The Warriors are still acting like Jimmy Butler is part of the long-term plan, even with his torn ACL recovery pushing his return to next calendar year. That leaves Golden State in a tricky spot this offseason: they need another proven scorer, and one of the cleanest options on the board just opened up.
DeMar DeRozan was waived by the Sacramento Kings on Monday after two seasons with the team, and his availability arrives at a moment that lines up neatly with the Warriors’ needs. Golden State has already come up short on several free-agency targets, including Anfernee Simons, Collin Sexton and Rui Hachimura, while waiting on LeBron James’ decision.
DeRozan is 36, but he’s still producing at a level that should draw interest from playoff teams. For the Warriors, the appeal is obvious. They finished 19th in offensive rating last season and need more help around Stephen Curry while Butler remains out.
According to ESPN’s Shams Charania, only $10 million of DeRozan’s $25 million salary for next season was guaranteed, which gave Sacramento a path to move on after it couldn’t find a trade partner for the six-time All-Star.
Just in: The Sacramento Kings are waiving DeMar DeRozan, making the six-time All-Star one of the top free agents, sources tell ESPN. The sides worked collaboratively on this resolution after exploring trade routes. pic.twitter.com/IsSZXhV4An
- Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) July 6, 2026
What DeRozan has done for years is score, and score efficiently. He had a streak of at least 20 points per game in each of the previous 12 seasons before this past year in Sacramento. Last season, he averaged 18.4 points, 2.9 rebounds and 4.1 assists in more than 31 minutes per game, while shooting 49.7% from the field.
His game is built around the mid-range, which doesn’t exactly scream perfect fit in Steve Kerr’s system. But the Warriors had similar questions when Butler arrived last February, and that move helped spark a dramatic turnaround.
DeRozan is not Butler, especially on defense. Still, he could give Golden State a useful stand-in until Butler gets back, and he may now be willing to sign for a number the Warriors can actually work with.
He would not change the age profile of the roster, but durability has long been one of his calling cards. DeRozan has played at least 68 games in 14 of his 17 NBA seasons, including at least 74 games in each of the past five.
Golden State is expected to keep chasing James for as long as it takes for the four-time MVP to decide. If that pursuit comes up empty, DeRozan suddenly looks like a very real fallback option.
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