The Denver Nuggets have suddenly found themselves in the LeBron James conversation, and that changes the feel of their offseason in a hurry.
What looked like a straightforward plan to mostly run it back now comes with a far more ambitious possibility: LeBron on a minimum contract, teaming up with Nikola Jokic in Denver. That kind of pairing would be hard to turn away from, and the Nuggets have at least a real shot at making it happen.
ESPN’s Shams Charania reported that LeBron is likely open to taking a minimum deal because winning is the priority.
"He's (LeBron) not going to make his decision just based on money. It means that all these teams, whether you have the minimum contract to give him, whether you have the exception to give him, or salary cap space, you're going to be involved."
That wasn’t the only encouraging sign for Denver. ESPN’s Brian Windhorst also mentioned the Nuggets as an "outlier" team in the chase.
"I have long believed that if there was an outlier team for LeBron, if he was willing to take sort of, you know, some exception, it was Denver."
Windhorst also said LeBron is a close friend of Nuggets team president Josh Kroenke, which only adds to the possibility that Denver could have a real path here. If that connection matters, the Nuggets could be in position to make a serious pitch.
From a basketball standpoint, the fit is obvious. LeBron would give Denver another elite mind next to Jokic, and that alone is enough to make the idea compelling.
He would also address several offseason needs at once. The Nuggets wanted more athleticism, and LeBron provides that immediately.
They needed a bigger wing presence, and he brings that too. He also adds another ball-handler, which is no small thing.
His shooting still has plenty of value in this kind of setup. After hitting 41.0% from three in 2023-24, he dropped to 31.7% in what would now be his final season in Los Angeles. Playing alongside Jokic would likely create cleaner looks, and that matters.
Defense is the one area where LeBron doesn’t bring as much, but even there, the Nuggets could still come out ahead if you compare him to the free agent departure of Tim Hardaway Jr.
Denver is far from alone in the hunt, though. The Golden State Warriors, Miami Heat, and Cleveland Cavaliers are expected to be among the main contenders for James next season, and Charania reported that as many as 12 teams have already contacted LeBron’s agent.
Still, if the Nuggets can get in the mix with the right pitch, they may have a very real chance to land one of the biggest names in the sport. And if that happens, Jokic might end up with the kind of teammate LeBron has been searching for.
In Other News...
Jalen Ramsey Just Validated What Deion Sanders Is Building At Colorado
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Ramseys presence mattered because it underscored the shift in energy around the program, one that is tied as much to coaching credibility as to talent acquisition. Colorado has spent the offseason reworking both sides of the ball, and the new structure carries the feel of a program trying to separate itself from the pack by giving players a more professional environment and a clearer strategic identity. For a team still trying to turn recruiting momentum into sustained success, that kind of validation is the sort of thing that can echo well beyond one visit. [Read more 🡒]
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Prediction models have leaned heavily toward Colorado, but the real answer will have to wait until Bobo makes his commitment decision on July 1. For the Buffaloes, the timing matters even more because they are still looking to add stability to the running back room in their 2027 class, and landing Bobo would give this recruiting run another important lift. [Read more 🡒]
Coach Prime Just Gave Colorado Fans The Update They Needed
Deion Sanders long absence from much of the 2025 offseason left Colorado with plenty of uncertainty, but the Buffaloes have spent the spring and summer building around his return for 2026. The staff looks different too, with Brennan Marion in as offensive coordinator and Chris Marve elevated to defensive coordinator, while the roster has been bolstered by transfers and the retention of quarterback Julian Lewis.
There is also real momentum on the recruiting front, where Colorado has positioned itself with one of the Big 12s top classes for 2027. After a year defined as much by medical concern as football, Sanders being back on the sideline changes the tenor of everything in Boulder, and the next question is whether all those offseason moves can translate into the kind of season the program has been trying to set up. [Read more 🡒]
