Misplaced Pages

Denver Nuggets

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Jiy (talk | contribs) at 23:12, 7 May 2006 (copyedit). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 23:12, 7 May 2006 by Jiy (talk | contribs) (copyedit)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Template:NBA team

The Denver Nuggets are a professional basketball team based in Denver, Colorado. They play in the National Basketball Association (NBA).

Home arenas

Denver Arena Auditorium (1967-1975)
McNichols Sports Arena (1975-1999)
Pepsi Center (1999-present)

Franchise history

Denver Nuggets logo
Denver Nuggets logo

A charter franchise in the American Basketball Association, the team was originally slated to play in Kansas City, Missouri before moving to Denver. They were named the Denver Larks before they changed their name and became known as the Rockets for their first seven years of existence, winning division titles in 1970 and 1975.

However, they tended to struggle in the postseason and failed to make a championship game during this span. They had a solid lineup led by Byron Beck and Larry Jones, then later by Beck and Ralph Simpson. During the 1969-1970 season, the team also had a controversial rookie named Spencer Haywood. Haywood was one of the first players to turn pro before graduating from college, and the NBA initially refused to let him play in the league. Haywood averaged 30 points in his only ABA season, then was allowed to sign with the Seattle SuperSonics to start a productive NBA career.

In 1974, a contest was held to find a new nickname for the Rockets. There was already a Rockets team in the NBA (Houston). The name Nuggets won, having been the nickname first used by the Denver 1949-50 NBA franchise. Their new logo was a miner apparently discovering an ABA ball.

With Larry Brown coaching, they had their best seasons in team history in their first two seasons as the Nuggets, with the team making the ABA finals in 1975-76. They would get no second chance to win a league championship, as the ABA folded after the 1975-76 season. The Nuggets were one of four ABA teams taken into the NBA, along with the New York Nets, San Antonio Spurs and Indiana Pacers. The Nuggets and Nets had actually applied to join the NBA in 1975, but were forced to stay in the ABA by court order.

Led by Dan Issel, Bobby Jones, and David Thompson, Denver (and their memorable rainbow-striped jerseys) were quite strong early on in the NBA, as they won division titles in their first two seasons in the league, and missed a third by a single game. However, neither of these teams were ultimately successful in the postseason.

Denver Nuggets logo
Denver Nuggets logo

Brown left the team in 1979, helping usher in a brief decline in their team's performance. It ended in 1981, when they hired Doug Moe as a head coach. Moe brought with him a "run and gun" philosophy, a style of play focusing on attempting to score rapidly with little interest in defense, and it helped the team become highly competitive. During the 1980s, the Nuggets would often score in excess of 115 points a game, and during the 1981-82 season, they scored at least 100 points in every game. It was a novel strategy, but it rarely led to playoff success. (On December 13 1983, the Nuggets and the visiting Detroit Pistons combined for an NBA record 370 points, with Detroit winning in triple overtime, 186-184.) Only once, in 1984-85, did they even make it to the Western Conference finals, and that year they lost in five games to the Los Angeles Lakers.

Moe left the team in 1990, and his departure ended their run as a competitive franchise. The team had a brief resurgence in 1993-94 (a year they ditched their rainbow colors for a dark blue and gold scheme) finishing 42-40 and stunning the top-seeded Supersonics in the first round of the Western Conference playoffs, falling to the Utah Jazz in game Seven of the second round, but it was a rare highlight following Moe's departure. The Nuggets were swept in the following year by the San Antonio Spurs in the first round of the playoffs. Denver was an also-ran for nearly a decade, and flirted with having the worst record NBA history in 1997-98, winning only 11 games in an 82 game season. They tied for the worst record in the NBA in 2002-03 with the Cleveland Cavaliers. Ironically, Cleveland (LeBron James) and Denver (Carmelo Anthony) would eventually have a twin pair of rookie dynamos enter their ranks the very next year.

Denver Nuggets logo
Denver Nuggets logo

The team has shown signs of another renaissance for the 2003-04, with the drafting of Carmelo Anthony and yet another uniform change (powder blue and yellow). In just two months of the season, they recorded more wins than they had in 5½ months of play in 2002-03. Much of the reason for this incredible turnaround were the front-office moves of General Manager Kiki Vandeweghe a former Nuggets player who assumed General Manager duties August 9, 2001, adding crucial personnel including: point guard Andre Miller, power forward Nenê, point guard Earl Boykins, center Marcus Camby and shooting guard Jon Barry. In April, the turnaround was complete as they became the first franchise in NBA history to qualify for the postseason following a sub-20-win campaign the previous year. They were eliminated in the first round four games to one by the Minnesota Timberwolves.

On December 28, 2004, head coach Jeff Bzdelik was fired from the organization and replaced by interim coach, former Los Angeles Laker player and Los Angeles Sparks head coach Michael Cooper, before finally hiring veteran coach George Karl as a permanent replacement. Karl lived up to his reputation by leading the team to an astounding record of 32-8 in the second half of the regular season which vaulted the team into the playoffs for the second consecutive year.

Denver Nuggets logo
Denver Nuggets logo

In the playoffs, however, the Nuggets could not survive the powerhouse defense of Manu Ginobili and the San Antonio Spurs. After winning an incredible game one in San Antonio, the Nuggets proceeded to lose the next four games and lost the series 4-1. The Nuggets picked 20th in the 2005 NBA Draft; it was acquired from Washington via Orlando.

In the 2005-2006 season the club won the Northwest division title and owned the third seat in the Western Conference Playoffs. They would have to play against the Los Angeles Clippers who have had a great season and also have NBA Most Valuable Player Award canadite Elton Brand. Although the Denver Nuggets had a better seat in the playoffs, they didn't had the homecourt advantage. That is based on the regular season record. The Denver Nuggets were 44-38 and the Clippers 47-35. The first game in the best-of-7 series was won by the Clippers in 89-87. The next game was won by the Denver Nuggets in 98-87. But eventually the Clippers would go on to win in 5 games and advance to the second round of the Western Conference playoffs. It was the first time for them since the franchise moved to L.A. for the 1975-76 season.

Players of note

Basketball Hall of Famers

File:DEN 5751.gif
Denver Nuggets alternate logo introduced for 2005-06 season. The logo has twin yellow pick axes with mountain peak on a blue circle.

Retired numbers

Beck was the only player to play all nine seasons of the ABA with one team. These men, and team trainer Chopper Travaglini (1975-99), have also been elected to the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame.

Not to be forgotten

Current roster

Denver Nuggets
Franchise
Arenas
Personnel
Owner(s)
Ann Walton Kroenke
President
Josh Kroenke
General manager
Calvin Booth
Head coach
Michael Malone
G League affiliate
Retired numbers
NBA championships
Rivalries
Culture and lore

External links

National Basketball Association
Eastern
Conference
Atlantic
Boston Celtics
Brooklyn Nets
New York Knicks
Philadelphia 76ers
Toronto Raptors
Central
Chicago Bulls
Cleveland Cavaliers
Detroit Pistons
Indiana Pacers
Milwaukee Bucks
Southeast
Atlanta Hawks
Charlotte Hornets
Miami Heat
Orlando Magic
Washington Wizards
Western
Conference
Northwest
Denver Nuggets
Minnesota Timberwolves
Oklahoma City Thunder
Portland Trail Blazers
Utah Jazz
Pacific
Golden State Warriors
Los Angeles Clippers
Los Angeles Lakers
Phoenix Suns
Sacramento Kings
Southwest
Dallas Mavericks
Houston Rockets
Memphis Grizzlies
New Orleans Pelicans
San Antonio Spurs
Annual events
Draft
eligibility
Summer League
Christmas
Martin Luther King Jr. Day
All-Star weekend
game
Global Games
Cup tournament
Play-in
Playoffs
list
finals
champions
History
Predecessors
BAA
NBL
ABA
merger
Walter A. Brown Trophy
Criticisms and controversies
2007 Tim Donaghy betting scandal
Lockouts
Former divisions
Eastern
Midwest
Western
Teams
defunct
expansion
relocated
timeline
Seasons
2019–20 suspension and bubble
Records
regular season
postseason
All-Star
win–loss records
People
Players
current rosters
Eastern
Western
foreign players
race and ethnicity
first overall draft picks
highest paid
banned or suspended
NBPA
Head coaches
current
player-coaches
champions
foreign
female
NBCA
Owners
Referees (NBRA)
Awards
and honors
Larry O'Brien Trophy
Maurice Podoloff Trophy
NBA awards
MVP
Finals MVP
Conference finals MVP
All-Star MVP
Hall of Fame
Members
Anniversary teams
Retired numbers
Others
Arenas
Business
collective bargaining agreement
jersey sponsors
salary cap
NBA Store
team valuations
Culture
cheerleading
mascots
dress code
superteams
sleep
G League
Media
TV
NBA TV
NBA Academy
Rivalries
WNBA
Categories: