After a similar report surfaced in August from another outlet, Zach Lowe of ESPN said on his podcast this week (hat tip to RealGM) that there are “rumblings” that Michael Malone and the Nuggets front office aren’t seeing eye to eye “to a degree even unusual for the NBA.”
This offseason, the Nuggets lost Kentavious Caldwell-Pope to free agency one year after losing key role players in Jeff Green and Bruce Brown. General manager Calvin Booth has targeted young players to develop to try and offset the losses of these veterans, but they haven’t been one-to-one replacements.
As noted by RealGM, Booth’s contract expires after the 2024/25 season while Malone’s runs through ’26/27. It’s not exactly clear to what degree Malone and the front office aren’t clicking, but Denver took a step back after winning the title in 2023 and doesn’t have a clear replacement for what Caldwell-Pope brought to the table as one of the premier 3-and-D role-players in the league.
For what it’s worth, Booth didn’t exactly put any rumors to rest with his comments in May.
“We’ve talked about this a lot upstairs,” Booth said in May. “The general manager, front office job oftentimes is to make sure the long-term view is something that we’re satisfied with. And Coach Malone’s down there in the trenches trying to win every night. And a lot of times, those things are aligned, but sometimes they ebb and flow away from each other.”
We have more from the Northwest Division:
- With Caldwell-Pope, Reggie Jackson and Justin Holiday gone, the Nuggets are losing more than 28% of their attempted three-pointers from last season, Bennett Durando of The Denver Post observes. Durando writes that Vlatko Cancar and Julian Strawther could be key contributors from beyond the arc to help offset Denver’s losses in that area.
- The Thunder continued cementing themselves as top contenders in the NBA this offseason by adding outside talent like Alex Caruso and Isaiah Hartenstein, but signing Isaiah Joe and Aaron Wiggins to team-friendly extensions might have been their most overlooked moves. As Ross Lovelace of Sports Illustrated writes, if Wiggins increases his three-point output this season, it could be one of the developments that helps push Oklahoma City to a title.
- Adding Caruso and Hartenstein gives the Thunder versatility and defense and as a result, John Wilmes of RealGM writes Oklahoma City has figured out the modern NBA. Even as the Thunder get more expensive, they’ve maintained a young core and have flexibility going forward.