Post#18 » by cupcakesnake » Tue Mar 14, 2023 10:16 pm
Mike Malone and the Nugget's crown jewel achievement so far was beating a healthy Clippers team in 2020.
Since then they've been too injured to seriously compete against elite opponents: the championship Warriors in 2022 and the finalist Suns in 2021.
Any conclusions about what Malone, Jokic, or the Nuggets are like in the playoffs (there have been tons of way overconfident takes on this board) isn't backed by strong data. This is going to be the first year since 2020 that we get a real look at the whole Nuggets situation in the playoffs. Whatever happens this year is going to cement the collective Nuggets opinion a lot more. If they go on a deep run, the "jokic got exposed" crowd will be confirmed silly. But an early loss of any kind will be the first legit logs on the fire.
I'd be really surprised if Malone got fired, unless the Nuggets have some 2007 Mavs level embarrassment. Malone has been pretty rock solid his entire Nuggets tenure, so I don't think losing to a good opponent (a healthy Phoenix might be the only example of that in the West) would endanger Malone's job. Unless the Warriors or Clippers can do a playoff transformation, Denver has a pretty good opportunity this year. The potentially rocky thing is that there's so many lower seeds that could get healthy and/or unlock a better version of their team in the playoffs. No one is going to be completely surprised if the Warriors, Lakers, or Clippers become a little scarier than Sacramento or especially the floundering Memphis. Minnesota and New Orleans could add All-NBA level big men right before the playoffs/play-in (if either make it). The West just feels completely on random mode outside of Denver and Phoenix, and even Phoenix might not end up with a high seed due to the Durant injury. Denver might end up fighting off a suddenly more powerful 8-seed, and then if they win, having to play a 4-seed Phoenix in the second round.