Nuggets again will get a jump on summer vacation
MARK HEISLER ON THE NBA
Despite the addition of Allen Iverson, Denver continues to underachieve and is just about back in familiar territory.
DENVER -- OK, boys and girls, what time is it?
Baseball season!
With the Nuggets trailing the Lakers, 3-0, and the NHL Avalanche trailing Detroit, 2-0, it's getting late in the local winter sports season.
Or seeing as how the Rockies, last season's National League champions (I know it sounds wrong but I looked it up), are back where they usually are in the NL West, maybe fans can go right to the NFL Broncos.
Actually, Denver fans never leave the Broncos. If you think the Nuggets' next-to-last stand Saturday had people here mesmerized, guess again.
Even with the Nuggets and the Avalanche playing, the big story was the NFL draft in which the Broncos selected a Boise State offensive tackle named Ryan Clady whose picture ran atop Page 1 in Sunday's Denver Post with a deck that read:
"Broncos hope they've found replacement for Matt Lepsis."
As any fifth grader here could tell you, Lepsis is the Broncos offensive tackle who just retired.
It was this anonymity that prompted the Nuggets to something as desperate as acquiring Allen Iverson last season, even if he didn't fit with a team that already had a one-on-one force unto himself, Carmelo Anthony.
On the other hand, Iverson came cheap (Andre Miller, Joe Smith and draft picks) and the Nuggets weren't going anywhere, so what could it hurt?
OK, here's the answer: Just look around.
It worked spectacularly for a few weeks, as Iverson's arrival knocked the Broncos, who were in the playoffs, off the front page.
Then the Nuggets went back to being the Nuggets, only slightly better, which is what most people expected in the first place.
Attendance ticked up 1% last season and another 1% this season.
They finished 45-37 last season and were knocked out in the first round of the playoffs.
They finished 50-32 this season and, barring a miracle, will be knocked out in the first round.
And now for the consequences.
With Iverson's $19-million salary, owner Stan Kroenke, the Wal-Mart son-in-law who broke his iron-clad rule against paying luxury tax, has the No. 3 payroll at $82.7 million and is looking at a $14.8-million tax bill.
That's a lot of money to finish No. 8 and last four or five games in the first round, which is why Coach George Karl was supposedly in trouble.
That, and the fact that Anthony announced that they all "quit" in Saturday's game -- "everybody from the coaches to the players."
- Names in the News Jun 24, 1988
- Thompson Turns Down Nuggets Jun 23, 1990
- THE SIDELINES - Nuggets Woo Yugoslav Star Oct 24, 1989
