The Nuggets now sit at 0-4 in the preseason, and head coach Michael Malone is questioning the conditioning of his team, Bennett Durando of The Denver Post writes.
“I don’t think we’re in great condition right now, and that’s one thing we talked about as coaches during the game,” Malone said. “Looked like some guys are just winded and a little tired out there. So that’s something that we can try to improve upon.”
In a recent preseason matchup against the Suns, Phoenix made 23 three-pointers and the Nuggets struggled to guard the Suns’ players one-on-one. Malone was critical and blunt in his assessment of what Denver needs to do just a week from the beginning of the regular season.
“I think some [conditioning] you can do [during games],” Malone said after the Sunday game against Phoenix. “Like tonight, I ran those guys the whole third quarter. And obviously, Jamal [Murray] didn’t play in the second half. But [I] played that starting unit the whole third quarter and tried to push their envelope a little bit. And that was probably a little bit hard on some of those guys. Then in practice, I think we can get up and down more. I think so often as coaches in modern-day NBA, the league’s gotten so soft [that] everybody’s afraid to condition and run. We have to.”
Durando writes that the Nuggets are trying to step out of their comfort zone this season by playing more in transition, which the starting lineup isn’t as accustomed to. Malone acknowledged as much on Sunday.
“Obviously if you’re playing at a pace that maybe you’re not accustomed to, it could definitely challenge your system,” Malone said. “But you know, we’ve talked about trying to be a better running team this year. … It can’t be just Russell Westbrook off the bench. It’s gotta be everybody.”
We have more from the Nuggets:
- Malone raised eyebrows again on Tuesday when commenting on his team after a 30-point preseason loss to the Thunder. The Nuggets lost Kentavious Caldwell-Pope to free agency this year, marking the second straight year in which they’ve lost a key contributor from their 2023 title run after losing Bruce Brown and Jeff Green the year before. With those losses, the Nuggets tried relying on their younger players to carry them back to the Finals in 2023/24, but they were defeated in the second round of the playoffs by the Timberwolves. When asked if there was a sense of wanting revenge for last season, Malone said “I haven’t seen it,” according to Brendan Vogt of DNVR Sports (Twitter link).
- While Julian Strawther has been one of the most impressive Nuggets players in the preseason, it’ll be an uphill battle for him to beat out Christian Braun for the starting shooting guard spot, Durando writes. Strawther is shooting 44.4% from beyond the arc this preseason, an area that Braun is struggling with (7.7%). “Obviously it’s never going to be just about who’s playing better in a vacuum,” Malone said. “It’s always going to be about, yes, who’s playing well, but also who complements that unit. And right now to be honest, I think [Braun] and Jamal and Michael and Aaron [Gordon] and Nikola, that’s a group that really complements each other well. … I think Russ, Julian, Peyton, Dario [Saric] and whoever else, I think that’s a really good complementary group as well. But I will give Julian some more chances to get out there and start and play with that [starting] group.”
- After the first four seasons of his career haven’t progressed in a linear fashion, it’s been encouraging to see Zeke Nnaji stand out in the preseason, Durando writes in the same piece. On Tuesday, he recorded 11 points, two steals and three blocks. There’s been some question as to whether Nnaji is best suited as a four or a five, but Malone said that didn’t matter. “I don’t get into all that. I think that’s a bunch of malarkey,” Malone said. “In today’s NBA, you’re a big, you’re a small. … This is not 1980s where it’s three-out, two-in. Zeke’s a big. So go out there and play your game. I mean, is Dario Saric a center in anybody’s eyes? Well, he is for us.“
- Nnaji’s good preseason has extended to beyond the arc, Durando observes in a separate feature. He’s shooting a team-best 54.5% and is aiming to bring those numbers to the regular season. That was a trademark skill for Nnaji as a draft prospect and he hit 43.9% of his threes in the first two seasons of his career. However, amid a form change, Nnaji shot 26.1% from deep over the past two seasons. Despite outsiders telling him to revert back to his old form, Nnaji stuck it through and the change looks to be paying off.
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