If Nuggets can’t trade out of pick No. 28, which NBA draft prospect should they take?

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Sean Keeler: The joke’s on Joker. And us. Trust the basketball gods to give Denver one of the most watered-down draft classes in modern NBA history in a summer when the Nuggets absolutely need to find some diamonds among all that rough. The upside? We’re losing sleep over tweaks, nips and tucks. The core of the roster remains one of the NBA’s best — it’s all about finding the right (and affordable) pieces to complement Nikola Jokic, Jamal Murray, Aaron Gordon, (probably) Michael Porter Jr. and (maybe) Kentavious Caldwell-Pope. According to our colleague Bennett Durando, the Nuggs are going to have a hard time swinging a trade out of pick No. 28 without some major structural upheaval along the way, though. No worries. I say the right finishing piece can still be had late in the first round on Wednesday. What say you?

Troy Renck: The NBA has more rules about the apron than “Ciao House” on Food Network. A trade is tricky because the players the Nuggets need to ship out — center Zeke Nnaji and backup point guard Reggie Jackson — will net only $9.3 million in wiggle room even when attaching the 28th pick. That’s not enough financial flexibility. Given the Nuggets lean toward draft and development, I expect them to stay put and trust the Magic 8 Ball with a late first-rounder. They need to hit on this selection given the empty calories provided thus far by Nnaji and Julian Strawther.

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