The Denver Nuggets still have work to do, and one of the newest names on the market could fit a glaring need. After the Sacramento Kings waived six-time All-Star DeMar DeRozan on Monday, the veteran wing suddenly became one of the most interesting free agents available.
At 36, DeRozan now sits at the top of the veteran minimum market, and that alone makes him worth a look for a Nuggets team operating in a cap crunch. Last season in Sacramento, he put up 18.4 points, 2.9 rebounds, and 4.1 assists per game while shooting 49.7% from the field. For Denver, the appeal is obvious: he brings scoring, experience, and another player who can handle the ball.
The Nuggets’ bench is still thin on paper. Tyus Jones, Julian Strawther, Trevon Brazile, Marvin Bagley, DaRon Holmes, Zeke Nnaji, and Bryce Hopkins make up the current group, and there’s still uncertainty around restricted free agents Peyton Watson and Spencer Jones. Even with that in mind, Denver still looks like a team that could use another proven piece if it wants to stay in the title mix.
DeRozan also gives a team something the Nuggets need more of: another creator. He’s listed as a wing, but his game comes with guard-like playmaking, and he can take over stretches with his scoring. He’s still the kind of player who can get to 30-plus points on any given night.
That said, the fit isn’t perfect. Denver plays with an emphasis on three-point shooting, and DeRozan has never been known for deep range.
He also isn’t a difference-making defender, which matters for a team that still needs to clean up that end of the floor. His value is tied to mid-range scoring and on-ball creation, and that’s a narrower lane than some other available options.
There’s also the question of whether DeRozan would even be interested. The Nuggets haven’t been among the teams linked to him since the waiver, while the Golden State Warriors, Miami Heat, Cleveland Cavaliers, and Toronto Raptors have all come up as possible destinations. Miami and Cleveland, in particular, have drawn the most buzz.
So while Denver should at least think about it, this may be one of those situations where the idea makes more sense on paper than in reality. DeRozan would help the Nuggets’ depth and give them another veteran scorer, but the fit, the role, and his own preferences could all point him somewhere else.
Still, for a team with roster holes to fill, it’s a name worth keeping in the conversation.
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Marvin Bagley now looks like the most immediate candidate to absorb those backup-center minutes, with Zeke Nnaji also in the mix and DaRon Holmes and Trevon Brazile part of the broader conversation. For Denver, the move also clears meaningful cap room, but it leaves one of the rosters more practical questions hanging as training camp approaches: who actually handles the Jokic insurance plan? [Read more 🡒]
Celtics Linked To An Unexpected Guard Target Fans Should Watch
Curtis Jones spent most of last season in the margins of Denvers roster, filling a two-way role that gave the Nuggets another guard option while he also logged meaningful run with the Grand Rapids Gold. His NBA minutes were limited, but the former Iowa State guard did enough in the G League to stay on the radar, and his late-season work hinted at the kind of scoring punch he can bring when given a larger role.
Now Jones is drawing attention from outside Denver, with Boston surfacing as a team to watch in the mix. For the Nuggets, it adds another small but notable offseason wrinkle around a player who never had a big foothold in the rotation, and it leaves open the question of whether his next NBA opportunity comes elsewhere after a brief first run in Denver. [Read more 🡒]
