Mar 14, 2022; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic (15) dribbles the ball against the Philadelphia 76ers during the first quarter at Wells Fargo Center. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-USA TODAY Sports

Did Nikola Jokić get away with the biggest travel in NBA history on Monday night, or did he make a brilliantly-timed pass?

Late in the third quarter of the Denver Nuggets’ wild comeback win over the Philadelphia 76ers, Jokić was dribbling down the floor and found JaMychal Green for a layup. It was a nice play. But Jokić’s transition from dribbler to passer was — let’s just say — awkward.

https://twitter.com/MrMatthewCFB/status/1503542246800564225

So, was it a travel? The opinion of those watching wasn’t unanimous.

That’s one opinion. The overall opinion, though, was different.

Coming out of the play, the general feeling is that Jokić and the Nuggets got away with one.

https://twitter.com/OTR2Victory/status/1503543063108595719

It’s a tough call. For years, the NBA has liberally enforced traveling. In recent years, it’s even changed some rules on what traveling is. So, it’s rare that you’re going to get a consensus opinion on a no-traveling call.

The play was anything but smooth. That much can’t really be debated. And had a travel been called, the Nuggets and their fans wouldn’t have had much of an argument. But given the way that traveling is (or is not called), it’s not especially surprising that the referees swallowed their whistles here. But we’d advise that Jokić not push his luck in similar situations going forward.

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