A pickup truck doing ballet: Nikola Jokić is making the NBA finals his masterpiece
As the Denver Nuggets tighten their grip on the NBA finals, their singular star is making a convincing claim for historical greatness
Hybridity has always been in Nikola Joki's basketball DNA; after all, this is a player who was famously drafted by Denver in the middle of a Taco Bell commercial for the quesadilla-burrito mashup known as a quesarito. The pretty, historic town of Sombor, where Joki grew up, is tucked into the northwestern pocket of Serbia, flush against the borders with Croatia and Hungary; the Hungarian, Habsburg, Ottoman and Austrian empires have all, at various points over the past half-millennium, laid claim to it. Joki, perhaps fittingly given his origins, has emerged over this postseason as the NBA's ultimate border-hopper: a center with the touch of a guard, a prodigious scorer who's better as a passer, the embodiment of total basketball, infinitely adaptable, positionless but always in position, a crossroads in human form.
As Denver tightened their grip on the finals with a coolly commanding Game 3 win in Miami on Wednesday night, a talent that once threatened to go unrewarded with the hard currency of titles has come thrillingly into mint. Joki's numbers - 32 points, 21 rebounds, 10 assists - made him the first player ever to post a 30-20-10 game in the NBA finals. But most impressive was the way in which he accumulated these figures, with a freedom and variety that captured the best of his childhood heroes.
Continue reading...