×
×

Get Instant Access To:

Exclusive Pre-Match Market Movement Alerts ✓ Elite Level Edge Access ✓ Matchup Insights & Industry Newsletter

Denver Nuggets vs. New York Knicks – Odds, Preview, Picks

Back-to-back fatigue looms as Nuggets face surging Knicks at Madison Square Garden

Baseline Odds
Spread Moneyline
Denver Nuggets Logo
Denver Nuggets
+4.5 (-104) +160
New York Knicks Logo
New York Knicks
-4.5 (-118) -194

The Denver Nuggets arrive at Madison Square Garden tonight, February 4th, at 7:10 PM EST, facing a New York squad riding a six-game winning streak while dealing with the grind of a back-to-back. Denver dropped a 121-124 decision at Detroit just 24 hours ago, marking their second consecutive loss and fourth defeat in their last six games. The Knicks, meanwhile, dismantled Washington 132-101 on the road but return home with momentum, home comfort, and a defensive identity that contrasts sharply with Denver’s porous 25th-ranked unit.

Metric Denver Nuggets New York Knicks
Record 33-18 32-18
Points Per Game 120.0 (2nd) 117.9 (7th)
Offensive Rating 122.1 (1st) 120.3 (3rd)
Defensive Rating 118.0 (25th) 114.1 (12th)
Net Rating +4.2 (8th) +6.2 (4th)
Rebounds Per Game 42.3 46.4

Market Analysis

The consensus spread sits at New York -4.5, with the Knicks carrying a 63.18% fair win probability against Denver’s 36.82%. The total of 226.5 points reflects two elite offenses operating at deliberate tempos, both ranking outside the top 23 in pace. The pricing accounts for situational context that heavily favors the home side: Denver’s back-to-back schedule, New York’s six-game winning streak, and the Knicks’ significant defensive advantage. While Denver boasts the league’s top offensive rating at 122.1, that firepower must overcome fatigue, travel, and a New York defense that ranks 12th in the league at limiting opponent scoring.

Elite offense meets disciplined defense

Denver’s offensive machine ranks first in the NBA with a 122.1 rating, fueled by Nikola Jokic’s 29.6 points and 12.2 rebounds per game alongside Jamal Murray’s 26-point scoring average. The Nuggets shoot 49.6% from the field and 39.5% from three-point range, creating scoring opportunities through ball movement and high-percentage looks. New York counters with the league’s sixth-best defense at 111.8 points allowed per game, holding opponents to 46.2% shooting. The Knicks excel at controlling tempo, dominating the glass with 46.4 rebounds per game (3rd in the league), and forcing opponents into structured half-court sets where their physicality disrupts rhythm. Karl-Anthony Towns and the frontcourt rotation limit second-chance opportunities, a critical factor against a Denver team that generates offense through multiple actions.

Fatigue compounds road challenge for visitors

The back-to-back schedule presents a tangible obstacle for Denver, which played in Detroit fewer than 24 hours before tipoff at Madison Square Garden. The Nuggets have dropped two straight games and four of their last six, showing vulnerability on the road where defensive lapses become magnified. Their 118.0 defensive rating ranks 25th in the league, a weakness New York can exploit with Jalen Brunson’s 27.6 points per game and a balanced attack that features multiple scoring threats. The Knicks shot 47% from the field in their recent stretch and rank third in three-point percentage at 37.9%, creating spacing that stresses tired legs. Denver’s slow pace (97.4 possessions per 48 minutes, 26th in the league) typically helps manage games, but fatigue erodes defensive rotations and transition defense, areas where New York has thrived during its winning streak.

ANALYSIS & EDGE
7.2/10
TARGET: New York Knicks -4.5

The situational dynamics point toward New York covering the 4.5-point spread. Denver’s back-to-back schedule creates a rest disadvantage that compounds the challenge of facing a Knicks team operating at peak form with six consecutive victories. New York’s defensive rating sits nearly four points better than Denver’s, a gap that becomes decisive when the visitors are managing fatigue. The Knicks’ rebounding advantage (46.4 to 42.3 per game) generates additional possessions and limits Denver’s second-chance opportunities, while the home court at Madison Square Garden amplifies the physical, grind-it-out style that favors the hosts. Denver’s elite offensive rating keeps them competitive, but the combination of travel, back-to-back fatigue, and a defensive unit ranked 25th in the league creates too many obstacles against a rested, confident opponent with superior net rating (+6.2 versus +4.2). New York -4.5 reflects the market’s accurate assessment of these compounding factors.

What do our ratings mean?

Our Scoring System (1-10):

  • 8.5 - 10 (Elite): Highest confidence. Reserved for rare, significant market edges.
  • 6.5 - 8.4 (Conviction): Strong indicator. Backed by solid evidence and multiple factors.
  • 1.0 - 6.4 (Lean): Actionable lean. Detects inefficiency but with lower conviction.
scroll to top