Nuggets trade Dario Saric to Kings for Jonas Valanciunas, source says

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The Nuggets are throwing yet another dart at the board, hoping it finally lands on an effective backup center.

Only difference this time? The new guy has been a starting center for most of his career.

Denver is trading Dario Saric to the Sacramento Kings for Jonas Valanciunas, a league source told The Denver Post on Tuesday morning. Valanciunas, 33, was a trade deadline consideration for the Nuggets as well in February, when he ultimately went from Washington to Sacramento.

Now the Lithuanian big man is on his way to Denver, where he’ll be paid a salary of $10.4 million next season and $10 million the year after. He’ll be an unrestricted free agent in 2027.

The Nuggets offloaded Saric’s $5.4 million salary in the deal, which was made possible by Monday’s trade of Michael Porter Jr. to Brooklyn. Shedding Porter’s contract and moving under the first tax apron allowed the Nuggets to take back more salary than they send out in trades.

They immediately took advantage of that flexibility with the Valanciunas acquisition. And as a result, their payroll is now expected by cap analysts to be hard-capped at the first apron ($195.945 million) — unless they can merge the two trades into one three-team deal with Sacramento and Brooklyn.

Fourteen of the Nuggets’ 15 roster spots are filled. They’re required to carry at least 14 players during the season, excluding two-way contracts. They still have access to at least a portion of the non-taxpayer mid-level exception in free agency.

Saric, 31, exercised a player option in his contract earlier this month that would have made him the sixth-highest paid player on Denver’s 2025-26 roster, despite having appeared in only 16 games last season. When he signed for the taxpayer MLE in 2024, the Nuggets hoped he would be an adequate backup center behind Nikola Jokic.

But that idea barely got off the ground. Saric struggled at both ends of the floor, causing Denver to quickly try other options with the second unit.

Valanciunas is a classic, old-school style of big man at 6-foot-11 and 265 pounds. He’s durable — he missed only one regular-season game in the last two years — and has only recently transitioned into more of a bench role. Before last season, he had started 827 of his 856 career games in the NBA.

The fifth pick in the 2011 draft, Valanciunas has played for Toronto, Memphis, New Orleans, Washington and Sacramento. He averaged 10.4 points, 7.7 rebounds and two assists per game in 2024-25.

He and Tim Hardaway Jr. are joining a mostly young Denver bench that also features Bruce Brown, Peyton Watson, Julian Strawther, Jalen Pickett and DaRon Holmes II. Assuming the veteran center plays most — if not all — of his minutes while Jokic is resting, he’ll have the least glamorous job on the roster.

The Nuggets had a 10.5 net rating with Jokic on the floor last season and a dismal minus-9.3 net rating without him. The year before, their net was 11.8 with Jokic and minus-8.6 while he was on the bench.

Valanciunas has always harbored an admiration for his superstar teammate’s interior game. “Even if he passes the ball out, you’ve gotta anticipate that there’s some kind of action going on, where he’s gonna keep moving without the ball and get the ball in a better position,” he told The Denver Post in a 2023 interview about Jokic.

“You’ve gotta be active in guarding him all the time. Read the game. See what’s going on. You can’t relax. Not even a second. … I just like the matchup. I like the big man traditional matchup. It’s not easy, but I like the physicality. Bring it back.”

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Originally Published: July 1, 2025 at 10:14 AM MDT