Jamal Murray exited Thursday night’s national TV matchup against the Boston Celtics, and the Denver Nuggets quickly clarified why. The team ruled Murray out due to illness, not injury, after he left in the first quarter. Murray finished with two points on 1-of-3 shooting and one assist.
Murray entered the night listed as questionable with right hamstring tightness. He ultimately suited up, giving Denver a needed offensive boost against a top-tier Celtics defense. However, the in-game update shifted the storyline from soft-tissue concern to sickness.
That’s significant for a Nuggets team navigating availability issues all season.
If this is a one-night illness, Murray’s status could rebound quickly. If symptoms linger, Denver’s offensive structure becomes a short-term concern. Murray is averaging a career-high 25.5 points and 7.5 assists while shooting 48.3 percent from the field and 42.3 percent from three, helping him reach his first ever All-Star appearance.
Without Murray, the creation load tilts heavily toward Jokić. The three-time MVP already orchestrates the offense, but Murray’s absence compresses spacing and late-clock options. Especially given their current injury pile up that includes two of their top rotation players. Denver is already without Aaron Gordon and recently lost Peyton Watson amid a breakout stretch, both to hamstring injuries.
The Nuggets remain one of the Western Conference’s elite teams and are not strangers to adversity. Still losing a primary scorer this late in the season is a huge blow given how small the margin for error is. The Nuggets currently sit third in the Western conference but are only a half game ahead of the Minnesota Timberwolves and a game and half ahead of the Los Angeles Lakers.
The Nuggets can afford one night without Murray, but they cannot withstand another major hit to the roster with the standings so compact. Murray’s next opportunity to play comes Friday against the Oklahoma City Thunder, and Denver will hope this was nothing more than a brief interruption rather than the start of another availability storyline.