Nikola Jokić has every right to demand a trade from Nuggets


Nikola Jokić should demand a trade. The 30-year-old has every right to want out of this Mile High mess.

On Tuesday, the Kroenke family, which owns the Denver Nuggets, executed a panic move without historical precedent by firing Michael Malone three games before the postseason. No team has ever fired a winning coach this late in the season. But that’s only half of it. The team also relieved general manager Calvin Booth of his duties as the top basketball decision-maker, indicating that it doesn’t believe in either leading voice to run the show. Cleaning house in April, days before the playoffs? In a league of chaos, this is beyond the pale.

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Imagine if this happened on a team with LeBron James. Or Stephen Curry. Or Kevin Durant. With any other all-time great, we’d be asking the question: How in the world can he be OK with all this?

But with Jokić — who has famously shied away from publicly or privately throwing around his enormous political weight — we skip over that part of the news cycle. We assume that he’ll be fine with it all.

Frankly, it’s an insult to Jokić. The Serbian has been cheated out of multiple championship runs by the Denver Nuggets. By his own admission, Jokić is at the peak of his powers, averaging 30 points, 12.8 rebounds, 10.2 assists this season. Three-time MVP, first-time triple-double average. The 10-year vet has been a contender with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander in the MVP race this season, but his best argument for the hardware is buttressed by how terrible his supporting cast is. When SGA has been off the floor, the Thunder have outscored opponents by 75 points across 1,199 minutes. When Jokić has been off the floor? The Nuggets have lost by a whopping 252 points in 1,366 minutes.

When it comes to quantifying his supporting cast, that’s just the tip of the iceberg.

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Jokic’s starless supporting cast

I don’t think people quite understand how bad the supporting cast has been around Jokić in Denver for his entire career.

I’ll put it another way. Do you know how many of Jokić’s teammates have made an All-Star team while playing next to him? I’m not talking about Paul Millsap earning four All-Stars with Atlanta before joining the Nuggets on the downside of his career. I’m talking about All-Stars in a Nuggets jersey since Jokić joined the league in 2015-16. Want to take a guess?

The answer is zero. Jokić has never played with an All-Star teammate in his seven trips to the All-Star game or in any of his 10 years in the league for that matter.

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You might be thinking that it’s a technicality, that surely Jamal Murray or Aaron Gordon, through all their slow starts, made an All-NBA team by season’s end. Nope, no All-NBA appearances by a Jokić teammate either.

DENVER, COLORADO - APRIL 1: Nikola Jokic #15 of the Denver Nuggets looks on in the second overtime period against the Minnesota Timberwolves at Ball Arena on April 1, 2025 in Denver, Colorado. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images)

Jokić hasn’t had an All-Star or All-NBA teammate in his 10 years in the league. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images)

(Dustin Bradford via Getty Images)

Fine, you might say. At least with an offensive savant like Jokić, you’d have the competency to pair him with multiple defensive stalwarts who were named to an All-Defensive team. The number of All-Defense members next to Jokić during his career? That answer is also zero.

Not one.

No All-Stars. No All-NBA members. No All-Defense awardees.

It’s been 10 years. A decade without a star teammate — even on the defensive side — has never happened for a player of Jokić’s caliber. Not even close. By my book, it’s probably the most underrated storyline in the NBA — how Jokić has been bereft of any star support throughout his career.


Jokić stands alone historically

I looked up the 24 MVPs dating back to 1984 and found that Jokić is the only MVP winner (and he’s won three) to have never played with an All-Star, All-NBA or All-Defense member in their first 10 seasons in the league.

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You thought LeBron had it bad in Cleveland the first time? At least he had Zydrunas Ilgauskas (2005 All-Star), Mo Williams (2009 All-Star) and Anderson Varejao (2009-10 All-Defense). And that’s only in six seasons. James’ supporting cast through 10 seasons earned 12 All-League accolades. That’s actually below average for an MVP.

All-League Awards By Teammates, First 10 Seasons of MVP’s Career