Spurs Fans Just Got Another Reason To Love That Kings Deal

The San Antonio Spurs' strategic maneuvers in the DeRozan trade saga have set them up for long-term success, securing a promising future asset while leaving the Kings' rebuilding efforts in question.

The Sacramento Kings’ decision to waive DeMar DeRozan caught plenty of people off guard, and it also put a spotlight back on a deal that looks better and better for the San Antonio Spurs.

San Antonio has already had a hand in two different DeRozan-related transactions. First, the Spurs helped move him to the Chicago Bulls.

Later, they used one of the assets from that path to bring in De’Aaron Fox from Sacramento. Then came another swing: the sign-and-trade that sent DeRozan to the Kings and brought Harrison Barnes plus an unprotected 2031 pick swap to San Antonio.

That last piece may end up being the real prize. Barnes gave the Spurs a starter for a year and a half and a veteran presence in the locker room. The pick swap, though, could be the kind of asset that pays off in a big way down the line.

With DeRozan gone, the move also reads like another sign that Sacramento is heading into a full rebuild. The Kings have reached the playoffs only once in the last 18 years, and it’s difficult to see that changing much over the next five years.

Even with that, the Spurs’ 2031 pick-swap advantage is not a sure thing. The NBA Draft lottery rule changes could complicate things, and the Kings would need to land in the 4-11 record range to make the best possible pick situation work out for San Antonio.

But even if the outcome is less dramatic than a top lottery slot, the value is obvious. Swapping into, say, the eighth pick instead of choosing in the late 20s would be a massive gain, especially with the Spurs projected to get very expensive in just two seasons.

San Antonio knew exactly what it was getting when it helped arrange the DeRozan sign-and-trade. He was always more of a floor raiser than a ceiling raiser, something his three seasons with the Spurs already showed. In Sacramento, where the team was already buried, that profile was never likely to change much.

That’s what makes the return look so lopsided. Barnes and a pick swap for helping make the deal happen is the kind of business that feels like a steal.

It’s also the sort of move GM Brian Wright has built a reputation for making. The returns may not always look flashy right away, but they tend to age well. The Fox trade is still being judged after his struggles in the NBA Finals, though a bounceback season could change that picture quickly.

For now, though, the verdict on the DeRozan-to-Sacramento deal is clear: the Spurs came out ahead. And if that 2031 swap turns into a lottery pick, this one could keep paying off for a long time.

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Carter Bryants long-term outlook in San Antonio got a little clearer this offseason, and not just because of what the Spurs think of him. The roster additions around him matter, too, especially for a young wing who is still trying to carve out his place in a crowded league. Even with the team adding more talent, Bryants path looks less blocked than it might have seemed at first glance, and that kind of organizational fit can matter as much as raw opportunity for a player still early in his development.

The bigger question now is how quickly that fit turns into a real role. San Antonios rookie group does not directly crowd Bryant at his spot, which leaves the door open for him to grow into a larger responsibility as the next couple of seasons unfold. For a team trying to build a sustainable core, that makes Bryant one of the more intriguing names to watch, especially if the Spurs keep leaning into a roster structure that gives him room to rise. [Read more 🡒]

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What makes the discussion linger is the basketball and financial logic behind it. A swap of that kind would likely require San Antonio to add a first-round pick, but it also could create more future cap flexibility because the incoming contract would come off the books sooner than Foxs max deal. It would also force a cleaner look at the roster, potentially clearing a path for Dylan Harper to start and nudging Devin Vassell into a sixth-man role, which is the sort of domino effect that makes this more than idle offseason noise. [Read more 🡒]

Latest Kawhi Twist Makes Spurs Look Smart For Walking Away

The latest Kawhi Leonard wrinkle only reinforces why San Antonio stayed out of the chase. The Spurs had already decided against pursuing a trade for Leonard, with the ongoing NBA investigation tied to his contract and the possibility of added distractions making the idea a poor fit for a franchise trying to keep its footing pointed forward.

Instead, the Spurs have spent their energy on the group they already have, a young core built around Victor Wembanyama, Stephon Castle, Dylan Harper and Carter Bryant. After recently reaching the NBA Finals, San Antonio has little reason to reopen old doors, and the league is expected to address the Leonard situation at an upcoming Board of Governors meeting. [Read more 🡒]