logo
Nuggets hang on to beat Warriors despite sitting Nikola Jokić, Jamal Murray and Christian Braun in prime-time matchup

Nuggets hang on to beat Warriors despite sitting Nikola Jokić, Jamal Murray and Christian Braun in prime-time matchup

Yahoo18-03-2025
It turns out that the Denver Nuggets didn't need their stars on Monday night.
The Nuggets, who sat Nikola Jokić, Jamal Murray and Christian Braun due to various injuries, still beat the Golden State Warriors 114-105 at the Chase Center on Monday in their primetime matchup behind a 38-point night from Aaron Gordon.
[Yahoo Fantasy Bracket Mayhem is back: Enter for a shot to win up to $50K]
Jokić was held out with a right elbow contusion and left ankle impingement. Murray missed the game with left knee inflammation and Braun was held out with left foot inflammation. That left the Nuggets without three key starters, and their MVP-candidate leader. Jokić appeared to initially injure his elbow in a March 9 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder.
Nikola Jokic was holding his right elbow after being fouled by Isaiah Hartenstein on this playpic.twitter.com/OI73zIvWzs
— Digits Sports App (@Digits3App) March 9, 2025
He wrapped his elbow on the sideline after a fall. He finished the game and was seen with ice on his elbow postgame. He'd played in each of Denver's three games since.
Murray appeared to tweak his ankle late in Saturday's loss to the Washington Wizards.
Jokić and Murray were both initially listed as questionable for Monday's game prior to being downgraded to out. Braun was listed as probable before being downgraded to questionable, and then out.
The NBA has been active in investigating potential violations of its player participation policy and recently fined the Utah Jazz $100,000 for sidelining former All-Star Lauri Markkanen for multiple games without an approved reason. But the Jazz are in competition for the worst record in the league and the No. 1 pick in a highly anticipated NBA Draft.
The NBA implemented rules in 2023 targeting the load management practice of resting star players when they're not injured. Teams are subject to fines for various violations of the policy that include prohibiting teams from sitting multiple star players in the same game when they're not injured and resting star players during nationally televised games.
Despite losing their stars, the Nuggets still led nearly the entire way in San Francisco. They jumped out to a seven-point lead after the opening period, and then they fended off a late push by the Warriors down the stretch to sneak out with the nine-point win.
Gordon shot 14-of-23 from the field and had six rebounds to go with his 38 points in the win for Denver, which is battling for the No. 2 seed in a competitive Western Conference. Michael Porter Jr. added 21 points and 10 rebounds, and Russell Westbrook finished with 12 points and 16 assists. The Nuggets now hold a 44-25 record, which is in line with the Houston Rockets for second in the conference.
Jimmy Butler led the Warriors with 23 points, eight rebounds and six assists in the loss. Stephen Curry added 20 points and shot just 4-of-14 from behind the arc. Gary Payton II put up 18 points off the bench, too.
The Nuggets will be back in action against the Los Angeles Lakers next on Wednesday night, which is another critical battle in the playoff race. It's unclear if their stars will be back for that matchup.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How the NBA got rid of microbets — and why it could be a blueprint for MLB
How the NBA got rid of microbets — and why it could be a blueprint for MLB

NBC News

time8 minutes ago

  • NBC News

How the NBA got rid of microbets — and why it could be a blueprint for MLB

Sixteen months after a landmark decision opened the door for legal sports gambling in the United States, a high-ranking NFL executive sat before a House committee in the fall of 2019 to ask for help banishing a particular type of bet that has drawn the ire of sports leagues across the country. Proposition bets, better known as 'prop bets,' allow wagers not on the outcomes of games but on occurrences during them. A wager could be on the result the first play of a game, the first pitch of an inning or whether a player will compile over or under a certain number of rebounds, strikeouts or rushing yards. Leagues, as the NFL indicated that day in front of lawmakers, consider such props troublesome and more easily manipulated because many hinge on the actions of just one player. 'These types of bets are significantly more susceptible to match-fixing efforts and are therefore a source of concern to sports leagues, individual teams and the athletes who compete,' NFL Executive Vice President Jocelyn Moore testified in 2019. (Moore, who has served on the board of directors of DraftKings since 2020, declined to comment.) Had you placed a bet then that prop bets would go away, you would have ended up a loser. When the NFL staged the Super Bowl between the Los Angeles Rams and the New England Patriots five months after the NFL's testimony, bettors could still choose among hundreds of prop bets. And six years later, they are still a source of headlines, concern for leagues and income for sportsbooks. In 2024, the NBA banned the Toronto Raptors' Jontay Porter for life for sports betting after an investigation found he had, among other findings, 'limited his own participation to influence the outcome of one or more bets on his performance in at least one Raptors game.' In June, reports surfaced that a federal investigation into longtime NBA guard Malik Beasley was related to activity around prop bets. 'I do think some of the bets are problematic," NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said in July, the month Major League Baseball placed a Cleveland Guardians pitcher on paid leave while it investigated unusually high wagers on the first pitches of innings on June 15 and June 27, ESPN reported. Weeks later, after MLB placed a second Guardians pitcher on leave as part of a sports gambling investigation, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred told a group of baseball writers that there were 'certain types of bets that strike me as unnecessary and particularly vulnerable, things where it's one single act [and] doesn't affect the outcome, necessarily.' Whether MLB considers prop bets 'unnecessary' enough to try to have its gambling partners restrict the kinds that are offered is unclear. But if MLB does, it might look to the NBA for a possible blueprint. During the 2024-25 NBA season, the league's gambling partners including FanDuel, DraftKings, BetMGM and several others who make up upward of 95% of the legal U.S. sportsbooks agreed to no longer offer 'under' prop bets on players either on 10-day or two-way contracts. (Porter had been on a two-way contract.) Fans could still bet on the sport's big names, like Stephen Curry's 3-pointers or LeBron James' rebounds — but legal sports betting operators in the United States were no longer offering action on the NBA's lowest-paid players. The decision wasn't a mandate handed down solely by the NBA. 'We do not have control over the specific bets that are made on our game,' Silver said in July. Years earlier, the league had sought just that type of power, but it was unsuccessful in persuading state lawmakers to pass legislation that would have given the NBA the right to approve what types of bets could be offered on the league. It also doesn't hold veto rights over what its gambling partners can and cannot offer, according to sources with knowledge of the situation. Instead, much like the NFL's attempt in its congressional testimony six years earlier, the NBA had to ask for help. Representatives for DraftKings and FanDuel didn't respond to requests for comment on their back-and-forth with the league that led to the decisions to restrict certain prop bets. Multiple people with knowledge of the situation not authorized to speak publicly on sensitive discussions said the league had to rely on making the case to its partners that prop bets on 10-day and two-way players weren't worth the relatively small amount of business they brought in. 'It's a small part of the marketplace,' a person involved in the process said, 'but had outsized integrity risks.' Such dialogue between a league and a sportsbook would have been unthinkable before the Supreme Court's 2018 decision to overturn a federal prohibition on sports gambling freed states to decide whether to permit legal sports betting. (Thirty-eight states and the District of Columbia allow sports gambling, and Missouri is set to launch its own operation in December.) Almost overnight, leagues and sportsbooks that once steered clear of one another were now in business together. Sometimes, the back-and-forth between a league and its sportsbook partners has stopped bets from appearing before they are even listed. In 2020, with leagues still months away from making a pandemic comeback, ESPN scrambled to fill programming that included NBA players' competing against one another in video games and even HORSE. As those competitions were announced, the NBA was contacted by betting operators and regulators who wanted to know whether betting odds should be offered on the unusual action, according to the sources with knowledge of the situation. The NBA strongly advised against it because the tournaments had been tape-delayed, meaning a handful of people already knew the outcomes and could benefit from that information if bets were offered. Sportsbooks agreed. The NFL recently has also found success restricting certain types of prop bets, this time through legislation. The Illinois Gaming Board in February approved the NFL's request to prohibit 10 types of what it classified as 'objectionable wagers,' including whether a kicker would miss a field goal or an extra point and whether quarterback's first pass of a game would be incomplete — the same type of 'single-actor' bets that leagues have come out against and that have reportedly sparked investigations into multiple athletes. By seeking to influence which bets are offered, leagues and their gambling partners are attempting a delicate balance of limiting bets they consider risks to the integrity of their games while still ensuring that enough betting options are offered to keep fans wagering their dollars in legal markets, rather than through offshore sportsbooks where tracking suspicious activity is much more opaque. Proponents of sports betting suggest that although the headlines about players or league staffers being investigated, or caught, for betting manipulation isn't good public relations for the sports, they're a sign that a 'complex system that detects aberrational behavior,' as Silver said in July, is working as intended. As part of their partnership agreements, leagues, betting operators and so-called integrity firms have data-sharing agreements that allow them to communicate with one another to monitor suspicious activity. "The transparency inherent with legalized sports betting has become a significant asset in protecting the integrity of athletic competition," DraftKings said in a statement. "Unlike the pre-legalization era, when threats were far more difficult to detect, the regulated industry now provides increased oversight and accountability that helps to identify potentially suspicious activity.' In the case of the pair of Cleveland Guardian pitchers, the Ohio Casino Control Commission was notified June 30 by a licensed Ohio sportsbook about suspicious wagering on Guardians games and 'was also promptly contacted by Major League Baseball regarding the events,' a commission spokesperson said in a statement. 'Under the Commission's statutory responsibilities, an independent investigation commenced.' It's why leagues and sportsbook operators consider restricting bets a fine line. 'If you have sweeping prohibitions on that type of a bet, you're taking away the ability for your league to ensure the integrity of that activity,' said Joe Maloney, a senior vice president for strategic communications at the American Gaming Association. 'You will not have the ability to work with an integrity monitor to identify any irregular betting activity on such a legal market. You will not have the collaboration of a legal operator who will share that information. You will not have the collaboration of a legal operator to say to them, 'Here's the do-not-fly list for betting activity for our league: employees, club employees, trainers, athletic officials, referees,' etc. ... 'Betting engagement on prop bets is largely a reflection of fandom. And so, by pushing that away, I think you absolutely lose the ability to properly oversee it and to root out the bad actors that would seem to exploit it. Because it will still take place.' In 2022, legal sports betting accounted for $6.8 billion in legal revenue, while illegal sports betting accounted for about $3.8 billion, according to research from the American Gaming Association, a trade association. Last year, it estimated that revenue from legal sports betting rose to $16 billion, while the illegal market grew to about $5 billion. A 2024 analysis by the International Betting Integrity Association, a nonprofit integrity firm made up of licensed gambling operators, questioned the efficacy of restricting prop bets. The IBIA reported that 59 out of 360,000 basketball games that had been offered for betting from 2017 to 2023 were 'the subject of suspicious betting.' 'There was no suspicious betting activity linked to match manipulation identified on player prop markets,' the IBIA report said. 'There is no meaningful integrity benefit from excluding such markets, which are widely available globally. Prohibiting those products will make offshore operators more attractive.' By persuading its partners to keep some prop bets off the books, the NBA nonetheless provided a precedent for how to remove bets leagues have considered, to use Manfred's term, 'unnecessary.' Would MLB, amid an ongoing investigation into two pitchers, follow? Unlike the NBA, MLB doesn't have easily defined classifications of contracts such as 10-day and two-way players. One method could instead be to target so-called first-pitch microbets. MLB is having 'ongoing conversations' related to gambling, according to a person with knowledge of the league's thinking. If baseball were to make such a push against microbets, its reasoning might mirror the NBA's last year, said Gill Alexander, a longtime sports betting commentator for VSiN. 'I think basically baseball's point would be, you know, this is the type of prop that is just begging for trouble, right?' Alexander said. Ohio, for one, would most likely agree. Last month, Gov. Mike DeWine asked the Ohio Casino Control Commission to ban prop bets on 'highly specific events within games that are completely controlled by one player," he said in a news release, while asking the NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL, WNBA and MLS commissioners to support his stance. 'The prop betting experiment in this country has failed badly,' DeWine said. Alexander said: 'I do think that we're in the era now where these leagues can exert some influence on these sports books, as long as it is of no financial pain to the sports books. This is one of these instances where, really, I don't agree with Rob Manfred every day, but I actually think he's probably going to get what he wants here.'

Call leads Dodgers against the Rockies after 4-hit game
Call leads Dodgers against the Rockies after 4-hit game

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Call leads Dodgers against the Rockies after 4-hit game

Los Angeles Dodgers (72-54, first in the NL West) vs. Colorado Rockies (36-90, fifth in the NL West) Denver; Wednesday, 8:40 p.m. EDT PITCHING PROBABLES: Dodgers: Shohei Ohtani (0-0, 3.47 ERA, 1.11 WHIP, 32 strikeouts); Rockies: Tanner Gordon (3-5, 7.98 ERA, 1.80 WHIP, 24 strikeouts) BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Dodgers -307, Rockies +244; over/under is 11 1/2 runs BOTTOM LINE: The Los Angeles Dodgers take on the Colorado Rockies after Alex Call had four hits on Tuesday in an 11-4 win over the Rockies. Colorado has a 36-90 record overall and a 20-44 record in home games. The Rockies are 26-42 in games when they record at least eight hits. Los Angeles has gone 31-30 on the road and 72-54 overall. The Dodgers are first in the NL with 187 total home runs, averaging 1.5 per game. Wednesday's game is the ninth time these teams meet this season. The Dodgers have a 7-1 advantage in the season series. TOP PERFORMERS: Hunter Goodman has 21 doubles, four triples, 25 home runs and 69 RBIs for the Rockies. Brenton Doyle is 11 for 32 with two doubles, three home runs and eight RBIs over the past 10 games. Ohtani leads the Dodgers with 68 extra base hits (16 doubles, eight triples and 44 home runs). Max Muncy is 8 for 23 with four home runs and nine RBIs over the past 10 games. LAST 10 GAMES: Rockies: 6-4, .267 batting average, 5.83 ERA, outscored by 11 runs Dodgers: 5-5, .259 batting average, 4.03 ERA, outscored opponents by 16 runs INJURIES: Rockies: Thairo Estrada: 60-Day IL (hamstring), Seth Halvorsen: 15-Day IL (elbow), Zach Agnos: 15-Day IL (hand), German Marquez: 15-Day IL (shoulder), Kris Bryant: 60-Day IL (lumbar), Jeff Criswell: 60-Day IL (elbow) Dodgers: Max Muncy: 10-Day IL (oblique), Brock Stewart: 15-Day IL (shoulder), Tommy Edman: 10-Day IL (ankle), Kirby Yates: 15-Day IL (back), Hyeseong Kim: 10-Day IL (shoulder), Tanner Scott: 15-Day IL (elbow), Michael Kopech: 60-Day IL (knee), Kike Hernandez: 10-Day IL (elbow), Roki Sasaki: 60-Day IL (shoulder), Tony Gonsolin: 60-Day IL (elbow), Evan Phillips: 60-Day IL (forearm), Kyle Hurt: 60-Day IL (elbow), Michael Grove: 60-Day IL (shoulder), Brusdar Graterol: 60-Day IL (shoulder), River Ryan: 60-Day IL (elbow), Gavin Stone: 60-Day IL (shoulder) ___ The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Call leads Dodgers against the Rockies after 4-hit game
Call leads Dodgers against the Rockies after 4-hit game

Associated Press

time2 hours ago

  • Associated Press

Call leads Dodgers against the Rockies after 4-hit game

Los Angeles Dodgers (72-54, first in the NL West) vs. Colorado Rockies (36-90, fifth in the NL West) Denver; Wednesday, 8:40 p.m. EDT PITCHING PROBABLES: Dodgers: Shohei Ohtani (0-0, 3.47 ERA, 1.11 WHIP, 32 strikeouts); Rockies: Tanner Gordon (3-5, 7.98 ERA, 1.80 WHIP, 24 strikeouts) BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Dodgers -307, Rockies +244; over/under is 11 1/2 runs BOTTOM LINE: The Los Angeles Dodgers take on the Colorado Rockies after Alex Call had four hits on Tuesday in an 11-4 win over the Rockies. Colorado has a 36-90 record overall and a 20-44 record in home games. The Rockies are 26-42 in games when they record at least eight hits. Los Angeles has gone 31-30 on the road and 72-54 overall. The Dodgers are first in the NL with 187 total home runs, averaging 1.5 per game. Wednesday's game is the ninth time these teams meet this season. The Dodgers have a 7-1 advantage in the season series. TOP PERFORMERS: Hunter Goodman has 21 doubles, four triples, 25 home runs and 69 RBIs for the Rockies. Brenton Doyle is 11 for 32 with two doubles, three home runs and eight RBIs over the past 10 games. Ohtani leads the Dodgers with 68 extra base hits (16 doubles, eight triples and 44 home runs). Max Muncy is 8 for 23 with four home runs and nine RBIs over the past 10 games. LAST 10 GAMES: Rockies: 6-4, .267 batting average, 5.83 ERA, outscored by 11 runs Dodgers: 5-5, .259 batting average, 4.03 ERA, outscored opponents by 16 runs INJURIES: Rockies: Thairo Estrada: 60-Day IL (hamstring), Seth Halvorsen: 15-Day IL (elbow), Zach Agnos: 15-Day IL (hand), German Marquez: 15-Day IL (shoulder), Kris Bryant: 60-Day IL (lumbar), Jeff Criswell: 60-Day IL (elbow) Dodgers: Max Muncy: 10-Day IL (oblique), Brock Stewart: 15-Day IL (shoulder), Tommy Edman: 10-Day IL (ankle), Kirby Yates: 15-Day IL (back), Hyeseong Kim: 10-Day IL (shoulder), Tanner Scott: 15-Day IL (elbow), Michael Kopech: 60-Day IL (knee), Kike Hernandez: 10-Day IL (elbow), Roki Sasaki: 60-Day IL (shoulder), Tony Gonsolin: 60-Day IL (elbow), Evan Phillips: 60-Day IL (forearm), Kyle Hurt: 60-Day IL (elbow), Michael Grove: 60-Day IL (shoulder), Brusdar Graterol: 60-Day IL (shoulder), River Ryan: 60-Day IL (elbow), Gavin Stone: 60-Day IL (shoulder) ___ The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store