writer, filmmaker, and journalist with three decades of deep-rooted expertise in media production and investigative storytelling. As the founder and Creative Chief Architect of Art, Trade & Lifestyle Media Group, he leads editorial strategy and high-fidelity content development across expanding regional bureaus, focusing on the critical intersections of public policy, emerging technology, and urban infrastructure. A native of the California Bay Area and a long-time resident and community advocate in metro Atlanta, Miles J. brings a unique, bi-coastal perspective to modern journalism. His current editorial work includes building comprehensive policy blueprints for state gubernatorial races and producing forward-looking docuseries that examine municipal development, transit innovations, and workforce evolution. Committed to lifelong learning and cutting-edge industry standards, he actively couples traditional journalistic integrity with modern marketing management frameworks to shape the future of digital news architecture. Expertise: Public Policy, Emerging AI Technologies, Transit Infrastructure, Urban Development, Media Architecture. Credentials & Affiliations: Member of the Atlanta Media Press Core, Project Callisto Search Quality Evaluator.

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