LAS VEGAS -- Kyle Lowry knew people wanted to ask him about DeMar DeRozan.

That didn't mean he was going to give them answers.

It was a USA Basketball minicamp in Las Vegas, and that's all that Lowry -- the Toronto Raptors point guard who watched his longtime backcourt partner get traded to the San Antonio Spurs last week -- wanted to talk about. So when he was asked about DeRozan on Friday, no matter how reporters tried to pose questions, Lowry tailored his answers the exact same way.

"It's been a great week for USA Basketball for me," he said. "Being out here with these guys and hanging out and getting to talk and hang out with these guys and hanging out with DeMar and all those guys, it's been fun.

"Summer has been great in general for everyone. Just to have the opportunity to relax and work on your game and prepare for the upcoming season."

DeRozan and Lowry are close friends on the court and off, and neither was happy to see the trade. DeRozan was shipped to the San Antonio Spurs on July 18, along with center Jakob Poeltl and a protected 2019 first-round pick, in exchange for Kawhi Leonard and wing Danny Green.

Kyle, your thoughts?

"I'm here for USA Basketball," Lowry repeated. "It's been a great week for USA Basketball."

Kyle Lowry (7) refused to discuss the trade of close friend DeMar DeRozan by the Raptors, deciding to focus instead on the USA Basketball minicamp that he was attending.. Marcus Eriksson for ESPN

Lowry is coming off his lowest scoring output in five seasons -- averaging 16.2 points and 6.9 assists per game last season, considerably lower than the career-high 22.4 points he averaged in 2016-17.

But as the oldest player attending the two-day minicamp, the 32-year-old said he wasn't as concerned about working on his game or anything in particular as much as he was providing leadership at USA Basketball's first minicamp of this Olympic cycle.

"Just build chemistry and be a leader, be a voice," Lowry said. "We all know each other. We all have massive respect for each other. So just coming to hang out and kick it is fun."

Lowry, who won a gold medal with the national team at the 2016 Rio Olympics, said one of the biggest benefits for him has been absorbing as much information from former USA Basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski and new coach Gregg Popovich, also DeRozan's new head coach.

"They're two of the greatest coaches to ever coach the game of basketball," Lowry said. "Coach K has been amazing. Having the opportunity to spend a lot of time with him three summers ago was awesome, and even these last three days with Pop has been fun."

And while Lowry refused to discuss his close friend's departure or anything pertaining to the Raptors, DeRozan said he was confident his former teammate would be just fine without him thanks to a basketball IQ he respects.

"His knowledge of the game, just his IQ of the game, it stands out, bar none," DeRozan said. "Just talking about basketball, understanding basketball, reading basketball. It's great to see that."

DeRozan said both players understand the league is about business.

"Kyle is Kyle. At the end of the day, this is our profession," DeRozan said. "We understand what comes with the job. It's gonna be simple. We all got a job and got responsibilities to take care of with our home team. What happened, happened. He gotta do what he gotta do for his team, and I gotta do what I gotta do for mine."