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Nikola Jokic has a triple-double against every NBA team — except Denver — after Nuggets crush Wizards

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Either the Nuggets really benefitted from the All-Star break, or they really benefitted from playing the Washington Wizards in their first game after the All-Star break.

In a perfect remedy for a three-game losing streak before the week off, the Nuggets returned with a resounding 130-110 win over the floundering Wizards on Thursday night at Ball Arena.

With 21 points, 19 rebounds and 15 assists that included some of his best dimes of the season, Nikola Jokic has now registered a triple-double against every NBA team excluding his own. He has multiple in his career against every team except the Knicks, Pacers and Wizards (9-46). Only LeBron James and Russell Westbrook have triple-doubles against all 30 teams.

“I hope (Jokic) never gets that,” coach Michael Malone said.

Jokic almost put a bow on this triple-double by halftime, but Aaron Gordon passed out from under the basket instead of attempting a layup that would have been a Jokic assist late in the second quarter. Jokic went to the locker room with 10 points, 14 boards and nine assists.

This was the third game of Jokic’s career, and the second this season, in which he shot 100% from the field on at least 10 attempts. It was also his fourth career “perfect triple-double” on 100% shooting.

“Like I always say, it’s just something (that) after I finish career — legacy, milestone,” said Jokic, who knew going into the game that Washington was the final box to check. “I’m gonna look back and say that’s a really cool thing to do.”

The only bad news of the night for the two-time MVP: He had to play a handful of minutes in the fourth quarter with a back-to-back awaiting the Nuggets on Friday in Portland. Malone felt the game was still in reach after a Wizards run.

Jokic seemed to be having as much fun experimenting with circus tricks as he did in the uncompetitive All-Star Game on Sunday. In the first quarter, he tapped a rebound from his left hand to his right, then used the right to flick the ball 70-ish feet to Gordon for a dunk. From the rebound to the heave, he never lowered his arm. Three minutes later, he assisted another Gordon slam with a behind-the-back pass from the left wing.

“Like any great passer, his head is always up,” Malone said. “He’s surveying the floor. He’s seeing who is open, where the defense is, and he just has a tremendous IQ. He sees a lot of things before they happen.”

Washington’s malaise certainly helped. The Nuggets (37-19) scored five layups and three dunks in the first nine minutes, untroubled by defenders in the lane. And the missed shots at the other end made rebounding easy for Jokic.

In one second-quarter sequence, interim coach Brian Keefe called a timeout with 6:51 left after an easy Michael Porter Jr. put-back layup. Seven seconds into the Wizards’ ensuing possession, Corey Kispert turned it over. Jokic snatched the ball from an official and chucked the inbound pass the length of the court to Gordon again. Not a single Washington player was back. Another easy dunk. Another Keefe timeout — with 6:42 remaining in the half.

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