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Jalen Pickett on connection to Michael Malone-Calvin Booth rift: ‘Itap kinda crazy’

The second-year guard’s role was paramount in the Michael Malone-Calvin Booth tension, a position Pickett shrugged off but admitted was ‘kinda crazy.’

Jalen Pickett (24) of the Denver Nuggets is introduced before the first quarter against the Minnesota Timberwolves at Ball Arena in Denver on Tuesday, April 1, 2025. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)
Jalen Pickett (24) of the Denver Nuggets is introduced before the first quarter against the Minnesota Timberwolves at Ball Arena in Denver on Tuesday, April 1, 2025. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)
Luca Evans photographed in Denver Post Studio in Denver on March 4, 2025. Evans is the new beat reporter for the Denver Broncos. (Photo by Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post)
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The maelstrom swept through Ball Arena a week and a half ago, the fallout of the reported Michael Malone-Calvin Booth rift erupting in one shocking day, sweeping up all the Nuggets’ mainstays in its wake. Nikola Jokic’s long-term future was called into question by pundits. Michael Porter Jr. and Jamal Murray’s contracts dangle in the balance.

And at the eye of the storm, the heart of this conflict that led to Denver firing its head coach and general manager in the span of a few minutes, was a reserve guard who’s played 76 games in his NBA career.

“To be mentioned in these things, itap kinda crazy,” second-year point guard Jalen Pickett told The Denver Post on Friday after he was asked if it was strange to see his name explode amid sweeping change. “But growing up, you always want to be on this stage. So you gotta just accept everything that comes with it, at this point.”

The 25-year-old Rochester, N.Y., native out of high school and began his college career at mid-major Siena. The Nuggets selected him in the second round of the 2023 draft. In many ways, through no fault of his own, Pickett hit every pressure point of the Malone-Booth cold war. As The Post’s Bennett Durando reported, Malone played former two-way guard Collin Gillespie over draftee Pickett last year; Booth wanted the opposite. that Malone closed games with erratic veteran Russell Westbrook down the stretch of the regular season; Booth wanted Pickett.

On Friday, though, with the dust settled under interim head coach David Adelman, Pickett stood after the Nuggets’ practice and shrugged off the bluster around his role. Calm, like his game, as chaos erupted around him — and over him.

“Can’t really focus on that type of stuff,” Pickett said. “Can’t control anything that happens in this business, as you can see from this year. But, just when my number’s called, I’m going to be ready each and every time I step on the floor. And thatap whatever the team needs me to do at this stage.”

By all measures, the Nuggets will likely need a fair amount. Pickett has grown into a steady change-of-pace option from Westbrook behind starting point guard Jamal Murray. With Murray sidelined in Adelman’s first game as interim coach April 9, Pickett both started and closed against the Kings. The second-year guard responded with 18 points on 5-of-7 shooting from deep.

Pickett’s still not a final product, as Murray put it Wednesday. He’s still learning to play with Jokic, the traffic conductor of Air Denver. But his feel playing off the Nuggets’ MVP is “definitely more instinctual now,” Pickett said Friday.

On multiple possessions in that Kings matchup, Pickett recalled, he was stationed to space in the corner with Jokic operating from the post. Instead, Jokic urged him to flash to the middle.

“I was wide open,” Pickett recounted. “Like, wide-open shots, like at the middle of the paint. I mean, he’s just so great. He sees things two, three possessions, or two, three plays right before it happens.”

He’s played a total of 11 playoff minutes in his short NBA career. But postseason basketball is “more my game,” Pickett told The Post. He earned the nickname ҰԻ貹for his methodical pace growing up. He plays a unique brand of “booty ball,” a synonym of bully ball, a 6-foot-4 guard using his mass against smaller guards. He posted a 4.46 assist-to-turnover ratio in 2024-25, .

And he’ll have his chance to plant his flag this postseason.

“Jalen got to play in some big games,” Adelman said of Pickett on Thursday. “I mean this, the Sacramento game felt like a playoff game, and he seemed very comfortable in it. And his shotap been falling this week.

“So you have to rely on those guys.”

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