The Nuggets are looking to rebuild their depth after losing several key free agents in recent years, such as Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, while certain signings – such as Reggie Jackson and Dario Saric – have proved unsuccessful. Bennett Durando of the Denver Post breaks down some of the potential options they could look at in free agency as they seek to create another title-contending roster.
The first name Durando looks at is a former Nugget: Bruce Brown. Brown left the Nuggets for a two-year balloon deal with the Pacers in 2023, and was included in Indiana’s trade for Pascal Siakam the following season. He split this season between Raptors and Pelicans, but only played 41 games due to injury.
Brown is still a fan favorite in Denver, Durando writes, and posted about the Nuggets hiring head coach David Adelman on his Instagram story. It’s believed that there is mutual interest between the two parties moving forward.
Durando also mentions Chris Boucher, whom the Nuggets looked at prior to this year’s trade deadline. Boucher averaged 10.0 points in 17.2 minutes per game for the Raptors this season while shooting 36.3% from three, and could make for an interesting backup center, a position where the Nuggets desperately need depth.
The other options cited by Durando are Tyus Jones, Larry Nance Jr., Jake LaRavia, Dennis Schröder, Justin Holiday, Jae’Sean Tate, Luke Kennard, Clint Capela, and Mason Plumlee.
We have more from around the Northwest Division:
- DeAndre Jordan, the Nuggets‘ current backup center, took to Instagram to thank Denver fans after wrapping up his 17th year in the NBA, notes Denver Gazette’s Vinny Benedetto (via Twitter). “Can’t say enough how grateful I am for this team, this city, and everyone who supported us along the way. Playing this game never gets old, and doing it with this group made it even more meaningful,” he wrote, before adding “This isn’t a retirement post!” Jordan is set to hit unrestricted free agency this summer.
- “These guys are uncommon,” Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault said of his team, as reported by The Athletic’s Sam Amick. Part of that is the youthful exuberance the club displays after the final whistle blows, which Amick likens to a college program. However, there’s nothing playful about the Thunder’s approach during the game. Their ferociousness on the floor, combined with the genuine joy the players appear to feel for each other, marks it as a model of sustainable competitive team-building. “It makes sense. They’re great people first. That’s why it’s so easy to coach this team,” Daigneault said. That’s why Amick believes that this Thunder team is here for the long haul.
- There are striking similarities to this Thunder team and the rise of the Warriors dynasty, writes ESPN’s Zach Kram. Both teams feature a 26-year-old MVP guard leading a team to nearly 70 wins en route to winning the Western Conference in five games, and both were largely built through shrewd drafting of heady, versatile players who could impact the game on both ends of the floor. For Golden State, that meant Klay Thompson and Draymond Green complementing Stephen Curry‘s greatness. For the Thunder, it means Jalen Williams and Chet Holmgren supplementing Shai Gilgeous-Alexander‘s dominance. Both teams added a versatile, dominant defender via trade: the Warriors acquired Andre Igoudala while the Thunder traded for Alex Caruso, and they both had smart rim protectors who could be taken off the floor when the team wanted to go small (Andrew Bogut and Isaiah Hartenstein, respectively). The Warriors eventually added Kevin Durant to complete the dynasty. While the Thunder might not have that opportunity, they do have one of the biggest stockpiles of draft assets to trade in the league, so it’s not entirely out of the question. The important part is: both teams were built to last.
Trade Porter Jr. for depth.
In West
Jazz and Blazers are happy about what they are now. They love their GMs.
Other 13 teams need trade, trade, trade. —Huge Trade
Trade
Porter Jr
Durant and Beal
Kuminga
Norman Powell
Austin Reaves
Zach LaVine
Zion
Rudy Gobert
Spurs #2
I like Mathurin, Jarace Walker & Isaiah Jackson to Denver for Aaron Gordon & Jalen Pickett.
Obv Denver hates to lose their best defender, possibly their 2nd best overall player but it’s been clear since they lost KCP that they lack depth & this would go a long way towards turning that weakness into a strength. Jarace will prob never be Gordon but he’s a very talented young forward who should def compete with Watson for that other starting forward spot at least & could grow into a big time player. Mathurin is another guy with big potential, esp as a scorer. Playing alongside Jokic, in a system that suits him better would be great for his career no doubt. Jackson been hurt all yr but bringing him in plus the return of rookie Da’Ron Holmes would have the Nuggets looking alot deeper next season.
Denver isn’t trading Gordon. He’s literally their second best player (Murray is never healthy plus Gordon’s D). It’s porter jr and the other guys that will be moved around.
They’re gonna be able to get a lot more for Gordon than for MPJ. They get 3 young/cheap/talented rotation guys, possibly 2 starters, in this deal. They wont get nearly that much for MPJ. Plus MPJ is younger & they don’t have a ready made replacement for him like they do for Gordon (PWatson)
Usually I don’t reply to two kinds of trades
1. Unavailable players –
2. Infeasible trade
Well you replied to this one so clearly we’re good to go
Gordon hasn’t even made any all defensive teams. His defense gets overrated because of how bad the Nuggets are on it.
Same thing happened with Marcus Camby when he was on those terrible defensive Nuggets teams.
Oof. Bro Aaron Gordon & Marcus Camby are both great defenders. I don’t even know if I’ve ever heard anyone question Cambys greatness as a defender so I guess you get points for being bold. Of course those points get immediately rejected bc of how wrong you are. Terrible take.
Sorta crazy how KD was treated like the devil bc he joined the team that beat him in the playoffs when Iguodala had done the same thing the prior year & nobody had a problem with it.
Because Iguodala wasn’t a superstar and projected to be an all time great.
That’s like getting mad overs Kris Middleton joining a rival.
I feel like if you take a step back & be real with yourself you’ll admit how ridiculous that reasoning is. It’s just fine for anyone else to do it, even great players. But extremely great players like KD can’t do it lol. And not only can’t he do it but he’s literally the worst of humanity if he does? Logically that’s just stupid lol I feel like any reasonable person can see that.
Not even REMOTELY close to the same thing…..lol….wow
Explain why you feel it’s not even REMOTELY close to the same thing.
And keep in mind theyre both all-star wings from West conf teams that were free agents & chose the exact same franchise only a yr apart. I guess maybe the year difference makes it not even remotely close but idw put words in your mouth. Feel free to explain your thoughts.
Because.
KD vs Iguoldala is nowhere near a comparison.
GS then and later Is nowhere near comparable.
Iguoldala was 30. A top defender. But maybe a 3rd-4th best scorer on a champion team.
Never has he been a top 20 mvp.
GS was an up coming fast rising team when he joined.
Durant was 28. A 7 time all star. ALWAYS a 1-5th ranked mvp every year A 1st scorer.
GS had been really good for many many years before Durant joined.
1 was a super elite player at 28 already looking like a top 100 player all time !!
Joining a team already looking to be a dynasty.
1 was a above average player, a nice defensive player with average or slightly better offense.
That joined a up and coming team who still hadn’t become dominant.
Obv alot of prob def, esp possibly.
What I didn’t understand about this article in the Denver Post was how is Denver going to be able to sign most of these guys.
If they can sign LaRavia, they should ASAP – his value vs salary is excellent.
Journalists just writing whatever comes to mind
Better players always find a way to get on top teams. The ones released because their pay does no longer match their production.
Top teams often can’t get super deep rosters. But they can usually get 3-6 good vets for near minimum. Players that would never go to a middling team.
It’s what many older people dislike about modern sports. The best teams usually get even better players over the course of a season. For the nba, the teams dont even have to try much to aquire said players. They fall in their laps wanting to play there.