DeMar DeRozan is suddenly in the middle of a fresh round of free-agency chatter, and Cleveland has surfaced as a possible landing spot.
Matt George of Sactown Sports 1140 said the Cavaliers are among the teams being discussed for the veteran scorer after the Kings waived DeRozan, which made him an unrestricted free agent. George specifically pointed to Cleveland as a team that could use him, especially as a bench weapon.
"The two teams that we seem to hear the most chatter about in terms of potential landing destinations for DeMar DeRozan (are) the Miami Heat, who of course just traded for Giannis, and the Cleveland Cavaliers, who are a team I long thought could use the services of DeMar, especially in that second unit off of the bench," George said.
DeRozan spent the last two seasons with Sacramento. He averaged 22.2 points per game in 2024-25 and followed that with 18.4 points per game this past season. The six-time All-Star will turn 37 in August, and at this stage of his career, he looks like a player built for a contender rather than a rebuilding situation.
That’s where Cleveland comes in. The Cavaliers are coming off a trip to the Eastern Conference Finals, where they fell to the New York Knicks in four games, and they remain one of the league’s top teams.
DeRozan’s résumé still carries plenty of weight. The USC product has career averages of 21.1 points per game across stops with the Toronto Raptors, San Antonio Spurs, Chicago Bulls and Kings. He has been in the NBA since 2009.
There’s also a personal angle that could matter. One of DeRozan’s closest friends in the league is LeBron James, and most insiders expect LeBron to return to the Cavaliers this offseason, though nothing has been confirmed.
If that reunion happens, adding DeRozan could be another move that helps Cleveland round out the picture.
LeBron, of course, is the most important player in Cavaliers history. In his two stints with the franchise from 2003-10 and 2014-18, he averaged 27.2 points, 7.3 rebounds, 7.3 assists, 1.6 steals and 0.8 blocks per game. He won two MVPs and one Finals MVP and earned 10 All-Star and 10 All-NBA selections with his hometown team.
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