13 Pokes in 7 Seconds: Jokic Mugged, NBA Does Nothing

Jokic endured a 13-poke assault in 7 seconds, uncalled. The NBA's spineless refusal to protect its stars is ruining the game.

Forget the final score – Nikola Jokic was subjected to a thirteen-poke assault in seven seconds, and the NBA just watched. This isn’t basketball; it’s a mugging, and the league’s reigning MVP is the victim.

This isn’t just about one play; this is about the NBA’s spineless refusal to protect its biggest stars. The message? Anything goes when it comes to brutalizing superstars in the playoffs. Blatant cheap shots are now ‘playoff intensity.’

THE EDIT

  • Jokic endured relentless, uncalled contact in Game 2.
  • Lakers’ tactics are aggressive, pushing the boundaries of fair play.
  • The NBA’s officiating needs a hard reset on superstar protection.

The incident blew up during Game 2 of the Western Conference First Round on April 23, 2026. The Denver Nuggets fought off the Los Angeles Lakers 108-103 in a gritty battle. Throughout that absolute war, Jokic was subjected to a relentless, premeditated physical assault.

Lakers defenders, especially the notoriously aggressive Jaxson Hayes, were constantly jabbing him. They targeted his arms, hands, and upper body while he tried to post up, run the offense, and simply exist on the court.

The infamous “13 pokes in 7 seconds” sequence went viral, igniting a firestorm of outrage in the second quarter. The most shocking part? No foul was called. Nuggets Nation, and any analyst with working eyeballs, is absolutely incandescent with rage.

This isn’t just ‘defense’; it’s a strategic campaign of attrition, designed to physically break down a generational talent. It’s meant to disrupt his surgical passing and unblockable fadeaway. It’s meant to wear down a superstar, plain and simple. Coach Michael Malone was seething after the game, barely containing his fury.

“Nikola is getting mauled out there. It’s playoff basketball, I get it, but there’s a line. We need our superstar protected.”

Jokic, ever the stoic, just brushed it off. “It’s physical. You just play through it,” he said, with that trademark shrug.

But while the Joker brushes it off with his characteristic, almost infuriating calm, the NBA Commissioner’s office should be burning with shame. This isn’t ‘playing through it’; this is an unconscionable assault on the game’s integrity.

It’s a black eye on the league’s supposed commitment to fair play. It’s a fundamental breakdown of what fair competition is supposed to look like.

LAKERS’ BRUTALITY EXPOSED: A Blueprint for Dirty Play?

Let’s be brutally honest: The Lakers know they are incapable of stopping Nikola Jokic with pure basketball skill. Their solution? Resort to tactics that would make a street brawler blush. Coach Darvin Ham, predictably, tried to spin it as “playoff intensity” – a phrase that has become a thinly veiled excuse for dirty play across the league.

“You have to make it tough on a player of Jokic’s caliber. We’re not trying to injure anyone, but we are going to be physical and contest every possession. That’s how you win in the playoffs.”

That’s not ‘playoff intensity,’ Coach Ham; that’s a pathetic, transparent excuse for borderline assault. ‘Making it tough’ does not mean turning the game’s most skilled big man into a human punching bag.

It doesn’t mean allowing defenders to jab and poke a player like he’s a pin cushion, hoping to wear him down. The box score from Game 2, despite the abuse, tells a story of sheer dominance.

Jokic still dropped a monstrous stat line of 32 points, 18 rebounds, and 9 assists. He shot an efficient 12-of-23 from the field, even hitting a crucial fadeaway over Jaxson Hayes late in the game that sealed the Nuggets’ victory.

He somehow still drew seven fouls, but anyone watching could count dozens more instances of uncalled, intentional contact that were simply waved off. The message from the refs? ‘Go ahead, Lakers, keep hacking!’

The NBA needs to look itself in the mirror and ask: Do we want to showcase the pinnacle of basketball skill, or do we want a glorified street brawl where the biggest stars are targets?

THE NBA’S SILENT PROBLEM: A Conspiracy of Convenience?

The league, predictably, has offered crickets on this egregious display of officiating malpractice. But the debate rages on amongst fans and pundits alike.

And then there’s the tired, infuriating chorus from the peanut gallery: ‘Jokic doesn’t flop, he invites it!’ ‘It’s referee welfare bait!’ ‘It’s hyperbolic bullshit!’ Spare us the pathetic excuses.

This isn’t about flopping; this is about basic officiating standards and protecting the league’s most marketable assets. But make no mistake, the underlying issue is terrifyingly real and threatens the very fabric of the game.

The NBA talks a big game about protecting its stars, about player safety, about showcasing talent. Yet, when the playoffs arrive, the whistles disappear.

Contact that would be an automatic foul and a technical in a meaningless November game suddenly becomes ‘letting them play’ when the stakes are highest.


Source: Google News

Avatar photo

Jalen 'Swish' Carter

NBA and College Hoops insider with the freshest takes.