Nuggets Offseason Tension Is Suddenly Building Around Cameron Johnson

As trade interest for Cameron Johnson intensifies, the Denver Nuggets carefully weigh their options to optimize roster moves and balance financial implications.

The Denver Nuggets may be on the verge of a roster shake-up, and Cameron Johnson has quickly emerged as the name to watch.

Johnson arrived in Denver just last offseason as the key piece in the Michael Porter Jr.-Brooklyn Nets deal, but he’s already being viewed around the league as the most realistic trade candidate on the Nuggets’ roster. As the offseason moves deeper along, the possibility of Denver moving him has only grown, with several teams said to be monitoring the situation.

The Athletic’s Sam Amick reported that rival teams have “consistently” identified Johnson as the Nuggets’ most likely trade chip this summer. Among the teams believed to be in the mix are the Miami Heat and Dallas Mavericks.

“Rival teams consistently point to Nuggets forward Cam Johnson, acquired last summer in a deal that sent away Michael Porter Jr., as the most likely candidate to be dealt, in large part because the 30-year-old has just one season left on his deal at $23 million,” Amick wrote. “Miami and Dallas are believed to be among the many interested teams.”

Compared with other Denver names that have surfaced in trade talk - including Christian Braun, Aaron Gordon, and even Jamal Murray - Johnson looks like the cleanest fit for a move. The reason is pretty straightforward: his contract is short, manageable, and easy to work with.

Johnson is entering the final season of the four-year, $23 million deal he brought with him, and he gave Denver exactly the kind of plug-and-play wing production teams covet. In 54 games last season, he averaged 12.2 points, 3.8 rebounds, and 2.4 assists while shooting 48.0% from the field and 43.0% from three.

That combination of size and shooting makes him valuable to more than one roster build, which is why multiple teams are believed to have interest. He’s the kind of forward who can slide into different lineups without much adjustment.

For Denver, though, the challenge is finding the right return. The Nuggets are not simply looking to dump salary just to get under the second apron or dodge luxury tax penalties. They want a deal that actually helps.

There’s already an expectation that the Nuggets will make some cost-cutting moves around the edges, and Peyton Watson and Spencer Jones are viewed as likely returnees. Moving Johnson would fit that broader effort, but only if the package coming back makes sense.

If Denver settles for a light return after giving up an unprotected first-round pick for him just a year ago, the Porter-for-Johnson swap would look even tougher in hindsight. That’s the risk sitting right in front of the front office.

For now, the possibility of a deal is real, but nothing sounds imminent. Miami, Dallas, or another team could still step up with an offer strong enough to push Denver into action.

Even so, the Nuggets aren’t expected to move their versatile wing just to make a move. Johnson still has too much value for that.

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The timing matters because the Nuggets still finished 54-28, yet the first-round loss to the Timberwolves exposed enough frustration to make every layer of the operation feel under review. For a team that has already made clear it expects Malone back for 2026-27, the next step is less about replacing the voice at the top and more about surrounding him with help that can sharpen the response when the playoffs get tight again. [Read more 🡒]