Denver Nuggets star Nikola Jokić suffered a hyperextended left knee during Monday's loss to the Miami Heat, ruling him out for at least four weeks. The injury, which occurred after accidental contact with a teammate, avoids a season-ending tear but jeopardizes his MVP candidacy due to the NBA's 65-game threshold. This development clears the path for Oklahoma City Thunder's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to secure a second consecutive MVP award.
Nikola Jokić, the Denver Nuggets' three-time MVP, exited Monday night's game against the Miami Heat in the final seconds of the first half after his left knee buckled from accidental contact with teammate Spencer Jones. An MRI on Tuesday confirmed a hyperextension, with the team announcing he will miss at least four weeks and be re-evaluated then. While fears of an ACL tear were alleviated, the absence comes at a critical juncture for the Nuggets, who sit third in the Western Conference at 22-10 but face a grueling schedule of 16 games in the next 28 days.
Jokić has been dominant this season, averaging 29.9 points, a league-leading 12.4 rebounds, and a league-leading 11.1 assists per game across all 32 contests. He contributed 21 points, eight assists, and five rebounds before leaving the 147-123 loss. However, with only 65 games required for award eligibility, even a prompt return could push him over the limit, especially considering planned load management on back-to-backs.
The injury reshapes the MVP race. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, whose Thunder are on pace for 70 wins, now leads in key metrics like EPM (+10.1) and ranks highly in PER, BPM, and win shares per 48 minutes. Analysts note he would join an elite group as the 11th player to win two MVPs by age 27 if he claims the award.
For Denver, challenges mount amid other injuries to Aaron Gordon (hamstring), Cam Johnson (knee, 4-6 weeks), and Christian Braun (ankle). Jamal Murray, enjoying his best regular season, will shoulder more responsibility, though the team's net rating without Jokić remains poor at -11.1. Coach David Adelman emphasized team resilience: "This is part of the NBA. We'll move on as a team."
The Nuggets trail closely in the West, just three games ahead of the seventh seed, risking a drop toward the play-in tournament without their cornerstone player.