Denver Nuggets Dismantle Suns in 2025-26 Home Opener Spectacle
The air in Ball Arena crackled with the kind of electric anticipation only a Denver Nuggets home opener can bring. Twenty thousand fans, a sea of navy blue and gold, were ready to welcome back their team. On the other side stood the Phoenix Suns, a team walking wounded into the lion’s den on the second night of a back-to-back. The stage was set, and the Denver Nuggets didn’t just win; they put on a masterclass, dismantling the Suns 133-111 in a game that felt more like a statement than a simple victory.
From the opening tip, this was the Denver Nuggets’ night. They never trailed, not for a single second. The energy was palpable, culminating in a moment of sheer magic as the first quarter clock bled to zero. Jamal Murray, the Blue Arrow, corralled a loose ball and launched a prayer from 55 feet out. The buzzer screamed, the net snapped, and the crowd erupted.
It was a shot that defied physics and logic, a perfect encapsulation of the kind of night it was going to be for Denver—effortless, audacious, and utterly dominant. Murray, who finished with a team-high 23 points, later quipped, “That’s why I wanted to come out and have a good November. October—whatever it is.” Whatever it is, indeed. For him, and for the Nuggets, it was spectacular.
Jokic’s Quietly Dominant Triple-Double
While Murray provided the fireworks, Nikola Jokic was the quiet force of nature at the center of it all. The Joker finished the night with his second triple-double of the young season—14 points, 14 rebounds, and a staggering 15 assists. It wasn’t a night where he needed to be a scoring machine; his brilliance was in his orchestration. He was the conductor of a symphony of destruction, finding teammates with no-look passes and threading needles through defenses that weren’t even there yet.

On a night where his shot wasn’t his primary weapon, going just 5-for-8 from the field, Jokic bent the game to his will. His 166th career regular-season triple-double, placing him third all-time, was a testament to his unique genius. He didn’t just play basketball; he saw it, a chess master moving his pieces with an almost psychic understanding of the court. The Suns, missing their starting center Mark Williams, had no answer. How do you stop a tidal wave with a bucket?
Suns’ Fleeting Hope Extinguished by Nuggets’ Firepower
For a brief moment in the third quarter, it seemed like Phoenix might claw its way back from the abyss. Trailing by 20, the Suns, led by a valiant 31-point effort from Devin Booker, ripped off a 13-2 run. The lead shrank to nine. The home crowd held its breath. Was the magic running out?
Not a chance.
The Denver Nuggets responded with the cold, calculated fury of a champion. They answered the Suns’ push with an 11-0 haymaker of their own, pushing the lead right back to a comfortable margin. It was a sequence that defined the game: Phoenix fought with desperation, but Denver fought with confidence. The run was punctuated by highlight-reel plays, including a jaw-dropping 360-degree slam from Aaron Gordon, who followed up his career-high 50-point game with a solid 17 points. By the time Murray drained another three to start the fourth, making it 108-86, the outcome was no longer in doubt. The Nuggets simply had too many weapons, too much chemistry, and too much Jokic.
The final stats paint a brutal picture. The Denver Nuggets dominated in the paint, scoring 62 points to the Suns’ 34. They were quicker on the break, outscoring Phoenix 28-11 in fast-break points. And they shared the ball with beautiful efficiency, racking up 31 assists. It was a complete performance, a warning shot fired across the bow of the Western Conference. They’re back, and they look hungrier than ever.
