Sacramento’s roster squeeze has already claimed one guard, and the move points just as much toward Daeqwon Plowden as it does away from Killian Hayes.
The Kings brought Hayes in during an injury-ravaged stretch late in the 2025-2026 season, a period when the team had to keep patching holes in a backcourt that was already overcrowded. Sacramento had a glut of guards to begin with, and then injuries made the situation even messier. In the middle of that chaos, the Kings added another point guard just to get through the stretch.
Hayes arrived on a pair of 10-day contracts before Sacramento liked enough of what it saw to give him a two-year deal. That contract included a team option for 2026-2027, and the Kings recently picked up that option before releasing him back into free agency.
The decision fits the bigger picture in Sacramento. Hayes was never really a long-term piece, even if he helped fill an immediate need.
Plowden, by contrast, has been with the Kings for the last season and has established himself as a reliable wing with a high ceiling. Reports have said Sacramento is interested in converting him from a two-way deal to a full NBA contract, and this move clears a path in that direction.
Hayes’ NBA journey has been a difficult one to pin down. The Pistons took him seventh overall in 2017, but he never found lasting footing in Detroit, staying there until 2024 before moving between the NBA and the G League. That pattern has followed him since: chances come, but they haven’t stuck.
For Sacramento, this wasn’t a judgment that Hayes couldn’t help. It was a roster decision, plain and simple. The Kings had to choose between guards, and Plowden was the one worth keeping around.
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