Nuggets Just Missed On A Guard They Clearly Needed

Despite adding Marvin Bagley to their roster, the Denver Nuggets continue to face challenges in strengthening their backcourt after missing out on Anfernee Simons, who signed with the 76ers.

The Denver Nuggets had their name in the mix for Anfernee Simons, but the guard ended up choosing the Philadelphia 76ers instead.

Simons agreed to a two-year, $12.3 million contract with a player option, and the Nuggets were reportedly among the teams that pushed for him before he made his decision. NBA insider Michael Scotto of HoopsHype listed Denver alongside the 76ers, Golden State Warriors, Miami Heat, Dallas Mavericks, and Indiana Pacers as teams that showed interest.

"Anfernee Simons had interest from the Philadelphia 76ers, Golden State Warriors, Miami Heat, Denver Nuggets, Dallas Mavericks, and Indiana Pacers, league sources said. Simons ultimately agreed to a two-year, $12.3 million deal, including a player option, as ESPN first reported," Scotto reported.

For Denver, the miss makes sense on the numbers. Brett Siegel of ClutchPoints reported that the Warriors offered Simons the veteran minimum, while his camp was not willing to go below $6 million per year. That helps explain why Philadelphia won out, and it also points to the kind of market the Nuggets are working in.

The bigger issue for Denver is obvious: they still need guards. After signing Marvin Bagley for frontcourt depth, the Nuggets have only Jamal Murray, Christian Braun, and Julian Strawther under contract at the position. That leaves a clear need for another ball-handler, especially with Tim Hardaway Jr. gone to the Miami Heat in free agency.

Simons would have fit the bill in a big way. Over his last four seasons with the Portland Trail Blazers, he put up 19.9 points and 4.5 assists per game while shooting 38.1% from three. Even with a slight dip in production last season with the Boston Celtics and Chicago Bulls, he still operated as an effective sixth man.

Now Denver has to keep shopping, and the encouraging part is that Simons’ price tag may help set the market. If he is landing at a little over $6 million per year, the Nuggets should have a better chance of finding another guard who can help at a minimum deal.

Names like Gabe Vincent, Cam Thomas, Brandon Williams, Josh Okogie, and Gary Trent Jr. are among the options they could pursue, or they could go in a different direction altogether. However they handle it, the Nuggets have made it clear they are hunting for guard depth. Signing Bagley was a start, but the work is nowhere near finished.

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