The Denver Nuggets survived a wild 125-123 road win over the Phoenix Suns on Tuesday, with Nikola Jokic finishing with a monster 23-point, 17-rebound and 17-assist performance, adding the game-winner with just 11 seconds left.
It wasn’t pretty, but it keeps Denver’s playoff positioning dreams alive heading into the season’s final nine games.
The three-time MVP was in vintage form, posting his third-fastest triple-double ever (by game time) at 11:49 left in the third quarter. It’s his 17th career 20-15-15 game — that’s 27% of all such performances in NBA history since 1964.
“The whole time we were up 15, I think the moment they came back again, 15, they came back and they made it dangerous at the end,” Jokic said postgame. “I think we should just not turn the ball. Don’t give him any hope, but it happens. And again, you made some we made some important shots, and that’s why we won the game.”
As Jokic said, it almost got away from Denver late. The Suns shot 37 free throws, committed just three turnovers, hit four more threes than the Nuggets. The game came down to the clutch, something Denver has struggled with this year. Coming into the night, the Nuggets were 18-19 in clutch situations with a -11.7 net rating, fifth-worst in the league. This was also their 24th clutch road game of the season, most in the NBA.
Jamal Murray finished with 21 points and six assists, struggling for most of the night but delivering when it mattered. He improved to 19-2 in his career against Devin Booker, hitting back-to-back clutch mid-range shots late and scoring 11 points with three assists in the fourth quarter on efficient shooting.
“We had control of the game,” head coach David Adelman said. “But a lot of mature responses, a lot of good execution, getting the ball to the right people in the right places.”
That execution included an old-school Hack-a-Oso strategy down the stretch. Phoenix center Oso Ighodaro went to the line multiple times late as Denver tried to steal possessions from the Suns’ best players.
“We felt like with the lead and kind of going possession by possession, if we took care of the ball, you know, and that’s stealing possessions from Devin Booker and those kind of guys,” Adelman explained. “To his credit, he made the two in a row. We went away from it. It was effective earlier. But he’s a really talented young player.”
The bench also provided crucial energy. Tim Hardaway Jr. scored 18 points on 4-of-8 from three, while Julian Strawther added seven points in just eight minutes, with a plus-12 rating. The small-ball lineups without Jonas Valanciunas again proved effective.
Denver caught a break facing a Suns team that has lost five of its last six and is dealing with significant injuries. Phoenix is hanging onto the seventh seed but looked vulnerable throughout — though their fight was impressive.
A PACKED STAT SHEET FOR THE JOKER IN THE WIN!
23 PTS
17 REB
17 AST
1 GW SHOT pic.twitter.com/69DfeIkMcu
— NBA on NBC and Peacock (@NBAonNBC) March 25, 2026
Seeking the 3 seed
The Nuggets had 10 games left coming into Tuesday. In order to get the No. 3 seed and pass the Los Angeles Lakers here’s what both teams would need to do in the final ten games:
LA: 8-2 or better, they clinch
LA: 7-3 DEN: 10-0
LA: 6-4 DEN: 9-1
LA: 5-5 DEN: 8-2
LA: 4-6 DEN: 7-3
With the Lakers having the tiebreaker it’ll be tough but the win against the Suns keeps hopes alive for the Nuggets. It also means it’s highly unlikely this late in the season that the Nuggets would fall to or below the Suns and into the Play-In. So Tuesday’s win de facto clinched a playoff spot for the Nuggets.
Here’s the full picture out West:
RK Team W L PCT GB HOME AWAY DIV CONF PPG OPP PPG DIFF STRK L10
1 Oklahoma City Thunder (x) 57 15 .792 – 29-6 28-8 11-3 37-9 118.7 107.5 +11.2 W12 10-0
2 San Antonio Spurs (y) 54 18 .750 3 28-7 25-11 11-3 31-14 119.2 111.7 +7.5 W6 9-1
3 Los Angeles Lakers 46 26 .639 11 23-12 23-14 8-7 30-16 116.4 114.9 +1.5 L1 9-1
4 Denver Nuggets 45 28 .616 12.5 21-13 24-15 7-5 27-16 120.9 116.5 +4.4 W3 6-4
5 Minnesota Timberwolves 44 28 .611 13 24-13 20-15 9-7 27-21 118.4 114.5 +3.9 W1 5-5
6 Houston Rockets 43 28 .606 13.5 25-10 18-18 7-6 23-21 114.2 110.2 +4.0 L1 5-5
7 Phoenix Suns 40 33 .548 17.5 23-15 17-18 10-6 25-21 112.4 111.2 +1.2 L1 4-6
8 LA Clippers 36 36 .500 21 20-15 16-21 8-6 22-23 113.8 112.8 +1.0 W2 6-4
9 Portland Trail Blazers 36 37 .493 21.5 19-16 17-21 7-8 25-20 115.3 117.0 -1.7 W1 6-4
10 Golden State Warriors 34 38 .472 23 19-15 15-23 6-6 23-22 115.1 114.9 +0.2 W1 2-8
11 New Orleans Pelicans (e) 25 48 .342 32.5 16-22 9-26 7-8 16-30 115.5 119.2 -3.7 L2 6-4
12 Memphis Grizzlies 24 47 .338 32.5 12-21 11-25 6-7 19-27 115.3 119.1 -3.8 L3 1-9
13 Dallas Mavericks (e) 23 49 .319 34 14-23 9-25 4-11 12-32 113.8 119.0 -5.2 L4 2-8
14 Utah Jazz (e) 21 51 .292 36 13-24 8-27 1-12 11-33 117.4 125.1 -7.7 L2 3-7
15 Sacramento Kings (e) 19 54 .260 38.5 13-25 6-29 3-10 12-35 110.8 121.2 -10.4 L1 5-5
Key: x – Clinched playoff spot | y – Clinched division | e – Eliminated from playoffs
What’s next for the Nuggets?
For the fourth time in four weeks, the Nuggets tip off two basketball games within 24 hours, coming back home late tonight to host the Mavericks in a late-night affair. It’s the team’s final back-to-back of the season, 17th without rest this season, most in the NBA, and Wednesday’s game is one of seven at Ball Arena of the team’s final nine games.