Does Josh Kroenke want to run it back with current Nuggets roster? ‘I think a lot of our answers are internal’ ...Middle East

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Does Josh Kroenke want to run it back with current Nuggets roster? ‘I think a lot of our answers are internal’

The Nuggets have their next coach, but they still need a new architect for a roster that’s already built by cement.

Don’t expect them to hire a general manager today or tomorrow.

    At least, that was the indication team president and governor Josh Kroenke gave while speaking with reporters on Thursday afternoon following the announcement of interim coach David Adelman’s promotion to the full-time job.

    “On the front office stuff, I want to take my time a little bit more,” Kroenke said.

    Essentially, while one search came to a quick conclusion, the other remains in its infant stages. Might Kroenke double-dip on internal hires?

    “Ben Tenzer has done an unbelievable job over the last six weeks, getting things reorganized,” he said, lauding his interim GM. “Ben’s been with us a very long time. I want to solicit his opinion. (Assistant general manager) Tommy Balcetis is in our front office. I want to solicit his opinion. Because these guys have seen the ups and downs through thick and thin over the last 10-plus years. And then I’m also gonna be soliciting some outside opinion. So there’s gonna be an extensive process.”

    That was just one of numerous topics addressed by Kroenke at the Nuggets’ end-of-season news conference that ran for approximately 25 minutes. Here are three takeaways from his session with reporters:

    ‘Brightest upcoming minds’ for GM

    Kroenke said: “I’ve promoted (general managers) from within for several cycles now. Am I going to do that again? I’m not 100% sure. But I know we have some very capable people in this organization, and they’ve made me rethink a few things that I’ve already been thinking myself, which is great. I don’t want an organization where everyone agrees. I want everyone to challenge people, and then when the door opens and we move out, we’re all moving in unison. … I would be naive if I didn’t think about soliciting opinions outside these walls, whether that’s from some of my own basketball contacts, or hiring a firm that perhaps might be able to give me a list of some of the brightest upcoming minds in the league.”

    Translation: Even if the Nuggets end up hiring from within, they’re clearly planning to consider other candidates in a more deliberate process. Either way, it seems unlikely that Denver’s next general manager will be a grizzled veteran executive. Kroenke’s use of the phrase “brightest upcoming minds” was notable.

    The risk with hiring a candidate like Tenzer or Balcetis: Perpetuation of insular thinking. The risk with an unfamiliar newcomer: No guarantee of philosophical alignment between the GM and a coach who was already hired. The Nuggets should be pretty sensitive to that dynamic.

    Trades? Maybe not

    Kroenke said: “I think a lot of our answers are internal right now. With where we are from a roster standpoint, we have guys locked into contracts. We’re going into a coaching transition. And to be frank, that’s a huge change. Huge change. … DA’s philosophy, how he might use these guys slightly differently, there’s gonna be a lot of big changes throughout our organization already.”

    Translation: Run it back? This was perhaps the defining theme of Kroenke’s news conference. When he was asked if he feels urgency to explore trading a high-salary player to fix Denver’s problematic lack of depth, Kroenke instead referenced “a lot of successful teams that have developed their benches.” These answers sound like code for: Michael Malone didn’t develop his bench enough to give Denver’s depth a chance.

    In any case, the Nuggets clearly believe Adelman can get something out of this roster that Malone couldn’t by the end of his regime. And considering the team’s shortage of avenues to acquire new players, it sounds like Kroenke is placing the onus on Adelman to develop his young bench players into more viable options. The Nuggets fired Calvin Booth, but they haven’t fired his idea yet. Or maybe they just feel stuck with the idea.

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    What about Kroenke’s role in basketball ops?

    Kroenke said: “The thing that was tough to deal with is: Should I have been more hands-on or more hands-off in the transition (from Tim Connelly to Calvin Booth) a couple years ago? Well, we won the championship the first year. We’d never done that before. So I don’t know what the right balance was then. I think, actually looking back on it, I should have been more hands-on in the wake of the championship. … I need to be more hands-on in the moments of transition, while also recognizing when I need to take a step back and allow people to do their jobs. It’s a delicate balance, one that actually requires the art of just reading people. … I should’ve recognized certain human elements that were going on that could affect the group later on.”

    Translation: Perhaps it’s a pang of regret over the guaranteed contracts that Denver kept giving its low draft picks after winning the championship — interpreted by Malone as acts of egotism and authoritarianism by Booth, snowballing into semi-wasted years for those players.

    Julian Strawther, Jalen Pickett, Hunter Tyson and DaRon Holmes II currently occupy four roster spots on the 2025-26 roster, but none of them have been consistent enough (or healthy enough) to make an everyday playoff rotation. Expect Kroenke to be pretty closely involved in Denver’s upcoming roster decisions as the team (and its new GM) tries to navigate out of a tough spot. At the bare minimum, he seems anxious to avoid more fallout of clashing ideologies.

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