Kings NBA Trade Deadline (Part 4): Trade Targets!

[This is part four of a series of posts on the Kings ahead of the February 8 trade deadline. In part one, I looked at the areas on the floor that the Kings should be trying to improve, specifically defense and efficient, reliable offense when Fox sits. In part two, I wrote about what the Kings can send out in potential trades and how the NBA’s rules governing player- and draft-pick trades affect what the Kings can offer. Part three covered the Kings’ roster construction needs, diving deep into future contracts the Kings will want to offer to De’Aaron Fox, Malik Monk, and Keegan Murray, as well as reviewing what on-court roles the Kings will look to fill ahead of the deadline.]

We’re finally here at the most exciting part of the post—who are the potential trade targets for the Kings ahead of the trade deadline and does it make sense to go after them?

There are obviously a lot of rumors about potential trades that make the rounds this time of year. I’m not going to weigh in on how true those rumors are or which players are truly on the trade block. Shams, Woj, and dozens of other reporters (shout out to Sam Amick for reporting on the Kings) will give the best intel on that. But I will look at players that have frequently come up in reporting or the rumor mill that may be of interest to the Kings. For each player, I’ll try to talk about the player’s talents, how they would fit on the Kings, what the Kings would sacrifice by making a deal, and whether I think a deal makes sense.

I’m going to organize this summary by team since there are a number of teams that are could be sellers at the deadline. The Bulls, Hornets, Raptors, Blazers, and Wizards all come to mind as obvious candidates—I cover all of them and more below. Other teams might consider one-off deals that make sense, even if they’re not full-on “sellers,” so I’ll look at those possibilities individually (plus Detroit, which only has one trade candidate that should even draw remote interest from the Kings in my view).

Just so folks know how this is organized, I cover the following players in the below order. The order is just how I started writing things, so don’t think too hard about how it doesn’t make sense, I concede that’s true.

  • Chicago Bulls

    • Zach Lavine

    • Alex Caruso

  • Atlanta Hawks

    • Dejounte Murray

    • De’Andre Hunter / Saddiq Bey / Bogdan Bogdanovic

      • [I combined these three for convenience]

  • Utah Jazz

    • Lauri Markkanen

    • John Collins

    • Kris Dunn

  • Brooklyn Nets

    • Mikal Bridges / Cam Johnson

      • [I combined these two because, realistically, the Nets aren’t going to deal them anyway]

    • Dorian Finney-Smith

    • Royce O’Neal / Lonnie Walker IV / Spencer Dinwiddie / Nic Claxton

      • [I combined these guys for convenience. Even though they’re different styles of players, the thinking is comparable.]

  • Portland Trailblazers

    • Jerami Grant

    • Malcolm Brogdon

    • Matisse Thybulle

  • Washington Wizards

    • Kyle Kuzma

    • Tyus Jones

  • Charlotte Hornets

    • Miles Bridges

    • PJ Washington

  • Toronto Raptors

    • Gary Trent Jr.

    • Bruce Brown

  • Miscellaneous

    • Naji Marshall

    • Bojan Bogdanovic (Detroit version—how’d we get two Bogdanovic’s?)

    • Andrew Wiggins

Let me know in the comments if there are other players you want me to look at, or if there’s other details you want to know about any of these prospective deals.

Bulls Trade Targets

The Bulls are sitting in 9th in the East but their roster is way too old and way too expensive for the production they’re getting. It feels like they’ve stagnated over the last couple years without Lonzo Ball. One of their best players, Demar Derozan, is about to hit free agency and their highest recent draft pick, Pat Williams, is about to get a pay bump as a restricted free agent (even though his on-court production hasn’t been anything to write home about). This team should be looking to re-tool, but what they’re going to look for in doing so is harder to predict.

Zach Lavine

As most basketball fans know already, the Bulls are trying their best to ship Zach Lavine to anyone who will take him, but they still want to get at least something of value back.

Only 28 years old, Lavine is still a high-level scorer who can create for himself and knock down shots, but there are lots of questions about what else he brings to the table.

Lavine’s numbers have historically looked pretty good. During the five seasons from 2018 to 2023, Lavine scored more than 23.5 points per game each year, always shooting above 45% from the field and over 37% from three, and put up 4.0+ assists and 4.5+ rebounds per game, all while playing heavy minutes (34.5+ minutes per game). Those are impressive numbers, and proved out that Lavine is capable of generating quality offense with relative efficiency.

Lavine also has a good combination of size (he’s 6’5”), length, and athleticism, which allows him to create space against most defenders and get to the rim when he wants to attack. He pairs these skills with solid ball-handling and strong perimeter shooting. He doesn’t need a lot of help to get quality offense, as he largely lives off of a strong pull up game these days. But he can also run pick and rolls when he needs to, with decent efficiency—Lavine runs about 6.2 pick and rolls per game this year, which generate about 0.94 points per possession, a tick down from 8.1 pick and rolls per game and 0.93 points per possession last season.

Lavine has always had a “score first” game, so he’s never excelled at creating offense for others. He’s not a black hole on offense at all, but he’s not always quick to move off the ball—for example, at 42.5 passes per game, he’s moving the ball at about the same rate as Tyler Herro. This could make for a bit of an awkward pairing with the Kings style and De’Aaron Fox in particular, who is also a score-first guard (though a better overall distributor than Lavine). There’s only so much room for players with a score-first approach in Kings’ line-ups, as they rely heavily on ball movement. That said, issue can be can be mitigated by staggering when Lavine and Fox are on the court, especially since generating offense when Fox sits is one of the things the Kings need to improve (as I wrote about in part one of this series). [Just as a quick aside—staggering minutes isn’t always the “best” use of players. Staggering minutes is nice, but it also generally means that the team’s ceiling is lower since the best players aren’t functioning perfectly together in late-game situations, especially in the playoffs.]

In addition, Lavine’s strong shooting and ability to get up efficient shots could work nicely when the Kings run their offense through Domantas Sabonis, which they often do in non-Fox minutes. Lavine is an expert shooter with the ability to pull up from all over the court, so having him work off of Sabonis—who creates tons of space for shooters with dribble hand-offs and screens—could work wonderfully. Adding Lavine would also let the Kings to keep at least one elite scorer on the floor with Sabonis at all times. Monk, and to a lesser extent Kevin Huerter, fill that role now, yet there’s no doubt that Lavine packs more of an offensive punch.

Still, there are glaring questions that come with Lavine.

Health has been an issue for Lavine throughout his career. Now in his tenth season, Lavine has played 65+ games just four times, and over halfway through this season, Lavine has only played in just 25 games.

Lavine has also never been part of a winning NBA team, raising questions about whether his game contributes to winning. He’s been on just one team with a .500 record or better in his NBA career, despite the Bulls attempting to build a championship contender around him. Of course it isn’t fair to put this on Lavine alone, and it doesn’t detract from his skill as a player, but it does raise red flags.

One of the reasons Lavine’s teams have struggled to win is that Lavine has never been a strong defender himself, despite having the physical tools to be one. That’s obviously an acute concern for a Kings team that desperately needs help defensively. Given Lavine’s offensive talent, his defensive limitations aren’t fatal. Plus, just because Lavine isn’t great defensively doesn’t make him a complete zero. In fact, several advanced metrics paint Lavine as just slightly below average on defense, which is probably sufficient. For example, Basketball Reference’s Defensive Box Plus/Minus, which estimates the points per 100 possessions a player contributes above league average, rates Lavine is at -0.5 this year and -0.7 last year, while Dunks and Threes Defensive Estimated Plus-Minus, a similar stat, rates Lavine at 0.2 the last two years (a little above average defensively). With that said, Lavine has rarely (never?) been part of a good defensive teams. His effort defensively can come and go, and the defensive stats one might look at to see effort (like steals, blocks, and deflections) don’t stand out at all. There’s also a little bit of Rockets James Harden to his game defensively, where he appears to sometimes lose track of his assignment inexplicably.

The net result is that while Lavine would help the Kings offensively, they can’t expect him to bring much more to the table on defense beyond slightly improved rebounding.

Trading for Lavine would probably help the Kings this season, but Lavine’s injury history and limitations on defense make that a risky bet in a vacuum. There’s also no guarantee that adding would help in the playoffs. Lavine has no real prior playoff successes himself, and it’s not clear how much of a benefit he would provide overall when rotations start to tighten and teams buckle down. And if there are struggles playing him alongside Fox and Monk, whether because of overlapping offensive skillsets or defensive limitations, adding Lavine may not add as much to the team’s playoff ceiling.

We also haven’t talked about Lavine’s contract yet, which may be the poison pill that ultimately kills the possibility of the Kings trading for him.

Lavine signed a 5 year, $215 million contract in 2022 that pays him $40 million this year, $43 million in 2024-25, $46 million in 2025-26, and gives him a player option for $49 million in 2026-27. He’s pretty likely to pick up that player option, so he’s effectively got four years and almost $180 million left on his deal.

Lavine’s future salary would be high for any player, and if Lavine can’t stay healthy or help deliver playoff success, they’re completely absurd for a team like the Kings to trade for.

Take a look at the chart below showing the projected salaries for the Kings core plus Lavine, compared to the projected salary cap and luxury tax line.

[For simplicity, I’ve assumed Fox signs an extension for a max contract, not the super max he could become eligible for if he makes another All-NBA team this year or next. I’ve also assumed that Murray signs an extension with a starting salary of $30 million in 2026-27, but you could imagine the extension ranging from $25-40 million depending on how well he plays. Those estimated salaries are shown in green.]

As you can see from the chart, even before trading for Lavine, the Kings core of Fox, Sabonis, and Murray is going to get expensive. Combined, the trio will make over $85 million in 2024-25, over $93 million in 2025-26, and could top $129 million in 2026-27. If Fox makes another All NBA team this year or next, or if Murray continues to develop, they could easily push the trio’s combined salary to almost $150 million before adding Lavine or filling out the roster.

Adding Lavine’s salary would be tough even before extensions the Fox and Murray kick in, as it would push the combined salary for just four players (Lavine plus Fox/Sabonis/Murray) to $128.5 million in 2024-25 and $139.2 million in 2025-26. That’s inching close to the cap in both seasons, and would leave little room for the Kings to maneuver elsewhere. They’d be limited in re-signing players, signing free agents, or trading for new talent without pushing toward the luxury tax line.

The 2026-27 season is where things could get really ugly from a cap standpoint, as extensions for Fox and Murray would likely put the Kings over the cap with just Lavine + Fox/Sabonis/Murray. Filling out the rest of the roster would likely put the Kings into the luxury tax—though the tax aprons probably wouldn’t be a huge issue (the Kings would still have about $39 million under the projected first apron and about $52 million under the projected second apron to operate). The Kings could theoretically try to find ways out of the luxury tax at that point by moving off Lavine’s contract in the last year, but getting off contracts always comes with its own challenges. Teams are often happy to take on expiring contracts but they usually want something valuable stapled to it like a future draft pick, and that ask would be comparatively high to eat a salary over $40 million (the imposition of a higher salary floor in the 2023 CBA could change market dynamics on this, as teams might be more willing to absorb big expiring contracts).

On top of thinking through future cap issues, the Kings also need to think about how to match Lavine’s salary in a trade. Complying with the trade salary matching rules for a $40+ million contract is, almost by definition, expensive—especially for a Kings team whose only big salaries are for meaningful rotation players.

Lavine’s $40.1 million salary this year means the Kings would have to send out about $31.9 million or more in any potential deal. There is simply no way for the Kings to piece together that much salary for a trade without raiding their current rotation. To get to $31.9 million in outgoing salary, the Kings would have to trade at least two or three players at a minimum. That would most likely be Barnes ($17 million) and Huerter ($15.7 million), or one of those two plus some combination of Monk ($9.9 million), Lyles ($8 million), Vezenkov ($6.3 million), Mitchell ($5.1 million), and Duarte ($4.1 million). Dealing Huerter and Monk might make the most sense given their skillsets overlap with Lavine’s the most, but that would be quite painful in terms of depth. For that kind of outlay to make sense, the Kings would have to be absolutely convinced that Lavine will seriously outperform Monk. That’s certainly possible, but it’s not a guarantee by any means.

Taking on Lavine’s huge salary and sending out multiple rotation players is tough to swallow given Lavine’s injury history, lack of playoff success, defensive limitations, and imperfect fit with Fox. This simply isn’t the most natural roster fit for Lavine. On top of that, the Bulls, somewhat surprisingly seem to be asking for first round draft pick compensation back from any team that wants Lavine, which further complicates things. Nobody appears all that ready to dish out picks to get Lavine—the consensus around the league appears to be that the Bulls should probably be willing to give away picks just to get Lavine’s salary off their own books . . .

Verdict: Hard pass on Lavine. Lavine is a good player, but it is hard to envision a trade for him making sense for the Kings. The contract issues, health questions, lack of defensive impact, and lack of playoff success make the price too much to absorb.

Alex Caruso

Even though Lavine isn’t a good fit, Chicago does have another very attractive trade target for the Kings: Alex Caruso.

Caruso isn’t a big household name. He’s played in relative obscurity on a mediocre Bulls team for the last three seasons and at a glance, his numbers aren’t eye-catching. He averages 10.1 points, 3.5 rebounds, and 2.7 assists in just under 26 minutes per game. He is, however, relatively efficient offensively: he shoots 49.1% from the floor and 41.5% from three and he rarely gives the ball away.

But Caruso really shines on defense, and his impact on that end of the floor shows up all over the place. Caruso is averages 1.3 steals and 1.0 blocks per game, which are both stellar numbers for a 6’5” guard. He’s also top-10 in the NBA in Basketball Reference’s Defensive Box Plus/Minus (10th) and Dunks and Threes’ Defensive Estimated Plus-Minus (8th). The Bulls, too, benefit enormously defensively with Caruso on the floor, as they give up about 5.5 fewer points per 100 possessions when he’s in the game according to PBP Stats.

Caruso’s impact defensively is obvious watching the Bulls play and it earned him All-Defensive NBA First Team honors last year. It’s also not new—he’s basically done the same thing his entire career, even dating back to his days at Texas A&M where he was on the All SEC Defensive team.

Caruso brings the kind of defensive presence the Kings are sorely missing on the perimeter. He’s big enough to take on guards that are too big and powerful for Fox or Monk to handle and agile enough to stick on guards that are too quick for Kevin Huerter. Caruso defending opposing guards would also free up Keegan Murray’s defensive responsibilities a bit. Murray is being asked to cover players like Steph Curry too often in the Kings’ current lineups, and while he typically does an admirable job, Murray is much better suited to guarding wings that he doesn’t need to chase as much.

At the same time, Caruso brings enough on offense that he would fit well with the Kings’ core. He shoots well enough from deep to maintain spacing (averaging 37.6% from three for his career), he moves well without the ball, and he’s a willing cutter, which plays well with Sabonis.

Caruso is basically a plug-and-play add that would raise the Kings’ floor defensively instantly.

The only real downsides to trading for Caruso are his age and the cost to get him. Caruso will turn 30 next month, so he’s probably in the back half of his defensive prime, though still young enough that it shouldn’t be a major concern. He also is an ideal fit for lots of playoff teams that could use a perimeter defender of his caliber. The Bucks, Sixers, Pacers, Nuggets, Suns, and Mavs would all benefit tremendously from adding a player like Caruso. Many of those teams have little to offer the Bulls in a trade, but it’s enough of a market that any deal for Caruso isn’t going to come cheaply. The Bulls haven’t shown a lot of interest in dealing Caruso to date, but given their current roster situation, it’s hard to see why they wouldn’t deal him for a solid offer.

Despite Caruso’s age and a potentially hot market, the Kings would be wise to consider giving up meaningful future draft capital to get him. He would give the Kings enough juice on the defensive perimeter to meaningfully improve their overall prospects, even if he doesn’t provide a ton offensively. Being able to roll out line-ups with two strong perimeter defenders would go a long way to improving the Kings defense generally, hopefully with an effect similar to what the Knicks got after adding an elite perimeter defender in OG Anounoby (though less dramatic). Getting Caruso shouldn’t be nearly as expensive as prying Anounoby away from the Raptors was, and Caruso’s $9-10 million salary over this year and next is a bargain compared to the $30+ million that Anounoby is likely to receive. It’s also easier than trying to add rim protection alongside Sabonis, which could really compromise the Kings’ offense.

The Kings could potentially get Caruso with just a small outgoing salary like Davion Mitchell’s ($5.1 million) plus future draft picks. That would give the Kings flexibility to play stronger defensive line-ups with Caruso, but keep the option to bring more offensive firepower off the bench with Huerter and Monk. Alternatively, the Kings could send Huerter ($15.7 million) to Chicago for Caruso and a smaller, expendable contract like Andre Drummond’s ($3.4 million). That would cost the Kings a bit more in terms of offensive firepower, but it might mitigate the amount of future draft capital that the Kings would need to send out. The Bulls could use shooting (they rank 20th in three point percentage), and Huerter is still young and has a favorable contract for the next three seasons.

There’s also a funky (and far-fetched) alternative the Kings could offer if the Bulls want to get off of Lonzo Ball, who hasn’t played a game since January 2022 due to a career threatening knee injury. Ball just got cleared to run this month, and it’s possible he will never play again—yet he is on the books for $20.5 million this year and has a player option for $21.4 million next season that he is assuredly going to exercise. The Bulls have paid Ball to not play for two years and could be looking at another one (the Bulls could try to stretch Ball’s salary to save themselves the salary cap hit, but they’re still paying for no on court production if they do). The Kings could send Huerter ($15.7 million) + Mitchell ($5.1 million) + Duarte ($4.1 million) and a future first to the Bulls in exchange for Caruso ($9.5 million) and Ball ($20.5 million). There’s risk to the Kings here, as they’d be sending out Huerter and a pick, plus absorbing a year of Ball’s contract, but the deal could work out well for the Kings if Ball can return to playing (he’s a good distributor, shooter, and defender when he plays) and the down-side of carrying Ball’s $21.4 million contract next season is palatable for the Kings, since it would end before extensions for Fox and Murray kick in. Meanwhile the Bulls would get shooting they need on a movable contract in Huerter, plus free looks at Mitchell and Duarte.

Verdict: This is the guy this trade season the Kings should want (given we couldn’t get a deal done for OG)! I really like the idea of the Kings trading for Caruso, so long as they don’t have to sell the farm in terms of draft picks to get him (giving up multiple first rounders gets to be too pricey without big protections on the picks). Obviously, the Kings can’t overpay dramatically—but giving up a little more than Caruso’s actually worth because of his limited offense is still fine given his defensive prowess. He’s a clear floor raiser that could hopefully transform the team’s identity on defense from middling to hounding, and adding him would let Fox and Murray guard guys they’re more naturally suited to. The Kings are right to bet on their core, but adding Caruso is the type of incremental move that can actually enable that growth to happen smoothly.

Hawks Trade Targets

The Hawks are in a weird spot. They’re hanging on by a thread to a spot in the play in at 10th in the East, but this season has largely been forgettable. They’re certainly not as good as they envisioned when they gave up three first round picks and a first round swap right to add Dejounte Murray a year and a half ago. There’s a lot of smoke around the Hawks shedding pieces that don’t fit well together, so there is a ripe chance for the Kings to make a deal.

Dejounte Murray

Before trading for Dejounte Murray, the Hawks had a high-usage, deep shooting scorer in Trae Young who couldn’t play defense. To shore up their squad, the Hawks traded an absolute haul to the Spurs for Murray, a lanky and athletic 6’5” point guard, in the hopes that he would bring excellent defense, downhill scoring, and strong ball distribution.

His last season in San Antonio, Murray averaged 21.1 points, 9.2 assists, 8.3 rebounds, and 2.0 steals per game, and he brought an athletic, attacking style that put a ton of pressure on defenses. Murray would run right at guys to get them in backpedals and either get to the rim, pull up for short jumpers and midrange shots, or kick the ball to open shooters. Fitting that game alongside Trae Young made some sense on paper.

But that hypothesis hasn’t worked out at all like the Hawks hoped.

Offensively, the Murray-Young pairing has been like oil and water. Far too often, they end up playing an undesirable brand of “your turn, my turn” basketball, where neither player really does anything to help the other succeed. Teams like the Dallas Mavericks have done that in the past, but Doncic and Irving are transcendent offensive talents who still had to learn to play more complimentary basketball to start winning games more often.

Since joining Atlanta, Murray’s offensive efficiency has stayed pretty solid, but he’s had to change his game a bit too. It’s not clear that it’s really an improvement. As Murray’s usage rate has dropped, his assist rate has plummeted to 22.2% this year, down from 40.6% his last year with the Spurs. He’s also shifted to a more perimeter-oriented game, which shows up in the numbers. Murray now shoots 6.2 threes per game compared to just 4.3 per game in his last year in San Antonio. Though he’s hitting threes at a career high clip—38.7% from three this year compared to a career average of 34.6%—he’s also not getting downhill nearly as often. Murray is shooting a lower proportion of his shots from inside 10 feet, making fewer trips to the line, and getting offensive rebounds less frequently, all of which indicate his game is moving farther and farther away from the basket. That’s normal as a player ages, but Murray is still just 27 years old and in his athletic prime. While there’s nothing inherently wrong with Murray’s move outward (it does create more space on the interior), it’s not quite what the Hawks envisioned when they traded for Murray, and they don’t have other players who’ve stepped up to put downhill pressure on defenses and score in the paint.

At the same time, Murray hasn’t been the elite defensive weapon that many thought he might turn into based on his time with the Spurs. Murray’s steals rate has dropped each of the past two years, from 2.8% his last year as a Spur to 1.8% this year. Per Dunks and Threes, his Defensive Estimated Plus-Minus has also dropped too; he was in the 81st percentile of defenders his last year with the Spurs, but he’s dropped to the 53rd percentile this year. While Murray’s defensive reputation was probably a little overblown, he’s still had a meaningful drop-off on that end of the floor. That may be on Murray or it may be on the Hawks as a team, but it’s been an issue for them trying to pair Young and Murray regardless.

The net result has been the Hawks failing to live up to their own expectations, and it seems like they’re ready to get off of Murray. The Hawks have also overpaid several players on their roster, such that they’re already within $10 million of the luxury tax line this year and projected to be about $9 million below the luxury tax next year, so they have a clear incentive to get out of Murray’s contract if they want to create more operating space to adjust their roster. That presents an opportunity for the Kings to get Murray or someone else off the Hawks roster.

Fitting Murray on the Kings does raise some of the same issues that have come up for the Hawks in the Trae Young-Dejounte Murray pairing.

Offensively, it’s a cautionary tale of sorts for a potential Fox-Murray backcourt. Fox is one of just nine players in the league with a higher usage rate than Trae Young, so there’s a concern that he and Murray could end up playing “your turn, my turn” offense too. And Fox and Murray both seem to be moving their games out toward the perimeter and away from the paint, which might be too much of the same thing. But there are a few things that I think would make adding Murray to the Kings more feasible.

One point of adding Murray is to solidify the Kings’ offense when Fox sits, which minimizes some of the risk that they have overlapping skillsets. During those minutes, the Kings try to run offense through Sabonis. Murray’s pull-up shooting and quickness should work well off of Sabonis in the high post, and Murray is athletic enough to serve as a capable cutter off actions where Sabonis starts with the ball (though Murray doesn’t cut often enough now). Murray is also an experienced pick and roll initiator, running 7.3 pick and rolls per game, which would be an effective half-court tool for Murray-Sabonis lineups. Murray’s ball-handling and knack for avoiding turnovers would also be a big benefit to the Kings. While Fox does a good job taking care of the ball, the Kings’ other primary ball-handlers (Sabonis and Monk) turn the ball over too often. Finally, Murray’s improved three point shooting has really shorn up what was previously a weakness. Murray is an effective spot up shooter, scoring about 1.18 points per possession on those shots, and he’s managed to push out his range beyond the three point line. If he can keep that up, he would be an effective floor spacer that can also attack close outs (much like Monk, and to a lesser extent Barnes, already do for the Kings), which puts a lot of pressure on defenses to collapse to the paint and opens up other shooters.

On the defensive end, even the Hawks version of Murray would be an upgrade for the Kings’ perimeter defense. He’s bigger and lankier than Fox and Monk, and quicker on his feet than Huerter or Keegan Murray, which would provide some benefit against scoring guards. He also has active hands defensively to generate steals and deflections (3.0 deflections per game, tied for 10th in the NBA), which would be a nice addition. If it does turn out that the Spurs defense version of Murray is still there, the upgrade is even more obvious.

Let’s turn to the contract situation. Murray signed a four year, $120 million extension this off-season, but his salary this year is just $18.2 million, which makes salary matching a bit easier. The Kings would have options of who to send out, but the Hawks roster is in such a transition state that it’s hard to know what they would want back. Presumably, players with contracts cheaper than Dejounte Murray’s going forward like Barnes and Huerter would have some appeal to the Hawks, as they could get them another $7.5-10 million in cap relief next season. But those guys probably don’t add much for the Hawks on the court. A three-way deal could make more sense, as Huerter or Barnes could be more useful to a playoff contender. The Hawks have a big trade exception of over $23 million from the John Collins trade with Utah that could be used to facilitate such a three way deal so they don’t have to take back $45 million or more in long term salary, as they would have to do if they accepted Barnes or Huerter.

The real prize for the Hawks in a Dejounte Murray deal with the Kings would be draft picks and salary cap relief. The Hawks already have Sacramento’s 2024 first round pick (top 14 protected), but they are still pretty short on draft equity from 2025 to 2027. They might jump at the chance to get another future first rounder from the Kings, plus whatever could come from a third team for Huerter or Barnes. The Hawks aren’t going to recover the three first rounders and a pick swap they gave to get Murray, but if they can get back 70% of that, it might be worth cutting bait.

The cap relief benefit for the Hawks is also real. They’re almost $24 million over the cap this year, and the problem gets worse in the next two years. If the Hawks do nothing, Dejounte Murray’s extension will kick in next season, and they also have to decide what to do with restricted free agents Jalen Johnson (2025) and Saddiq Bey (2024). The Hawks could deal Bey at the deadline, but extending Johnson is a must. The Hawks are also probably stuck overpaying a bit for Trae Young ($40-50 million) and De’Andre Hunter ($20-25 million) each year through 2026-27, and they likely want to hold on to quality players on reasonable, tradable contracts like Bogdan Bogdanovic (making $16-19 million on a declining contract through 2026-27) and Onyeka Okongwu (making $14-17 million through 2027-28). The Hawks are in a tough cap situation, so they’re going to have to let someone go below market value. Trading Murray would probably get them the cap relief they need and allow them to get back reasonable valuable in terms of future assets.

Verdict: Only if the price is right. Ultimately, I think a Kings trade for Dejounte Murray would be super interesting, but it’s high risk. If Murray can’t play with Fox effectively, as he’s struggled to do with Trae Young in Atlanta, the Kings could be looking at moving him on from him relatively quickly. That said, the Hawks are in a precarious cap situation without an obvious way out, so it’s possible that the Kings could nab a clear talent on a reasonable contract without giving up a ton of on-court talent. I’d be comfortable letting Huerter head back to Atlanta, giving up a future first rounder, and adding perhaps some additional draft capital (second rounders or a first swap, perhaps) to get a deal done, but not much more than that.

De’Andre Hunter / Saddiq Bey / Bogdan Bogdonavic

I mentioned De’Andre Hunter, Saddiq Bey, and Bogdan Bogdanovic in the Dejounte Murray section. These guys are all different players and in totally different contract situations, but they could also make for appealing trade targets. I’ll go quickly here.

De’Andre Hunter is the most interesting, but he’s also totally confounding. Hunter is a 6’8” wing that sports incredible length and athleticism. He can also shoot well from distance and he’s young, only 26 years old. He was drafted as a prototypical 3-and-D player who could cover four positions, and he looks like he should be exactly that. Hell, the Hawks gave him a 4 year, $95 million extension because they thought that’s what he is.

But the on-court production has been consistently underwhelming, and it’s hard to figure out exactly why. Hunter is scoring 15 points per game on a slash line of 46% from the field, 40.4% from three, and 90.7% from the line, but it still feels disappointing. Despite the solid offensive numbers, his impact on games is hard to see unless you squint. You don’t see him making plays that pop as a scorer or a passer, and he offers way less than he should as a rebounder given his physical profile. Hunter also hasn’t lived up to his prospects as a defender, and you rarely see him pop on that end of the court either. Advanced metrics show him to be a bit of a paper tiger defensively too—his Defensive Estimated Plus-Minus of -1.1 is in the 26th percentile of all players.

Hunter’s profile and shooting ability makes him an intriguing target, but his marginal impact on games in four of his five seasons in the league makes it hard buy into the next four years and $95 million of his contract. Given that, it’s hard to see the Kings swinging a deal for him unless they believe he’s got a leap in him. Trading for Hunter would require sending out Barnes or Huerter plus another player, and he just hasn’t produced enough to warrant that and taking on more salary at the same time. I would love for the Kings to add a player with his physical profile on defense to add length on the perimeter, but it’s hard to justify at $20-25 million a year.

Saddiq Bey is another player whose early prospects looked more promising than his actual NBA performance. Bey is only 24 years old and is a bit of a SF/PF tweener, but he can get points and rebound reasonably well at a low usage rate, though he’s not particularly efficient. He’s sort of like a less consistent Harrison Barnes, but he brings better rebounding and worse shooting. He might be useful to shore up the Kings rotation, but he’s not going to meaningfully improve the roster in the near term. He is also on the last year of his contract, so he will be a free agent next year even if the Kings trade for him—but his $4.6 million salary is easy to match this year and the Kings may be able to get him cheaply.

Kings fans know and love Bogdanovic. He’s pretty good at a lot of things (scoring, passing, defense), and he’s on a totally reasonable contract that pays him between $16-19 million through the 2026-27 season, the last year being a team option to boot. That said, Bogdanovic doesn’t truly excel at any one thing and probably wouldn’t be a big upgrade for the Kings (plus, the the Kings already picked Huerter over Bogdanovic in a way, and it’s not like it hasn’t worked out). He doesn’t shoot better than Monk or Huerter, he isn’t a stellar ball handler or offensive organizer, and he has similar defensive limitations that the Kings have lived through before. I love the guy, but he doesn’t make sense as an addition this season, though it’s possible he’ll be traded off the Hawks.

Verdict: Only if the price is right. Of the three, Hunter and Bey are probably the most interesting, but I wouldn’t give up a future first to take either of them. Hunter for Huerter and a second rounder or Bey for a second rounder plus Kessler Edwards or Chris Duarte would be reasonable, but there’s no reason to break the bank to get these guys.

Jazz Trade Targets

The Jazz don’t need to make a trade this year, but they’ve shown a willingness to deal players (even very good ones) in order to build up a long term championship roster. They’re playing well right now, which could mean they’re less likely to make a move—although a surprisingly strong showing last season didn’t stop them from dealing Mike Conley to the Timberwolves. The Jazz currently sit 10th in the West and are playing well, but they’ve bounced in and out of the play in so far.

Lauri Markkanen

A Kings trade for Lauri Markkanen is a huge long-shot given his talent and the likely cost to get him, but man, would it be fun to watch! It’s the kind of big swing trade that can really raise the team’s ceiling, without having to bet on a player that may be past his prime.

Just 26 years old, Markannen is the type of offensive force that can fit onto basically any team. At seven feet tall, Markkanen is an elite scorer (24.0 points per game) that can space the floor with ease (he’s shooting over 39% from three the last two seasons on heavy volume), and he rarely turns the ball over (1.7 turnovers per game this year). Markkanen scores effectively off of catch and shoots, in transition, off offensive rebounds, and as a cutter, and he’s also able to get downhill to pressure the basket despite not being an particularly good ballhandler. He doesn’t need the ball much to be effective, as he’s getting 12+ shots up per game on touches of under two seconds and hitting over 50% of them.

Even though Markkanen was drafted as a floor-spacing big, during the last two seasons in Utah, he’s also developing into a very good interior scorer. Prior to joining the Jazz, Markkanen scored about 5-6 points in the paint per game, but last season he upped that to 10.2 paint points per game according to NBA.com (he’s holding pretty steady this year at 8.7 paint points per game and keeping his overall scoring numbers up).

Adding Markkanen to the Kings would be an enormous boon offensively, where his scoring prowess would essentially eliminate concerns about the King’s offense struggling when De’Aaron Fox sits. Markkanen’s strong shooting, quick trigger, and ability to score off cuts would make him a fantastic fit with Sabonis, and he’s big enough to play as a pick and roll partner with Fox or Monk when Sabonis sits (even though he hasn’t done that much in Utah). You can even imagine some funky big-big plays where Markkanen plays off of Sabonis dribble hand-offs or runs inverted pick and rolls with him, which would be wild to watch and totally throw off lots of NBA defenses.

Defensively, Markkanen isn’t a ceiling raiser, though he would still probably help the Kings a bit. He has much more size than current forwards Harrison Barnes and Trey Lyles, which would let the Kings add desperately needed length at the rim and rebounding. A starting front line made up of Sabonis, Markkanen, and Keegan Murray would bring a ton of size and rebounding that could be tough for some undersized Western Conference teams like the Clippers and Thunder to deal with.

Obviously everyone knows Markkanen is good, he was an All-Star last year, so the toughest part about getting a deal done for him would be the cost to acquire him. While his age, offensive game, and adaptability would fit perfectly on the Kings, those same factors also make him an attractive player for Utah to build around and for other teams to target, so Utah can wait for a Godfather offer or choose not to move him at all. The Jazz have also historically demanded enormous hauls to trade away players of Markkanen’s caliber: the Donovan Mitchell trade netted the Jazz three young players (Markkanen, Collin Sexton, Ochai Agbaji), three future first rounders, and two first round pick swaps, while the Rudy Gobert trade similarly resulted in the Jazz getting young players (Walker Kessler, Jared Vanderbilt, and Leandro Bolmaro), two veterans (Malik Beasley and Patrick Beverley), three first round picks, and two first round pick swaps.

To get Markkanen, the Kings would have to put together a huge offer. That means they would probably have to give up all of the first round picks they can feasibly make available. To do so, the Kings would have to free up restrictions on the 2024 first round pick owed to the Hawks so that the Kings could trade three first round picks (2026, 2028, and 2030), and they would also potentially have to give the Jazz pick swap rights for some of the years the Kings retain their first rounders (2025, 2027, and 2029).

In addition, to match Markkanen’s $17.3 million salary, the Kings would need to send out at least $9.8 million in salary, which would probably mean trading away either (A) Harrison Barnes, (B) Kevin Huerter, (C) Davion Mitchell and another player, or (D) perhaps most realistically, whatever Utah asks for (within reason). Still, because Markkanen’s salary is relatively low compared to players like Zach Lavine, salary matching alone wouldn’t force the Kings to raid their depth as much.

If the Kings were to deal for Markkanen, they’d be locking in a young, elite offensive core (Markkanen is 26, Fox is 26, Sabonis is 27, and Murray is 23). But the Kings would also probably be limited to this core, and would potentially face steep cap restrictions and luxury tax bills down the line.

Markkanen is on the books for 2024-25 at $18.0 million, but signing him to an extension could easily cost upwards of $40 million per season. The 2024-25 season would be fine: Fox, Markannen, Sabonis, and Murray would combine to have a salary of just under $103.5 million (the salary cap should be around $142 million), but things could get really tight after that—much like with a potential trade for Zach Lavine (discussed above).

If Markkanen were to be extended with a first year starting salary of $45 million, a four player core of Fox/Sabonis/Murray/Markkanen would make about $138.1 million in 2025-26, $176.8 million in 2026-27, and $186.4 million in 2027-28—again, assuming Fox is extended to a max deal (not a supermax) and Murray is extended starting at $30 million. Those figures would be about $9 million higher if Fox signed a supermax, and it’s possible Murray could sign for more than $30 million too.

In other words, with just four players, in 2025-26 the Kings would have only about $18 million in cap room to fill out their roster, although they’d be about $51 million under the luxury tax line. In 2026-27, those four players would put them about $5 million over the cap, with just under $32 million of room below the luxury tax line. In 2027-28, the team would be about $2 million below the cap, with about $43.3 million in luxury tax room. [You can see the projected cap and tax levels in Part 3.]

Those kind of salary cap/luxury tax issues would probably be worthwhile if things panned out with Markkanen and Murray, so it’s hard to fuss too much. Unlike with the Lavine trade, the Kings would also get a chance to see how a core of Fox/Sabonis/Markkanen/Murray functions before they have to commit to any extensions for Fox, Markkanen, and Murray. Putting aside Markkanen’s better fit with the Kings roster, that’s a massive distinction between a trade for Markkanen and Lavine, as the Kings have time to figure out potential cap issues along the way, and they could always unwind a Markkanen deal if it didn’t work out.

Verdict: Only if the price is right, but man it would be fun! I think this one is far-fetched given what the Jazz are likely to ask for in return, but I’d be excited about it if it did happen—this kind of deal could make the Kings the best offensive team in the league. The defense might struggle but hey, how many teams can put up 150? If the Jazz demanded three future firsts and swaps, as they probably will, this doesn’t make sense—but if the price comes down? I’d go for it.

John Collins

It’s much more plausible that the Jazz trade forward John Collins. Collins, now 26 years old, is a 6’9” power forward who the Hawks traded to the Jazz last year in exchange for Rudy Gay and a future second round pick after things didn’t work out in Atlanta. The Hawks wanted to get out of Collins’ contract, which pays him a little over $26 million a year through 2025-26 assuming he exercises his player option in the last year of the deal.

Collins is a bit polarizing as a player and in recent years he hasn’t quite played to his ceiling. He is talented, athletic, and has the ability to score at the rim, get to the line, hit threes, rebound, and contest shots. Although Collins doesn’t really create a ton of offense for himself and he’s not a great distributor, he excels at finishing at the basket (he’s a career 75%+ shooter from within 3 feet according to Basketball Reference) and has been a solid floor spacer most years, even if he’s not an elite shooter like Markkanen. He’s a career 35.6% three point shooter on relatively low volume (about 3 to 3.5 threes per game)—he’s managed to pull his shooting back up to his career average after dropping to under 30% last season, which may have been attributable to an ugly finger injury.

Collins has some attributes that would be helpful aside from his scoring. He’s pretty good on the glass, sporting a career rebounding rate is 14.9%, though that has waned a bit in recent years as he’s become less active on the offensive glass in particular. And even though he’s not a true rim protector, Collins does provide some shot blocking, averaging more than 1.0 blocks per game each year of his career but one. Early in his career, Collins also graded out as a reasonable defensive player. According to Dunks and Threes, Collins posted defensive EPMs between -0.4 and 1.3 for his first five years in the league. But this year, he’s dropped off dramatically, to the point where it’s a significant concern. His defensive EPM per Dunks and Threes has dropped to -2.1 and his defensive rating has dropped all the way to 121.3 per NBA.com.

Overall, Collins could bring scoring, rebounding, and athleticism to the Kings’ front court, though the team would take a step back in terms of shooting and passing. At this year’s defensive performance levels, Collins would be a step backward, but I do think there’s a good chance he can recover his form since this year’s defensive numbers are an outlier for him.

Given the Jazz got Collins for peanuts just last year (basically a second round pick), it’s doubtful that the Kings would have to pay a ton of draft capital to obtain him—perhaps as little as a protected first or a couple second rounders. To match Collins’ $25.3 million salary this year, though, the Kings would also have to be willing to deal players. Likely, the Kings would send out Harrison Barnes ($17 million) and another player with some untapped potential like Davion Mitchell ($6.4 million) or another back-end player like Chris Duarte ($4.1 million). Such a trade would net the Jazz some pick equity, a flier on Mitchell, and some cap flexibility in 2025-26. The Kings would lose some cap flexibility and lineup versatility at guard in particular, but they’d still have the ability to go after other trade targets, too. Alternatively, the Kings could try to send out Huerter ($15.7 million) instead of Barnes.

I think trading for Collins would be a smart shot to take, although it’s not a “must” by any means. He’s not an obvious part of Utah’s future plans because he overlaps positionally with Markkanen, Utah’s best player, and they have Walker Kessler at center. As a result, the price to get Collins could be pretty reasonable if Utah doesn’t see him as part of its future. His game should work well with Fox and Sabonis, and he would provide the Kings with better size, athleticism, and rebounding, and could provide some defensive help inside as well. But the Kings need to believe he will continue to rebound well and recover some of his defensive form, otherwise a deal doesn’t make sense. You can’t pay $25-26 million for the next three years for Collins if he’s going to play bottom-of-the-league level defense.

Giving up Barnes or Huerter would hurt a bit, but Mitchell and Duarte barely play, and sacrificing a protected first or some second round picks to raise the team’s ceiling seems worthwhile. At the same time, the Kings would only be adding about $2 million in salary in 2024-25 and $7.6 million in 2025-26, but those seasons will be before extensions for Fox and Murray would kick in anyway. Plus, even though Collins would be overpaid, he’ll still be in his prime and his contract isn’t so big that there would be no market for him if the Kings need to get out of the deal down the road.

The Kings could make a trade for Collins even more desirable by trying to add Kris Dunn to the deal. I’ll discuss Dunn more below.

Verdict: Only if the price is right. Barnes + Duarte + a protected future first rounder (or various seconds) seems like a fine deal, and the Kings could even go up a bit from there if needed. If the Jazz demand Mitchell, I’d want to also try to get Kris Dunn in the deal to keep some defense, even though that could add to the price.

Kris Dunn

Dunn is a 29 year old point guard known for his defensive prowess. Dunn never developed into a strong offensive player and his shooting is pretty suspect, but he offers very good perimeter defense. Although only about 6’3”, Dunn has very good length and he’s physically strong enough to hold up at the point of attack against most guards. For the Kings, this would pair well with Fox and Monk, who can struggle with more powerful guards. Dunn would provide the defensive help that the team hoped to get from Davion Mitchell, but in a bigger package that more readily compliments Fox in particular on defense.

Offensively, Dunn really wouldn’t provide much help. He’s essentially a non-factor from the perimeter, as he takes just over 1.5 threes per game this season and he is a career 32% shooter from three. He’s also doesn’t break down defenses off the dribble or provide significant playmaking, though thankfully he doesn’t hold on to the ball too much either. Still, because the Kings run so much of their offense through Fox, Sabonis, and Monk, the Kings wouldn’t be asking him to create offense—the only real compromise would be to spacing, which the Kings already have to give up when they play Duarte or Mitchell anyway.

Dunn is on the last year of his contract and his salary for this year is just $2.5 million, so he’s not likely to be a long-term answer for the Kings and they shouldn’t give up a ton to get him. But he would help improve the defense and offer alternate line-ups against teams with attacking guards that are too big for Fox (for example, the Timberwolves, Thunder, and Clippers). The Jazz have Keyonte George, Collin Sexton, Jordan Clarkson, and Ochai Agbaji on longer contracts, so they don’t have much reason to hold onto Dunn past the deadline, so the cost to acquire him or add him to a deal for John Collins shouldn’t be high.

Verdict: Do it (assuming the Kings can’t get Caruso or Finney-Smith)! A small deal for Dunn or a combo deal for Collins and Dunn would both help the Kings improve in the near term and set them up well for the next couple of seasons.

Nets Trade Targets

The Nets have fallen into a hole. Since the start of December, they’re 7-18 and have dropped out of the play in, which would counsel in favor of a reset. But they don’t control most of their own first round picks as a result of the James Harden trade two years ago, so they don’t have a strong incentive to strip the roster down to the studs and hope for a better draft pick. They don’t seem desperate to do deadline deals even though they perhaps should be more willing to consider offers.

Mikal Bridges / Cam Johnson

The prime trade target on the Nets is undoubtedly Mikal Bridges, but all indications are that he isn’t likely to be available based on recent reports. I won’t spend a ton of time on Bridges, but he would be a pretty stellar get for the Kings as he is only 27 years old and offers high-quality perimeter defense and strong shooting at a pretty reasonable contract price—$23.3 million next season and $24.9 million in 2025-26. He’s over-extended as a lead scorer in Brooklyn, as reflected by his dip in efficiency and their inability to win games, but he would be a great fit alongside Fox, Sabonis, and Murray because he would offer better scoring than Huerter, similar shooting capability, and dramatically improved defense. Alas, the Nets probably won’t trade him, and the Kings would probably have to move a Markkanen level package to get him anyway. But we can always dream!

Cam Johnson would also be a great trade target for the Kings, although less appealing than Bridges. Johnson is also 27 years old and on a reasonable 4 year, $94.5 million contract. He’s a little bigger than Bridges, and though he is a solid defender, he’s not as versatile defending the perimeter. But Johnson can absolutely stroke it from three point range, where he’s a career 39.3% shooter, so he can find minutes on any roster. Johnson would be able to replace Barnes in the starting line up and offer a bit better defense at the power forward position. Given Brooklyn just signed Johnson to an extension and has given no indication they want to move him, he’s also a pretty far-fetched trade target and not worth spending a lot of time on. But if the Kings could get him for a deal centered around a future first round pick, a trade would be worth considering.

Verdict: Only if the price is right (and it probably won’t be).

Dorian Finney-Smith

Even though the Nets probably won’t deal Bridges or Johnson, there’s been smoke about teams inquiring about the availability of Dorian Finney-Smith (including the Kings).

Finney-Smith is a relatively unheralded player, but he’s a popular trade target for teams ahead of the deadline this year. At 6’8” and 220 pounds, Finney-Smith plays high-quality defense, is versatile enough to guard wings and power forwards effectively, and knocks down threes at a solid clip (37.8% this year and 35.9% for his career). Each of the past six seasons, Finney-Smith has posted Defensive Estimated Plus-Minus scores of at least 0.6 per Dunks and Threes, which confirms what you see on film: Finney-Smith is good at defense.

Because he plays solid defense and hit threes, Finney-Smith is the type of player who can find a role on any team. Adding Finney-Smith would give the Kings two plus perimeter defenders (with Keegan Murray), and provide a lot of versatility and pick-and-roll switchability on defense, which is extremely valuable in the postseason. Finney-Smith won’t provide much in terms of offense, but he’s a good enough shooter that he wouldn’t compromise the Kings’ floor spacing the way that a player like Kris Dunn would.

The contract situation for Finney-Smith is also pretty reasonable. He’s got three years left in his deal (the last of which is a player option) at $13.9 million this year, $14.9 million next year, and $15.4 million in 2025-26—not exactly a bargain basement prices, but definitely favorable. The Kings could do a deal for Finney-Smith by sending out draft compensation and one of Harrison Barnes ($17 million), Kevin Huerter ($15.7 million), or Trey Lyles ($8 million). Sending out just Lyles and a draft pick would let the Kings improve on the floor defensively and only sacrifice some size in backup line-ups; the Nets, meanwhile, would save money and get pick compensation.

Verdict: Do it (if no Caruso deal), and be willing to overpay a little! A Finney-Smith trade is pretty appealing given his reasonable contract and defensive capabilities. He would give the Kings a second plus defender with versatility, which would allow them to improve their perimeter defense and expand the ways they can play in the playoffs, all at a reasonable cost. If the Kings can get Finney-Smith for Lyles and some second round picks, I’d be ecstatic. I’d be willing to send out a first round pick too, but would want to add some protections. Getting much beyond that starts to get too pricey though, given Finney-Smith isn’t an All-Defense level player like Caruso and his offense is pretty limited.

Royce O’Neal / Lonnie Walker IV / Spencer Dinwiddie / Nic Claxton

The Nets also have a few other players who might be helpful to the Kings ahead of the trade deadline. None of them are likely to dramatically change the Kings’ playoff prospects on their own, but they could be part of a trade package that brings some defense and bench depth to the Kings. These are solid players who have roles on a functional NBA roster, but they’re only worth pursuing if they can be obtained at a reasonable price.

There have been a handful of rumors about the Kings being interested in Royce O’Neal, alongside Finney-Smith. O’Neal is solid defender, but at just 6’6”, he’s on the smaller side for a forward. On top of that, he is already 30 years old, a pending free agent, and offensively doesn’t offer much but hitting open threes (he’s a career 38% three point shooter). On his own, O’Neal probably doesn’t warrant a trade for much. That said, O’Neal has a $9.5 million salary for a contract that expires this off-season, so the Kings might be able to snag him for little more than a salary match and a second rounder, or add him to a potential trade for another Nets player. He would offer the Kings some defensive versatility, but I don’t think he’s good enough to get too excited about on his own.

In a lot of ways, Lonnie Walker IV is presents a similar trade scenario to Royce O’Neal. He’s also on an expiring deal, though at a salary of only $2 million. Walker IV is a better shooter and scorer than O’Neal, but he’s more of a traditional guard and offers pretty average defense overall. He’s not a player the Kings should target as a stand-alone, but if they do a deal with the Nets, he could be an interesting piece to pull into the deal to help bolster the Kings bench without incurring a big expense.

Spencer Dinwiddie is the best offensive player of this bunch, but he’s having a bit of an odd season overall. On the one hand, he’s a 30 year old guard who has never established a clear identity as a point guard or shooting guard. His shooting has also been awful (just 39.7% from the field and 33.2% from three this season). On the other hand, the Nets are about 3 points better with Dinwiddie on the court this season (per PBP Stats) and advanced metrics suggest he’s an above average player on both offense and defense. At the end of the day, Dinwiddie offers some reasonable scoring ability and shot creation (even if it’s inefficient at times) and decent perimeter defense. He’s also on an expiring contract and the Nets probably aren’t in a rush to bring him back given his age and positional ambiguity, so he can probably be had for cheap. The Kings would have to send out at least $13.8 million in salary to get Dinwiddie, and because they don’t have have that much in expiring salary (other than Malik Monk) that the Nets might want, they would probably ending up sending Brooklyn draft picks to get a deal done. Sending picks out for Dinwiddie is a little hard to swallow given the Kings needs, so presumably a deal for him won’t happen unless it’s part of a bigger trade. He would bring the ability to stabilize the Kings offense when Fox sits, though, so it’s OK to keep him on the radar.

Nic Claxton would be an interesting add for the Kings, although it’s pretty unlikely the Nets would actually part ways with him and he would be a short-term rental given he is in the last year of his cotract. Claxton is a 24 year old, 6’11” center, and he brings strong rim protection and shot blocking, effective rebounding, and a solid offensive game predicated on transition offense and rim-running. Claxton’s athleticism would make him a viable part of the Kings’ transition offense, but he’s a non-shooter, so it’s hard to envision how he would play with Sabonis right now. That, combined with the pending expiration of Claxton’s contract, makes him an imperfect fit for the Kings this year. The Nets also haven’t given any reason to think they want to deal Claxton, so he’s probably staying put anyway.

Verdict: Small deals for O’Neal or Walker IV would be good, but pass on Dinwiddie and Claxton unless it’s a bargain.

Blazers Trade Targets

Whether they acknowledge it or not, the Blazers went into rebuilding mode when they traded Damian Lillard this past offseason. Their record reflects that, as their 13-33 record is fifth worst in the NBA. They’ve retained some veteran players anyway in the hopes for a quick turnaround, but given the age of their future core and performance on the court so far, that’s probably wishful thinking. This team is probably 2-3 years away from competing meaningfully, but you wouldn’t know that looking at how they’ve allocated their resources. They should be looking to make deals to get future assets and young players, and to get off of some of their higher-priced vets.

Jerami Grant

Jerami Grant is a perplexing player to me. He’s an athletic forward with great size and length (standing 6’7” with a huge 7’3” wingspan), he can score, he moves well defensively, and he fills up the stat sheet. He’s averaging 21.1 points, 3.6 rebounds, 2.6 assists, 0.7 steals, and 0.8 blocks per game with good shooting numbers: 45.9% from the field, 41.0% from three, and 79.8 from the line. He can score at all three levels and has the length, athleticism, and quickness to guard a range of positions defensively.

But his impact on the game too often feels too marginal. He’s not quite a looter in a riot, but Grant’s lofty numbers have come during four straight seasons on completely uncompetitive teams. Advanced metrics don’t paint a particularly rosy picture for Grant either. Now in his tenth season, Grant’s career Box Plus/Minus (per Basketball Reference) is just -0.4, and he’s never posted a BPM over 1.2; Dunks and Threes Estimated Plus-Minus tells a similar story, as Grant routinely grades out as an above average player, but nowhere near a star.

But Grant is certainly paid a lot like a star, in fact he just signed a 5 year, $160 million contract this off-season—borderline All-Star money. He’s never really lived up to that billing.

Still, Grant has some skills that would definitely help the Kings roster, and he wouldn’t have to be the best player on the team (he’s been miscast as a lead scorer in Detroit and Portland, although in fairness that is because he chose that purposefully).

Offensively, Grant is a versatile scorer who can knock down threes (36.3% from three for his career) and get to the rim, and he does a good job of getting to the free throw line (5.3 free throws per game). Although Grant can be a little sticky with the ball, he’s a substantially better scorer than Barnes, and he can get to his shots in a variety of different ways. Playing with Sabonis and Fox, it’s also likely that Grant’s efficiency would improve—he’s a little stifled on a Portland team that lacks consistent offensive threats and outside shooting.

Defensively, Grant would add a ton of length to the Kings’ front court. His 7’3” wingspan is enormous and he’s athletic enough to make a good impact defensively. These are things the Kings would benefit from in particular, as Keegan Murray is the only guy they have on defense with size, length, and the ability to defend out on the perimeter.

Unfortunately, Grant’s defensive performance can disappear at times and he’s not going to be a defensive tone-setter. It’s hard to blame him too much, as he’s played the past for years in Detroit and Portland, where defense is more of an option that an objective. Still, Grant has the tools to be an effective defender and he flashes it at times. The Kings would need Grant to lock in consistently on defense and bring intensity there on every possession, which he hasn’t done regularly since his early years in Oklahoma City. They would also need him to improve his rebounding, which has been a weakness in recent years despite Grant’s impressive physical ability.

Grant’s new contract has a few important effects on any potential trade. First, it means that Portland just recently decided they wanted to keep him for the long term, so getting a deal done might be challenging. Second, it makes salary matching difficult. Grant is getting paid just under $27.6 million this year, which means the Kings would need to send back about $20.1 million in salary to effectuate a trade. Doing so would require the Kings to give up either Barnes ($17 million) or Huerter ($15.7 million), plus another player like Mitchell, Duarte, or Lyles. That’s OK, and giving up Huerter or Barnes would mitigate the impact of taking back Grant’s substantial contract, but the team needs to keep in mind that Grant is already 29 years old—his current deal is going to take him into age 34 (assuming he exercises his player option in the last year of the deal, which he probably will).

Grant’s contract was probably a bit of an overpay the moment he signed it due to his age and come-and-go defense. But Portland probably won’t see it that way; the Blazers aren’t looking to get off Grant’s salary, so they will demand draft picks on top of whatever players come back in a trade. That makes doing a deal tricky, since Grant doesn’t live up to his defensive capabilities consistently enough to warrant giving up a lot of future draft capital.

Verdict: Only if the price is right (it probably won’t be).

Malcom Brogdon

Malcolm Brogdon plays ugly basketball, and I love it. He’s kind of slow, a little bit ground-bound, and plays a herky-jerky style that doesn’t look super great on film, but he can hoop!

Brogdon is a 31 year old point guard that plays an efficient, if not particularly appealing brand of basketball. At about 6’5” and 220 pounds, he uses his size effectively to bully his way to his spots offensively, even if it’s not particularly fast. He can drive reasonably well and is a knock-down shooter from distance, hitting 42.2% of his threes this season and 39.1% for his career. Brogdon also can run a reasonable NBA offense in most situations. He’s a good distributor who averages 5.3 assists per game and just 1.5 turnovers, and he has the ability to get to pick and rolls if all else fails offensively, although it’s not something he should do all the time.

Defensively, Brogdon does a good job of using his strength to stay in front of defenders. He lacks foot speed, so he can get beat by the league’s faster guards, but he has enough size and savvy to do a solid job defensively. Per Dunks and Threes, Brodgon’s been a slightly above average defender for his career—and he’s carrying a slightly above average 0.1 Defensive Estimated Plus-Minus this year (that’s in the 61st percentile of defenders).

Brogdon is in the first year of a two-year deal that pays him $45 million. While that salary is reasonable, the situation in Portland isn’t. Brogdon makes virtually no sense on the Blazers given their team’s timeline and the need for Scoot Henderson to develop as a playmaker and lead ball handler. He’s expensive veteran leadership, but he is also taking away minutes from the young players that the Blazers need to develop. The Blazers ought to be looking to deal him.

That presents an opportunity for the Kings. Sacramento could offer Huerter, who is also on a reasonable 4 year, $65 million dollar deal. Huerter is younger than Brogdon at just 25, so he’s more in line with the Blazer’s overall timeline. Plus, Huerter plays a complimentary offensive role that benefit the Blazers by allowing Scoot Henderson and Shaedon Sharpe to play with the ball in their hands. They’d be taking on more salary overall, but that’s a good thing given the Blazers aren’t likely to be competitive this year or next regardless.

For the Kings, Brogdon would provide better ball-handling and a reasonable back-up point guard option to Fox. There are too many times that the Kings offense gets sloppy with Fox out of the game in particular, and Brogdon’s methodical, careful style would be a good way to calm those situations down and take pressure off of Malik Monk and Sabonis to run all of the offense when Fox sits. And because Brogdon is a good shooter, swapping him for Huerter wouldn’t hurt the Kings much from a floor-spacing perspective.

Defensively, adding Brogdon would give the Kings another option to deal with bigger guards that can be tough for Fox, Monk, or Davion Mitchell to handle (a theme of this post). No one is going to confuse Brogdon for a defensive stopper at this point in his career, but he’d still offer some improvement in on-ball defense over Huerter, who gets beat on far too many straight line drives. It’s not a cure, but it would be an improvement.

Verdict: Worth it at a bargain price. If the Kings can get Brogdon for Huerter, perhaps adding a second round pick, it would improve their prospects this year. There’s a legitimate question of whether the improvement would be big enough for the Kings to make a run in the playoffs, but it would shore up their ability to get to the postseason and give them more lineup options. Other deals that don’t require giving up Huerter to bolster the team’s defense may be better long-term though, so this wouldn’t be my first choice.

Matisse Thybulle

Thybulle is definitely a defensive stopper. Although he’s only 6’5”, he has great length, strength, and athleticism, and he plays a hyper-intelligent game on defense. He gets his hands in passing lanes, always seems to play his help responsibilities correctly, and can effectively guard almost any 1 through 3 in the NBA without resorting to fouling. Four of out five seasons in the NBA, Thybulle has graded out as a 95th percentile or better defender according to Dunks and Threes, which is absolutely consistent with what you see watching him play (this year is a bit of an anomaly, as Thybulle’s defense rates in the 77th percentile).

The problem is on offense, where Thybulle offers almost nothing. As good as he’s been defensively, Thybulle’s offense has consistently ranked in the bottom quartile of players per Dunks and Threes. He doesn’t attack the basket, he doesn’t drive, he doesn’t cut, and he’s not a particularly adept passer, so it’s not like he keeps the offense moving all the time. He only really shoots when he’s wide open, but at least he’s managed to up his three point percentage in the last couple of years to 37.3% this year and 38.8% last year (he shoots 34.3% for his career). That’s made him more playable on offense, as he can at least provide some spacing, but it’s not like he’s turned himself into a threat as a floor spacer.

At age 26, Thybulle is still in his prime. There’s a chance he continues to develop his jumper, but at the moment he doesn’t fit well with Portland, which has a bevy of young guards and small forwards that need to get time on the floor. I’ve already mentioned Scoot Henderson and Shaedon Sharpe, but Portland also drafted 19 year old Rayan Rupert hoping he’d be a defensive stopper in the future, and Kris Murray should get time given the success his brother Keegan has had too. They should be willing to part with Thybulle for a reasonable cost.

Thybulle is on a 3 year, just under $33.1 million deal that runs through 2025-26 if he exercises his player option in the last year. That’s a pretty fair contract that the Kings could carry with their core. Thybulle won’t provide anything on the offensive end that the team doesn’t already have, but he could fill the role of “break glass when needed” defensive stopper much more effectively than Chris Duarte and Kessler Edwards do, without much difference on the offensive end. Thybulle probably wouldn’t see huge minutes on the Kings, but for the handful of stretches per game when the Kings absolutely need stops, he would be a great option to have available.

Thybulle’s $10.5 million salary this year means the Kings could send out a small salary like Davion Mitchell’s or Chris Duarte’s, plus Kessler Edwards and a future second rounder (or slightly more) to get him. That would be absolutely worth it in my mind.

Verdict: Do it (if there’s no deal for Caruso or Finney-Smith). The Kings should make a run at Thybulle, especially if they can’t get Alex Caruso from the Bulls or Dorian Finney-Smith from the Nets. The Kings could trade any two of Davion Mitchell, Chris Duarte, and Kessler Edwards, plus a future second, and probably get this done. That would improve their roster options for this year without sacrificing players that are going to be around long term (I would miss absolutely Davion and try to avoid dealing him, for the record). They could also try to target both Brogdon and Thybulle, but getting salaries to match would be a bit tricky there—the Kings would need to send out Huerter or Barnes plus a couple other players just to make it work, which is probably too much.

Wizards Trade Targets

The Wizards are struggggggling. They’re not fun to watch, they don’t really compete, and they have only one player on the team that I would be excited about having on the team long-term, rookie Bilal Coulibaly (Deni Avdija also has some talent and will probably also be part of the long-term squad). They have a couple veterans on the roster that could contribute to other teams and the Wizards should be looking to deal them for whatever they can.

Kyle Kuzma

Kyle Kuzma has been linked to the Kings for quite a while at this point; there were rumors the team wanted to sign him in free agency, and several years ago, the Kings almost sent Buddy Hield to the Lakers for Kuzma.

I’ve never been a huge Kuzma fan (he feels too much like empty calories, but that might be my anti-Laker bias), but he offers some definite upgrades for the Kings. Kuzma is a 28 year old, 6’9” stretch power forward who is averaging 22 points, 6.5 rebounds, and 4.4 assists per game, which are good numbers. Kuzma flashes a ton of talent on offense, as he can create his own shots, attack the paint against slower forwards, spread the floor, and move the ball, and his numbers reflect that. But at the same time, imagining Kuzma as a key part of a good team offensively requires some projection. Kuzma’s shooting numbers are just OK (45.7% from the floor, 33.3% from three, and 78.9% from the line) and he can get a little loose with the ball on offense. He also takes his fair share of ill-advised shots and he can be prone to watching the action when he’s off the ball. Those are fixable issues, but they’ve shown up often in Kuzma’s seven year career.

On the defensive end, Kuzma is athletic and stout enough to guard fours and some fives, but other than a surprise showing last year, he’s typically been about average defensively. Dunks and Threes rates his Defensive Estimated Plus-Minus at just -1.7 this year, but that’s down from a career high 1.4 last year, and even down from previous years where he graded out around the middle of the league. Advanced metrics aside, Kuzma’s effort is rarely consistent defensively, and no one is going to confuse him for a stalwart on that end of the floor.

Yet for the Kings, Kuzma offers a clear ceiling-raising opportunity. He’s got enough offensive talent that he can provide meaningful firepower and play with either Fox or Sabonis on the floor. If the Kings were to unlock his willingness to move without the ball and cut to the basket, and get him to be more selective in the shots he takes, there’s a good chance his shooting numbers could improve significantly. He also brings more size and rebounding than the Kings’ current options at power forward (Barnes and Lyles), while shooting well enough to keep the floor spaced. If Kuzma can regain last year’s defensive form, he’d provide a significant improvement over Barnes and Lyles, too.

Kuzma’s talent and favorable contract means that the Kings will have to give up a hefty sum to get him. Kuzma’s getting paid $25.6 million this year during the first year of a four year, $90 million deal that declines year over year. That makes Kuzma’s contract quite valuable; by the last year of Kuzma’s contract, he will be 31 years old and be getting paid just $19.4 million, a very reasonable sum.

Just to make a deal for Kuzma work, the Kings would need to send the Wizards at least $18.1 million in salary. Practically speaking, this would mean trading away either Barnes or Huerter and a back-end rotation player like Davion Mitchell, Chris Duarte, or Sasha Vezenkov (there’s a world in which the Kings could trade Monk too, but that seems unlikely and probably not worth it for anyone involved). The Kings would also probably have to send at least one first round pick to the Wizards given that Huerter or Barnes won’t actually save them salary or give them a long-term piece they covet.

Verdict: Reluctant yes, if the price is right. I would personally be a little sad if the Kings traded Barnes, Davion Mitchell, and a future first for Kuzma—I like rooting for Dave, and Barnes brings a calm veteran presence that Kuzma won’t replicate. But I can’t dispute that adding Kuzma would improve the team’s potential and raise the heights they could get to in the playoffs. And Kuzma’s favorable contract structure also brings solid value going forward. That said, Washington isn’t going to be forced into a deal here given they just re-signed Kuzma, so they may try to demand a lot of draft capital in a deal. I would be super wary of that. Giving up multiple first rounders for Kuzma seems like an overpay that the Kings should avoid.

Tyus Jones

Tyus Jones is the type of veteran point guard that announcers love and teams often covet. There will definitely be interest in Jones from numerous playoff contenders as we head toward the trade deadline. But he’s also a pending free agent in the second year of a two year, $29 million deal, which caps how much the Wizards could get back for him in a trade.

Jones is undersized at around 6’1”, and he’s not a premier athlete. But he plays a very controlled and efficient offensive game centered on making the right decision all of the time, without fail, that can fit in well on almost any roster. He’s a good passer and ball handler, he rarely turns the ball over, and he has turned himself into a strong shooter (he’s over 50% from the floor and hitting a career high 41.4% of his threes). Jones isn’t going to burn people off of the dribble or attack the rim, but he does make the right reads and can run an efficient offense.

Defensively, Jones’ lack of size and athleticism really limits his potential. He doesn’t make a lot of mistakes on defense, but he doesn’t have the physical tools to really bother talented guards. He can be shot over and beaten off the dribble, and he’s not quite strong enough to hold up against big guards/forwards. The net result is Jones provides average to slightly below average defense, consistent with his career Defensive Estimated Plus-Minus, which has been between -1.8 and 0.7 for his career.

Jones would offer the Kings a reliable backup point guard to handle the minutes that Fox sits. Adding him would keep shooting on the floor and let Malik Monk give up some on-ball responsibility, which can be important during the occasional stretches where Monk starts to get wild with the ball. Jones could also work with Sabonis to get to an effective pick and roll offense when nothing else is working—Jones runs about 4.6 pick and rolls a game and generates 1.06 points per possession as the ball handler per NBA.com.

Jones is paid $14 million this season, so to get him the Kings would probably need to send out either Huerter, Monk, or Davion Mitchell + another player. Given Jones’ pending free agency, the return doesn’t seem worth sending Monk or Huerter out the door, so a deal involving Mitchell + Chris Duarte/Kessler Edwards/Javale McGee/Alex Len seems far more appealing for the Kings. But that would cost the Kings quite a bit on the defensive end and would limit the types of line-ups they could roll out in the playoffs. Plus, other than maybe Mitchell, it’s hard to see the Wizards really valuing any of those players in return. Thus, given there probably will be a solid market for Jones at the deadline, the Kings would likely have to give up a future pick (probably a second) to get a deal done.

Verdict: Pass on Jones. The Kings would have to give up too much to get Jones, including players that matter to the team’s line-up flexibility this year. Adding Jones would help settle the Kings down offensively when Fox sits, but Jones probably isn’t good enough to make the Kings’ late game line-ups, and it would cost the Kings in terms of defensive flexibility. I like Jones as a player, but this one doesn’t make a ton of sense.

Hornets Trade Targets

The Hornets are one of the NBA’s most forgotten teams. They’re not as bad as the Pistons or Wizards, so nobody really harps on them. They’ve also suffered from a ton of injuries, including to their only star player LaMelo Ball, so they’re not that interesting to watch either. Ball led the Hornets to 43 wins just a couple seasons ago, and young players like Brandon Miller and Mark Williams (if he can stay healthy) look like they can form part of a healthy core going forward. Everybody else should be tradeable, as the Hornets showed last week by dealing Terry Rozier to the Heat for Kyle Lowry (who probably won’t play for them) and a protected first rounder.

Miles Bridges

I’m going to preface this by saying Miles Bridges has been accused of several heinous acts of domestic violence and pleaded no contest to felony domestic violence charges in 2022. He missed the entirety of last season and was given a 30 game suspension by the NBA as a result (he was credited with 20 games for missing last year and missed another 10 games to start this season). He’s also been recently arrested just last October for allegedly violating a protection order, threatening his ex-girlfriend, and throwing pool balls at her car with children in the vehicle. That hasn’t been adjudicated yet, but the allegations are bad.

As a defense lawyer by trade, I’m generally in favor of second chances, but I am not in favor of trading for Bridges based on his off-the-court behavior alone. I’ll reserve judgement on the latest arrest warrant, but it is absolutely something to be concerned about. The repeat nature of the domestic violence allegations and Bridges’ lack of public contrition are dealbreakers for me (even though I understand why he isn’t talking about these issues publicly). I want to state that up front.

I’ll go through the on-court piece quickly. At 25 years old, Bridges has all the tools to be a hugely productive SF/PF in the modern NBA. He’s just 6’7” but he has a powerful, 225+ pound frame; he’s a better athlete than the vast majority of NBA players; he’s an effective three-level scorer; he rebounds at a high level for his position; he keeps the ball moving on offense. Advanced metrics paint him as an above average defender, too. Dunks and Threes gives him a Defensive Estimated Plus-Minus of about 0.0, which is the 64th percentile, and you could imagine that figure improving if he were on a more competitive team and gave more consistent effort.

Bridges is the kind of on-court player that the Kings would really benefit from adding, as his skill set would improve their defense and rebounding without sacrifice much offensively. But it’s impossible to ignore that the only reason Bridges is theoretically available is because of his off-court actions. Players like him don’t normally become available at age 25 otherwise.

Bridges’ off-court issues have also put him into a difficult contract situation that makes trading for him very challenging even if the Kings were willing to give him a second chance. Bridges signed a 1 year, $7.9 million contract this off-season following his no contest plea, missed season, and lengthy suspension. We don’t need to cover all of the rules surrounding one-year deals, but there are a few important points that stem from Bridges signing that deal:

  • Bridges can veto trades;

  • Bridges’ Bird rights won’t travel to any team that trades for him (the details of Bird rights aren’t important here, but I described the concept in part two already); and

  • Because teams trading for Bridges will not have Bird rights, they would only be able to re-sign him using cap space or a cap exception—for example, the largest available cap exception is the non-taxpayer midlevel exception (which I discussed in part three), which was only $12.4 million this season.

These factors combined would make it very hard for the Kings to pull off a deal for Bridges even if they wanted to. The Kings are already over the cap next season, so they’d be limited to re-signing Bridges with a cap exception. The most they could even theoretically offer Bridges is a contract with a starting salary of about $12.4 million (the non-taxpayer MLE should go up slightly next season) and 5% annual raises. It’s hard to know what the market for Bridges will be like as a free agent given his off-court issues, but that is probably the floor of what Bridges will seek in free agency (he was looking at a contract worth upwards of $25 million a year before the domestic violence issues came to light).

In all likelihood, Bridges wouldn’t agree to a trade to a team with no cap space like the Kings. Even if Bridges didn’t veto a deal, the Kings wouldn’t have any way to ensure they could re-sign him next season, which significantly limits how much the Kings could justify giving up in a trade. Add to that the off-the-court issues and PR nightmare that would result from dealing for Bridges, and there’s just no way to make a trade for Bridges make sense.

Verdict: Don’t even think about it.

PJ Washington

Charlotte does have a more desirable trade target on its roster in 25 year old, 6’7” power forward PJ Washington. He’s on the short side for his position, but he’s a good athlete who can play with force on offense and defense, though he needs to bring that force much more consistently.

Washington brings solid versatility on the offensive end. He’s a decent three point shooter (just 34.8% this year, but he shoots 36.3% from three for his career) and knows that he needs to shoot from distance to be at his most valuable, so he focuses on those shots. He’s strong and athletic for his size, so he can hit a high percentage on shots inside 10 feet and threaten on the offensive glass. But he lacks the handle and creativity to really get quality interior shots on his own, and he doesn’t have a back-to-the-basket game to lean on to otherwise generate consistent interior scoring himself.

Defensively, Washington has the strength to hold up against most forwards and be an adequate rebounder for his position. He doesn’t offer a ton of rim protection, but he still posts decent block rates and he does a reasonable job of keeping his hands active and generating steals. Most years, he’s graded out well as a defender, though it is notable that this season his Defensive Estimated Plus-Minus has dropped to below average this year at just -1.2, per Dunks and Threes.

Washington signed a 3 year, $46.5 million contract this off-season that actually declines year over year. That’s a pretty favorable contract that offers a good value opportunity if Washington can return to his defensive form from previous seasons. To acquire Washington, the Kings could send out either Barnes or Huerter, whose salaries come pretty close to matching Washington’s $16.9 million salary for this season. Barnes doesn’t really make sense for Charlotte, but they might benefit from adding a floor spacer like Huerter. There are a few other salary matching alternatives given the Kings would only need to send out about $9.35 million in salary. The Kings could trade some combination of Trey Lyles ($8 million), Sasha Vezenkov ($6.3 million), Javale McGee ($5.7 million), Davion Mitchell ($5.1 million), and Chris Duarte ($4.1 million) and the deal could work.

Charlotte would presumably seek draft compensation back too. The Hornets don’t need to trade Washington and his contract is not massive, so they’re probably going to want meaningful draft compensation—like a first round pick or multiple seconds—regardless of what players come back to them in a deal. How much draft capital they’d be willing to take will depend on how much interest Washington draws ahead of the deadline, whether the salary they get back is expiring (e.g., McGee), and whether they think younger players they get back like Mitchell or Duarte have future value. Given Charlotte probably will end up keeping Bridges next year (they’re the only team that has already taken the PR hit from having him on the roster and the only one that has Bird rights), they will have a good amount of front court depth already, and might be willing to part with Washington in favor of finding guards to supplemental Ball, Miller, and maybe Nick Smith Jr., also a first round pick this year.

Verdict: Only if it’s a bargain—and don’t give up anything unprotected! I think Washington would be a better defensive fit for the Kings than current starter Harrison Barnes. While he suffers from some of the same flaws defensively as Barnes (lack of size/length and little rim protection), he is a better athlete and rebounder. Washington can hold up a little better than Barnes against quicker forwards, he does a better job of handling pick and roll defense, and he offers a little bit more as a rebounder. There would definitely be a step-back in shooting, but Washington is good enough as a shooter and active enough on offense to hopefully mitigate the impact. That said, this isn’t a home run deal, and getting a trade done probably means the Kings would end up with two undersized forwards: Washington and Barnes. Thus, a trade only really makes sense if you can work out the right deal and not overpay in terms of future draft equity. If the Kings could send out Trey Lyles, Chris Duarte, and multiple second rounders, a deal could make sense as a “diet” version of a trade for Kyle Kuzma.

Raptors Trade Targets

The Raptors have gone into sale mode already, as they’ve already moved on from two of their best players in OG Anounoby and Pascal Siakam. They still have a couple players on the roster who are pretty obvious trade candidates, so there’s a good chance they do at least one more deal. They’ve shown at least some preference for on-court fits, but they did take picks back for Siakam. Either way, their best trade candidates have either already been traded or are effectively untouchable (Scottie Barnes and Immanuel Quickley ain’t going anywhere).

Gary Trent Jr.

Gary Trent Jr. is the most obvious next trade candidate for Toronto given he’s a pending free agent.

Trent Jr. is a 6’5” shooting guard whose calling card is his three point shooting. He’s a career 38.7% three point shooter on good volume (the last four seasons, he’s taken between 10.5 and 11.6 threes per 100 possessions), and most teams can find a place for that kind of floor spacer. Trent plays to his strengths and stays within himself. He understands that his job is to create space, play off of more prolific scorers, and not turn the ball over—he plays that role well.

Trent Jr. is also capable of playing effective defense, though he’s slipped a bit this season. He’s never been elite on defense, but when Trent Jr. locks in, he does a good job of chasing shooters, closing out, and staying engaged. In past years, he’s done well generating steals, although that’s dropped off some this year. A relative lack of length and so-so NBA athleticism means that he can get beat at times on dribble-drives, and he’s not tall enough to bother every perimeter shooter. That’s usually fine since only a handful of players can do that consistently.

That said, there’s some reason to be concerned that Trent Jr.’s defensive performance has dropped off a bit this year. I’ve already mentioned his drop in steal rate, but multiple other defensive metrics also point to a small drop off. For example, Trent Jr.’s Defensive Estimated Plus-Minus has dropped from 0.2 to -1.3 per Dunks and Threes and his Defensive Box Plus/Minus has dropped from 0.0 to -1.3 per Basketball Reference. The Raptors are also giving up about 5.2 points per 100 possessions more with Trent Jr. on the floor this season, which is up from previous years. He’s also getting fewer deflections and contesting fewer shots compared to the last two years, which is only partly explained by him playing fewer minutes. Per NBA.com, Trent Jr. is getting about 1.7 deflections and contesting 1.3 shots per game this season, down from 2.7 deflections and 2.3 shot contests per game last season and 3.4 deflections and 2.9 shot contests per game in 2021-22.

Still, Trent Jr.’s age (25) and shooting ability are enough to get the Raptors back something of value in a trade. Teams always need shooting, and there’s at least a chance that his defense improves back to where it was the last couple of seasons.

Trading for Trent Jr. is where challenges come up for the Kings. Trent Jr.’s salary this season is just under $18.6 million, so the Kings would need to put together about $11.1 million in salary to have a workable deal. The easiest way to get there is trading Huerter, but that would see the Kings basically dealing a shooter for a shooter. Sure, Trent Jr. has a chance at being better defensively than Huerter, but that hasn’t really been on display this year, he would have to regain his previous defensive form to do so. Huerter also has two years left under contract after this season, whereas Trent Jr. may just end up a short-term rental. Unfortunately, there also isn’t really another good option to match salary. The Kings could compile a bunch of miscellaneous salaries under $6 million (McGee, Mitchell, Duarte, Len, and Edwards) and hope to get to the minimum of $11.1 million, but it’s not clear why Toronto would want to take back so many players that they can’t even roster, especially when some of them will carry extra salary into next season when Toronto will have to pay Immanuel Quickley a raise. If the deal were Trent Jr. for Huerter, it’s possible Toronto would say yes without asking for any draft capital—but for a mishmash of back end rotation players, they’d probably demand at least a second round pick. That’s not unreasonable, but the Kings might be better able to put those resources to use on targeting a player with stronger perimeter defensive skills—shooting hasn’t really been the issue in Sacramento.

Verdict: Pass on Trent Jr. Even though Trent Jr. would be a nice addition, he’s no guarantee to stay with the team and his salary situation makes designing a deal for him challenging. He would probably bring better defense than Huerter, but he’s not a strong enough defender to warrant trading away a similar offensive player on a medium-term, manageable contract in Huerter.

Bruce Brown

Bruce Brown (27) would probably be a better trade target for the Kings. Brown has a bit of a unique role in the NBA—he’s one of a handful of 6’5” and under players who basically play like power forwards.

Brown made his way into the NBA as a non-shooting guard, so he had to make his money by hustling, playing defense, rebounding at a high level for his position, and generally being a pest on the floor. It’s a useful role for any team, and Brown fills it perfectly.

In the last couple of years, Brown has evolved to at least become a passable three point shooter. Last year, he hit 35.8% of his threes and took about 3.2 threes per game. That helped him secure a two year, $45 million deal this past off-season (there is a club option for the second year, which is valuable flexibility for teams). Those numbers have dipped a bit this year to 32.7% from three on 3.0 threes per game, but that’s still within the realm of “expected” for Brown. He’s still got the same motor, and he’s still operating as a effort glue guy on offense.

Defensively, Brown has always been good though short of elite. He's always active, bull-strong, and he isn’t afraid to guard anyone (though at 6’4”, he can be at a significant height disadvantage at times). He’s not a defensive stopper, but he will do all of the little things that teams need—rebounding, getting to loose balls, getting his hands in passing lanes, and just generally pestering opponents.

Brown has been with Toronto for less than two weeks; he arrived as part of the Raptors trade sending Siakam to Indiana. He’s not attached to the team and they haven’t really integrated him into their roster. There’s a good chance the Raptors deal Brown this season they would need to shell out $23 million next season to pick up Brown’s team option on top of having to pay Quickley.

As with Trent Jr., the tough part about the Kings trading for Brown is who they’d have to give up. To match Brown’s $22 million salary, the Kings could trade Barnes or Huerter. Trading Barnes would be tough to do, as it would make the Kings even smaller in the front court than they already are. Trading Huerter could work, but there’s a question whether Brown is a big enough improvement over Huerter to justify paying an extra $6-7 million in salary next season and giving up a contract year in 2025-26. The Kings could again try to piece together back-end roster pieces to get to the requisite $14.5 million in outgoing salary, but that’s going to be even harder to do than getting to $11.1 million for Trent Jr.—I’m not sure Toronto would want to play ball.

Verdict: Only if the Kings can’t swing other trades for defenders. Ultimately, I think it would take too much to get a deal for Brown to work. I like Brown’s game, and swapping Huerter for him could help the Kings enough on defense to justify the deal, but there are probably better trades options available that either yield bigger improvements or less disruption to the current roster. The Kings could give up a little more draft equity than they would have to give up for Brown and bring back better defensive fits like Alex Caruso or Dorian Finney-Smith. They could also look at smaller deals for guys who can add to the defense, like Kris Dunn or Matisse Thybulle, yet wouldn’t force the Kings to send out starters/rotation pieces like Huerter and Barnes.

Other Possible Targets

Naji Marshall

I really like Naji Marshall’s game. He’s on the back end of the Pelicans rotation, but when he comes in, he plays hard on defense and bugs the hell out of everyone on the court. He’s got size and he uses it well to play hard-nosed defense. He plays a bit like a bigger Bruce Brown, although not quite as impactful. He’s not a great offensive player, though he can do just enough to stay relevant. He’s willing to mix it up on the offensive glass and he’s upped his shooting this year to 37.6% from three, which would be enough to keep defenses honest if he can sustain it (that could be a bit of a mirage, he doesn’t take a ton of threes).

Because the Pelicans have crazy depth on the wing, the 26 year old Marshall doesn’t see a ton of minutes, only about 18 per game. He’s a free agent next year too, and it’s pretty unlikely the Pelicans can bring him back—they’re already paying $119 million to Zion Williamson, Brandon Ingram, CJ McCollum, and Herb Jones combined, and they need to think about re-signing Jonas Valanciunas this off-season and extending Trey Murphy III after next year. So he’s ripe for a trade.

Marshall’s salary is tiny by NBA standards at just $1.9 million, so there’s no real salary match concerns. The biggest question is whether the Pelicans would let him walk to a competitor this year (although the Pels have owned the Kings so far this year, so maybe they don’t care).

Verdict: Do it! If the Kings can snag Marshall for a second round pick, they should do it. At the very least, he’s a defensive option the Kings can go to when they need to muddy up games.

Bojan Bogdanovic

I feel obliged to at least mention Bojan Bogdanovic. He’s a good player on a bad team in Detroit, and his name comes up more often than maybe anyones in trade discussions.

I don’t think he’s a good target for the Kings. Bogdanovic is a good scorer and very strong perimeter shooter, but he offers little on defense, where the Kings need to improve the most. He’s also on a salary that would presumably require the Kings to send back Barnes or Huerter in a deal, and that doesn’t seem worth it given Detroit is probably going to ask for at least a first rounder to send Bogdanovic anywhere. I would concede that he’s probably a better player than Huerter or Barnes in a vacuum, but swapping Huerter for him would make the Kings perimeter defense slower and swapping him for Barnes would actually hurt the Kings rebounding.

Verdict: Not worth it.

Andrew Wiggins

This one is fascinating. The Warriors are 19-24 and sitting in 12th place in the Western Conference—over halfway through the season, it’s not clear whether they’re going to even make the play in. Obviously, the Warriors have rebounded from subpar seasons before, but there’s a glaring issue this time on top of their age. According to Spotrac, the Warriors’ payroll for this season is just over $206.9 million and they are facing a luxury tax bill of $186.3 million. In other words, the Warriors are going to have a roster that costs over $393 million just to maybe miss the play-in. That would be an ignominious record to hold, and presumably something that the Warriors’ ownership isn’t thrilled about.

Things would naturally improve for the Warriors next year if they let Klay Thompson walk in free agency, but they may not want to do that. While Thompson isn’t the player he used to be, he’s still one of the franchises greatest players, so they probably don’t want to push him out the door if they can avoid it.

Assuming they do want to keep Thompson, the Warriors have limited options. The three obvious ones are:

  • Try to improve the current roster. This path could be really hard, as the Warriors have a lot of salary already on the roster and a limited about of young players and future draft picks to send out in a trade. It’s also an uphill battle given the Warriors’ current seeding.

  • Trade Chris Paul. Paul is under contract through 2024-25 at a salary of $30 million, so sending him out the door would give the Warriors the ability to pay Thompson without going too far back into the luxury tax.

  • Trade Andrew Wiggins. This is the scenario the Kings care about. Wiggins is under contract through the 2025-26 season and has a player option in 2026-27 at a salary of $30.2 million. He’s being paid $24.3 million this year.

Wiggins is a 6’7” wing with tremendous physical ability. He’s got great size, length, and athleticism, and during the 2022 season and playoff run, he put together a remarkable stretch of defensive play that helped lead the Warriors to an NBA championship. He always had the physical tools, but it appeared that Wiggins had finally unlocked his defensive potential. At the same time, he was also improving his three point shooting, hitting a then-career high 39.3% of his threes on 5.5 threes per game in 2022. Combined with a versatile offensive skillset, it looked like Wiggins was coming into his own and becoming a really good wing player.

Wiggins played similarly in 2022-23, though with a slight decrease in efficiency. That didn’t seem like a huge deal at the time—he was dealing with undisclosed off-the-court personal matters, and he was still playing effectively enough. But this year, Wiggins has run into a brick wall. To put it bluntly, he’s been awful.

Wiggins has regressed in virtually every aspect of his game. His scoring is down, his shooting has been poor from the field, three point range, and the free throw line, he’s rebounding less, he’s dishing out fewer assists, he’s turning the ball over more often, and he’s getting fewer steals and blocks than he has in his previous two seasons with the Warriors. This drop off is perhaps best encapsulated by a precipitous fall in is Estimated Plus-Minus, which has gone from a career high 1.5 in 2022-23 to a career low -4.2 this season according to Dunks and Threes (Basketball Reference’s Box Plus/Minus stat tells a similar story: Wiggins has gone from 0.4 in 2021-22 to -5.2 this season).

You see the drop-off watching Wiggins play this year. He’s missing shots regardless of how open he is, he’s playing timidly on offense, and he’s barely exerting any influence on games defensively. Wiggins has played well in maybe a half-dozen games on the season (one happened to be against Sacramento in November, but luckily the Kings won), which is a minuscule number for a starter, much less a guy getting paid upwards of $25 million per year.

Wiggins has always been demure on the court, but over the past few seasons, he’d really found his footing as a player. Now, it’s like he’s reverted to how he played his rookie season—it’s baffling.

So why might he be of interest to the Kings?

At his best, Wiggins offers quality shooting, some one-on-one scoring ability, and enough size and quickness to put pressure on the rim from cuts. He also is capable of being a strong head-up defender, and he has the sort of length and quickness to offer really strong help defense, even offering respectable rim protection as a weak side helper despite not being a natural power forward. Combining Wiggins’ length and perimeter defense (when he’s right) with Keegan Murray would go extremely far in solving the Kings’ difficulties defending the perimeter, and he could even offer reasonable interior defense against forwards.

The Kings have to be curious if this year’s version of Wiggins is a fluke. The Warriors are wondering that too. That ambiguity makes it pretty hard to decipher whether the Warriors will ultimately move Wiggins but their cap situation is going to force them to think about it.

If Wiggins does come available, the Warriors would presumably be looking for salary cap relief first. They probably won’t, and shouldn’t, look to rebuild while Steph Curry is still playing at an All-NBA level, so they may be interested in taking back players who can provide on-court help (at least compared to Wiggins’ production this year) at a lower salary, even if they have to give up the potential that Wiggins returns to form.

Because Wiggins has a salary of just over $24.3 million this year, salary matching will be a bit tricky for the Kings—they would most likely have to include either Harrison Barnes or Huerter in a deal. The Kings could offer (1) Barnes plus light draft assets (think second rounders or a protected first) or (2) Huerter plus a back-end rotation player like Chris Duarte or Kessler Edwards, perhaps again with light draft assets.

Those offers, objectively, don’t give amazing return for the Warriors, but it would get them the cap relief they need and bring back at least one player that can contribute right away in Barnes or Huerter, and both of them have been better than Wiggins this year anyway.

Verdict: Only if the price is right. Ultimately, if Wiggins becomes available, the Kings should check in on it. They can make an offer that would be useful, but there’s definitely a solid chance other teams would top it. That said, the Kings shouldn’t go crazy trying to get Wiggins. Wiggins has been shockingly bad this year, but if that is the new reality for him (he was bad at the start of his career too), he’s going to be a salary cap problem for several years, as he has at least another three years under contract—probably four if he is really this bad, as he would pick up his player option for 2026-27. Trading for Wiggins would be such a high risk/reward play that the Kings shouldn’t pay handsomely to do it.

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Kings NBA Trade Deadline (Part 3): The Kings’ Current Roster Dictates Potential Deals