Kings Free Agency Plan May Signal A Much Bigger Frontcourt Shakeup

As the Sacramento Kings gear up for a pivotal free agency period, potential blockbuster moves and key signings are poised to reshape the roster.

The Sacramento Kings are heading into free agency with more moving parts than they first expected, and the first few days could reshape the roster in a hurry. Tuesday’s opening of negotiations at 3 p.m. PT gives Sacramento a chance to get aggressive, and there are several names already sitting at the center of the conversation.

The biggest one is Jalen Duren. On Monday, NBA insider Chris Haynes reported that the Kings plan to meet with the Detroit Pistons restricted free agent, with a sign-and-trade potentially on the table. If that route is taken, Domantas Sabonis would likely be headed to Detroit as part of the deal.

That alone was enough to catch Kings fans off guard, but the detail that really stands out is Duren’s own interest in Sacramento. According to The Athletic’s Sam Amick, Duren “very much wants to play in Sacramento.”

For a franchise that doesn’t often get that kind of pull from an All-Star, it’s a notable wrinkle. Amick also reported that the Kings’ meeting with Duren will be in person, while the Los Angeles Lakers are set to meet with him over the phone.

The Lakers are in the mix too, and that figures to make this a two-team race. Los Angeles reportedly wants to pair Luka Doncic with a star center, while Sacramento would be looking at Duren as a major piece for the future. The 22-year-old All-Star would immediately change the Kings’ outlook.

Another familiar name in Sacramento’s orbit is Russell Westbrook. He signed with the Kings last offseason after no team wanted to bring him in, but the expectation now is that he will not be back.

Even so, one of his old teams may be interested. Jake Fischer and Marc Stein of The Stein Line reported that the Washington Wizards have “a level interest in Russell Westbrook.”

There’s also the long-running Jonathan Kuminga link, which feels like it never quite goes away. The former Golden State Warriors and Atlanta Hawks forward is now an unrestricted free agent, and the Kings have been tied to him for what seems like forever.

Reporting has split in different directions: Andscape’s Marc J. Spears said Sacramento is still “expected to be interested,” while Amick said they “are not expected to pursue” him.

Either way, it would be surprising if the Kings weren’t at least in the conversation depending on the price.

While the Kings weigh those bigger swings, they are also expected to keep Precious Achiuwa. The 26-year-old forward gave Sacramento a strong season after arriving when no other team wanted him, and the sense is that he’ll be back.

He brings the kind of physicality and defensive presence the Kings have been searching for in the frontcourt, and a long-term deal would make sense. If he returns, there’s even a path to a full-time starting role alongside Keegan Murray and Domantas Sabonis, or Jalen Duren, Maxime Raynaud.

And then there’s Daeqwon Plowden, another possible return that could quietly matter. Plowden spent last season on a two-way deal and is now a restricted free agent, but Fischer and Stein reported that the Kings are expected to re-sign him to a standard contract.

He played in 32 games last season and averaged 10.8 points, 3.0 rebounds, and 1.3 assists, far outpacing expectations. He may not crack the rotation unless injuries hit again, but he has shown enough to be useful depth.

The Kings have built a track record of getting real value out of unexpected places, and this offseason could test that trend again. Between Duren, Westbrook, Kuminga, Achiuwa, and Plowden, Sacramento has plenty to sort through as free agency gets underway.

In Other News...

Kings Just Sent Another Clear Message About Their Backcourt Future

The back end of Sacramentos roster has been in motion for a while, and Killian Hayes is the latest guard to lose his spot. The Kings brought him in during an injury-ravaged stretch of the 2025-26 season, first on short-term help and later on a deal with a team option, but the move always looked like a stopgap rather than a long-term commitment.

What comes next says even more about how the Kings view their backcourt. Daeqwon Plowden has been in the mix and has flashed enough to stay on the staffs radar, and the organization is now weighing a bigger role for him as it trims down its guard picture. For a team trying to sort out who really belongs in the rotation, this is another small but telling signal about where the future is headed. [Read more 🡒]

Kings Free Agency Buzz Just Raised The Stakes On A Franchise Pivot

The opening of free agency always tends to ripple beyond the teams making the first splash, and Sacramento has already been pulled into the conversation. Around the league, the Warriors are being tied to a possible run at LeBron James and a trade for Anthony Davis, while Kristaps Porziis has already agreed to stay in Golden State and Draymond Green and De'Anthony Melton have declined their options. For the Kings, that kind of early movement matters because the West is shifting quickly, and every front office is watching which names come off the board first.

Zach LaVines decision to opt into his contract for 2026-27 is another piece of the domino chain, especially with other contract calls and trade discussions still taking shape. Sacramento has spent the opening stretch of free agency in the same current as the rest of the league, where one move can alter the market for everyone else, and the next few days could tell the Kings whether they are looking at a narrow upgrade path or something far more dramatic. [Read more 🡒]