Team Overview
The Denver Nuggets run one of the most sophisticated offenses in NBA history, built entirely around Nikola Jokić as a point-center hub. Every major action — pick-and-roll, dribble hand-off, post entry, and weak-side cut — flows through Jokić's decision-making. The result is an offense that requires zero athleticism-dependent plays and yet consistently leads the league in offensive rating.
Strategic Tendencies
What defines Nuggets basketball
Jokić as Hub Passer
Every pick-and-roll, dribble hand-off, and half-court possession runs through Jokić — he operates as a point guard from the high post and center position simultaneously.
High-Post Decision Making
Denver uses the high post extensively, giving Jokić passing angles that cover all five spots — cutters, corner threes, drivers, and post-ups are all available from one position.
Weak-Side Cutting
Murray, Gordon, and Porter are elite off-ball cutters who read Jokić's look-off timing to get layups on backdoor and direct cuts while the defense watches the ball.
Drop Coverage on Ball Screens
Defensively, Denver relies on conservative drop coverage that keeps Jokić near the rim — trading occasional pull-up threes for dominant rim protection on the back end.
IQ-First System
The Nuggets' offense requires elite basketball IQ from all five players — spacing, timing, and decision speed determine quality, not athleticism or set plays.
Tactical Breakdown
Why Luka Dončić wanted Walker Kessler: a rim-running, rim-protecting center to complete the Lakers’ heliocentric offense
Offensively, Kessler changes the pick-and-roll calculus. With Dončić, the base action will be high ball screen into a deep roll. Kessler’s value isn’t in popping or short-roll playmaking; it’s in forcing the low man to tag earlier and higher because the lob window is real. That single rotation creates the Lakers’ preferred outcomes: corner threes, slot threes for the second-side guard, and clean layups when the tag is late.
Expect staples: 1-5 spread PNR with Reaves lifted on the weak slot as the second-side release valve; “Spain” PNR where Reaves (or a wing) back-screens Kessler’s defender to delay the drop and open the lob; and empty-corner PNR to remove help and force the big into a two-on-two problem. Dončić is elite at manipulating the drop defender’s depth — if the big is too low, he walks into floaters and step-backs; too high, he strings the dribble and throws the late lob behind the defense.
Kessler also enables more early offense. A rim-running five who sprints into drag screens creates immediate advantage before the defense is set. That’s a Redick staple conceptually: win the first eight seconds, not the last eight.
Latest Analysis
All analysis →Why Luka Dončić wanted Walker Kessler: a rim-running, rim-protecting center to complete the Lakers’ heliocentric offense
Kessler’s arrival gives Dončić the vertical spacing and backline defense he’s lacked, while fitting JJ Redick’s preference for quick decisions, early offense, and five-man connectivity around a dominant ball-screen hub.
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Concepts Used by Nuggets
Extracted from tactical analysis articles
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All players →Frequently Asked Questions
1How do the Denver Nuggets use the pick-and-roll?
Denver runs Jokić as both the screener and the decision-maker. After the screen, Jokić can roll, pop, pass to the cutter, or score — defenses must guard all four options simultaneously, which is functionally impossible.
2What makes the Nuggets offense so hard to guard?
The Nuggets have no mandatory reads. Jokić reads the defense live and finds whoever is open — that could be the roll man, the weak-side cutter, the corner shooter, or himself in the post. Defenses cannot overload any one option without opening another.
3How does Denver defend pick-and-roll situations?
Denver primarily uses drop coverage, keeping Jokić near the rim rather than hedging aggressively. This accepts pull-up threes but ensures rim protection. They compensate with switching on the wings when necessary.