Grizzlies vs Nuggets Preview

The Grizzlies are circling the drain with five straight double-digit losses and a roster held together by duct tape, while Denver eyes seeding with a top-5 offense and far more urgency. For Memphis, it’s damage-limitation season; for Denver, it’s “don’t trip over these guys on the way to the playoffs”—and that’s exactly what this mismatch is about.

Denver Nuggets

Denver Nuggets

VS
Memphis Grizzlies

Memphis Grizzlies

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Win Probability (BAC Model)

85%

15%

Heavy Favorite

Competitiveness

2/10

Blowout Risk

Viewing Value

4.7

Significant Mismatch

HEAD-TO-HEAD COMPARISON
Nuggets
Grizzlies
120.3

ORtg

113.5
115.8

DRtg

116.7
99.2

Pace

101.5
4.4

Net Rtg

-3.2
60.9

Win%

34.3
4.2

TQS

-3.5
LWWLW
Last 5
LLLLL
B2B
Rest
1 day rest
Stat visualization


Record 42-27 23-44 Viewing Value 4.7 — Significant Mismatch Game Competitiveness 2/10

Matchup Overview

This is a game between opposites. Memphis, battered by injuries (again), slides further down a lottery track with every L. Denver, even on the back half of a back-to-back, is locked in a Western Conference seeding fight—every game is leverage for home-court. The Nuggets come in not just deeper, but sharper, and the BAC Model says there’s almost nothing subtle about the gap.

Stats Corner

  • Denver’s Offensive Rating: 120.3 (3rd in NBA), versus Memphis: 113.5—that’s a seven-point per 100 possession gulf.
  • Recent Results: Memphis has lost five straight by an average margin of 15.8 points.
  • Effective FG%: Nuggets shoot 57.2% (Top-2), Grizzlies allow 55.3% (bottom-third defensive mark).
  • Team Quality Score (TQS): Denver +4.22 (elite), Memphis -3.45 (bottom-five).
  • Injuries: Memphis is missing or may miss six rotation guys, including Morant, Clarke, and Mashack (questionable tonight).

The Edge & What Could Break It

BAC Model pick: Denver Nuggets. Core reason: Denver’s offense overwhelms, Memphis can neither match nor contain it, and the Grizzlies’ injury luck is the worst outside of an M. Night Shyamalan script.

Supporting this:

  • Denver has scored 120+ points in 4 of their last 5 games.
  • Grizzlies are allowing 126.6 points per game over their last 5.
  • Memphis’s best available playmakers: Ty Jerome and Cam Spencer. That says enough.
  • Nuggets’ eFG% edge is decisive—57.2% vs. 53.6%—and Memphis’s defensive rebounding (67.3% DRB) means second-chance points galore for Denver.

Risks:

  • Back-to-back fatigue: Denver is on a B2B, and their lone recent dud (loss at Lakers) came with heavy legs.
  • Short-handed Nuggets wing rotation: Peyton Watson is out, so Tim Hardaway’s defense becomes a liability—if the Grizz get hot from deep, the gap could shrink.

Confidence tag: 8.5/10. The 85% win probability isn’t hyperbole—unless Nikola Jokic personally decides to coach from the sideline.

The Bottom Line

Denver pummels teams like this for breakfast. Expect them to control the pace, dominate the glass, and put this one away by the early fourth. The Grizzlies’ recent injury avalanche seals their fate—bank on the Nuggets covering any reasonable spread, and don’t waste your League Pass on a blowout in progress.