Nuggets Fans May Hate What This Valanciunas Trade Talk Suggests

Could a trade to the Lakers be the solution for Denver's depth challenges as they consider sending their veteran center in exchange for younger talent?

The Nuggets’ latest trade chatter has landed on a familiar kind of idea: move Jonas Valanciunas, clear money, and take a swing on a Lakers package that looks a lot more like a bet than a payoff.

Mile High Sports’ Ryan Blackburn laid out the scenario Monday, writing that Denver is “very likely to do something with Valanciunas" because of the team’s cap crunch, the presence of a backup center already in place, and Valanciunas’ reported interest in heading back overseas.

“They don’t want his $10 million on their books, but another team might. The Lakers have had reported interest in Valanciunas after trading for Walker Kessler and trading away Deandre Ayton.”

Blackburn also floated the kind of return that would set off alarms in Denver: Valanciunas and a second-round pick going to Los Angeles for Jake LaRavia and Bronny James.

“If Denver were to add Valanciunas and get something back, that would be a solid move. If they send out Valanciunas and a second-round pick to acquire Jake LaRavia and Bronny James, that will sound some serious alarm bells.”

On paper, that’s a thin haul for a veteran center. LaRavia arrived in Los Angeles last summer after a strong perimeter-shooting season with the Memphis Grizzlies and Sacramento Kings, when he hit 42.3% from deep for the year. But his first Lakers season went the other way fast, as the Wake Forest product shot a career-low 32.1% from three across 82 games.

James had a better year from outside in 2025-26, connecting on 38.6% of his threes, but the rest of his game didn’t move far enough. In his second season with the Lakers, the USC product averaged 2.9 points, 1.2 assists, and 0.5 rebounds in 42 games, with his shot-making and playmaking both described as below average.

That’s the heart of the issue for Denver: if Valanciunas is the piece going out, the return would need to feel like more than a salary shuffle. As Blackburn put it, without a much bigger name coming back - “Unless the Nuggets manage to sign James’ father, LeBron, before making a Valanciunas-centered trade with the Lakers” - it’s hard to see how that kind of deal sells as a win.

In Other News...

Nuggets May Be Weighing A Move Fans Never Wanted Around Jokic

Denvers offseason has been quieter than many around the league expected, and that silence has only fueled the sense that something could still be brewing around Nikola Jokic. The Nuggets have not made any official statement about a major shakeup, but the conversation has shifted toward whether the front office is looking to retool the supporting cast rather than stand pat.

Jamal Murray has inevitably become part of that discussion, which is the kind of idea that tends to land hard with a fan base that has watched him grow alongside Jokic. He still has three years and $160 million left on his deal, so any real movement would be complicated, but the broader question is whether Denver is willing to consider a different look if it believes the right upgrade is out there. [Read more 🡒]

Lakers Face A Tough Peyton Watson Decision They Can't Ignore

Peyton Watson has become a name worth watching as the Lakers continue to sift through possible roster upgrades, and any path to prying him loose would run through Denver. Watson is a restricted free agent, which means the Nuggets still hold the cards, and any sign-and-trade talk is only as real as the Lakers willingness to keep pushing for it.

The reported framework being discussed would look a lot like the Lakers recent Walker Kessler approach, only on a smaller scale in both money and draft capital. Even so, the idea is not a casual one for Denver, which would have to decide whether moving a young defensive piece makes sense as the offseason picture develops. [Read more 🡒]

Nuggets Backup Center Drama Feels Like It Is Reaching A Breaking Point

The backup-center market has been moving around the Nuggets in a way that makes their own frontcourt questions feel even more urgent. The Lakers addressed one of those spots by signing Kevon Looney to a one-year deal, and around Denver the focus has shifted back to Jonas Valanciunas, whose contract situation is now sitting right in the middle of the teams roster calculus.

Valanciunas has not even reached the point where Denver has to make a final call, but the July 8 guarantee date is close enough that every new addition and every bit of roster shuffling gets read as a clue. With Marvin Bagley III now in the mix, the Nuggets have more reason to weigh fit, cost and depth all at once, and that is what has made this backup center situation feel like it could tip in a hurry. [Read more 🡒]