Perhaps the most animated Nikola Jokic has been all season was in reaction to a bucket in which he played no part.
Hidden at the end of the Nuggets’ bench, surrounded by a cohort of teammates five to 10 years younger than him — Jalen Pickett, Zeke Nnaji, Curtis Jones, Hunter Tyson, Peyton Watson — Jokic could’ve been mistaken for the 15th and final man on the roster, if you didn’t know any better.
One of the duties of an NBA reserve is to bring good vibes to the game while riding the bench. Stay engaged despite little to no playing time. Encourage teammates. React to questionable foul calls with adequate disapproval. Get hyped when there’s a cool dunk. Pretend to hold each other back.
Jokic isn’t exactly starved for playing time. He touches the basketball more than any other player in the league during the course of a game, and when he takes a breather, he’s usually reserved, staying in his seat, recharging.
But the superstar blended in perfectly with Denver’s bench mob for a cathartic moment on Dec. 5, when Jonas Valanciunas lifted off for a powerful go-ahead dunk in Atlanta. It was in the middle of a 20-0 fourth-quarter comeback, executed entirely without Jokic’s assistance — a foreign concept to him and anyone who has paid attention to the Nuggets for the last half-decade. Jokic catapulted up from his chair and shouted with the youngsters, and you got the feeling his reaction was completely organic.
“Everybody had a little moment (in the run),” he said afterward. “And me and P-Wat were on the bench having fun.”
The effect of Valanciunas has been resounding early this season, and the way he got to Denver seems all the more puzzling for it. Perennially in search of a competent backup center to play behind Jokic, the Nuggets solved two problems with one transaction in July: They traded Dario Saric to Sacramento in exchange for Valanciunas in a straight-up, one-for-one deal.
Saric was their Plan A at backup center last season. They pivoted to Plan B (a heavy dose of DeAndre Jordan) almost immediately when Saric struggled to contribute to the second unit offensively or defensively. Saric appeared in only 16 games while getting paid the taxpayer mid-level’s salary of $5.2 million. He was under contract for another $5.4 million going into this season, with seemingly no way out.
But the Kings have long been ridiculed as one of the most bumbling franchises in American professional sports. Sure enough, as they sought to clear cap space for a point guard, they bailed out Denver by agreeing to take on Saric’s expiring contract.
Valanciunas was a center the Nuggets had previously shown interest in acquiring at the 2024-25 trade deadline when he was playing for Washington, league sources said, but Sacramento ultimately landed the long-time starter instead. He backed up Domantas Sabonis for the rest of the season.
It cost the Kings two future second-round picks to get Valanciunas.
It cost the Nuggets no draft capital to get him four months later. In fact, it only cost them a player they wanted to get rid of anyway.
It’s worth noting that because the Nuggets were taking on an increased salary ($10.4 million) in Valanciunas, the trade wouldn’t have been possible without also dealing Michael Porter Jr. and a first-round pick to Brooklyn for the cheaper Cam Johnson. Denver’s new front-office tandem of Ben Tenzer and Jon Wallace wanted to improve the team’s depth with those two transactions, which were very much tied together, however indirectly. If that meant a marginal step back for the starting lineup, they were OK with that. But with Johnson substituted for Porter, no such regression has occurred.
Valanciunas was instantly seen as an upgrade to Denver’s bench. He’s proving that to be accurate. For starters, he’s appeared in all 24 games so far — already 150% of the games Saric played as a Nugget. The bar was low, but it’s an important number.
Above all, the Nuggets need backups who can reliably eat minutes during the regular season. Getting to the playoffs with Jokic feeling physically and mentally fresh is their priority.
Valanciunas is averaging 8.5 points in 12.8 minutes per game, putting him on track to be a single-digit scorer for the first time since his rookie season (13 years ago). But that’s only the surface-level stat. Per 36 minutes, he is scoring 23.9 points, the second-highest rate of his career outside of 2018-19. He’s shooting 58.9% from the field (second-highest) and 61.1% on 2-pointers (second-highest).
His touch has been feathery on hook shots, turnaround fade-away jumpers and other shot selections. He’s averaging 1.14 points per possession on 51 post-ups, making him the fourth-most efficient scorer among high-volume post-up players in the NBA (with a minimum of 40 possessions). Only Jokic, DeMar DeRozan and Kristaps Porzingis have a higher point-per-possession rate.
The Nuggets, as predicted by coach David Adelman, can play through Valanciunas.
Most importantly, the team’s net rating when Jokic is off the floor is minus-1.5 — close to breaking even. If that number still seems bad, compare it with last season (minus-9.3) or the year before (minus-8.6).
The improvement of those non-Jokic minutes is a testament to more than just one player, but it’s certainly an indicator of the stability provided by Valanciunas. The Nuggets view him as a starter playing the minutes of a reserve, and they’ve been delighted by his buy-in to that reduced role behind the scenes. The 33-year-old Lithuanian has never won an NBA championship, and he acknowledged before the season that this is best opportunity yet.
Denver faced the Kings for the fourth and final time this season on Thursday night in Sacramento. Valanciunas scored 15 points off the bench — one off his season-high — on a 7-for-7 shooting night. He looked every bit as technically proficient in the post as Jokic did while scoring 36 of his own. It was the best combined output of the year from the Nuggets’ centers. They clobbered their hosts by 31.
On the opposite sideline, Saric didn’t play. He hasn’t since Oct. 26.
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