NBA Trade Deadline: Lakers, Warriors Among Teams Most Desperate to Make a Move

A seller’s market has developed with contending teams outweighing the number of teams considering offloading veteran talent.
NBA Trade Deadline: Lakers, Warriors Among Teams Most Desperate to Make a Move
NBA Trade Deadline: Lakers, Warriors Among Teams Most Desperate to Make a Move /

We are just days away from the NBA trade deadline, the last chance for contending teams to make substantive moves (sorry, buyout market) for the stretch run.

What has developed is a seller’s market, with the number of contenders (and would-be contenders) significantly outnumbering the number of teams considering offloading veteran talent.

Let’s unpack some of the latest chatter, beginning with the teams most eager to turn talk into action before Thursday …

[NBA Trade Deadline Tracker: Stay on top of the latest moves]

The desperate to do something tier

Los Angeles Lakers

Team needs: Scoring, three-point shooting

The Lakers will head into the trade deadline on a three-game winning streak after outlasting the Charlotte Hornets on Monday. The team has intensified the search for perimeter help in recent weeks with D’Angelo Russell, a future first-round pick and pick swaps on the table, sources familiar with the Lakers told Sports Illustrated.

Speculation about LeBron James’s future remains just that. L.A. has shown no inclination toward trading James, rival executives say, and remain fully engaged in upgrading the roster. Atlanta Hawks guard Dejounte Murray remains a top target, per source. The Brooklyn Nets, who have a surplus of wing defenders, including Dorian Finney-Smith and Royce O’Neale, are worth watching, as is Detroit Pistons forward Danilo Gallinari.

Brooklyn Nets forward Dorian Finney-Smith brings the ball up court against the New York Knicks during the fourth quarter at Barclays Center in New York City on Dec 20, 2023.
Finney-Smith is one of the Nets’ surplus of wing defenders who could be coveted by teams at the NBA trade deadline :: Brad Penner/USA TODAY Sports

There will be a temptation in L.A.—a strong one—to do nothing. Short term, L.A. can hope that Russell’s strong January can be sustained, that Gabe Vincent can return after the All-Star break and that Jarred Vanderbilt can be back before the end of the season. The Lakers will have as many as three first-round picks to deal next offseason, which will put them in a much stronger position to make a substantial deal—if James, who has a player option this summer, elects to stay.

And, for the record, here is how James answered a question about Thursday’s deadline:

“It’s not a question for me. I love who we have in the locker room. And that’s all I worry about. ... I don’t get caught up in that. We’re going to go out and prepare ourselves every single night no matter what it is. No matter who’s out on this team. No matter what. So it’s my job and it’s AD’s job as the two captains to make sure we keep the main thing the main thing. The main focus is now: Thursday’s game at home. And look forward to that matchup,” James said Monday.

The Lakers Should Consider the Unthinkable: Trading LeBron James

Atlanta Hawks

Team needs: A fresh start

It’s widely believed that the Hawks, who have underachieved all season, are open for business on virtually the entire roster. Murray, a versatile, two-way guard, has generated the most interest, with the Lakers, Utah Jazz and Pistons among the teams that have checked in with Atlanta. Brooklyn, if the Nets look to upgrade, could get in the mix. The San Antonio Spurs, who have been focused on acquiring talent that fits alongside Victor Wembanyama, has considered a reunion with Murray, a source says.

This isn’t a fire sale, however. The Hawks, who surrendered three first-round picks for Murray in 2022, are seeking at least two for him now. As bad as this season has been—particularly defensively, where Atlanta is 27th in the NBA in defensive rating—the Hawks have signaled they are fine playing out the season and reevaluating this summer, which after watching how many years Atlanta held onto John Collins, teams believe.

Golden State Warriors

Team needs: Size, perimeter defenders

Chicago Bulls guard Alex Caruso has emerged as a top target for Golden State, which desperately needs (among other things) to improve a defense ranked in the bottom third in defensive efficiency. The Warriors have movable contracts (Chris Paul, Klay Thompson) and some draft capital to make a significant deal.

So far, Jonathan Kuminga, who had an outstanding January (20.6 points on 58.6% from the floor and 40% from three-point range) has been off the table in trade talks, rival execs who have discussed deals with Golden State say, and teams that have discussed Andrew Wiggins have pushed the Warriors to include a draft pick to absorb the final three years of Wiggins’s deal.

Chicago Bulls guard Alex Caruso shoots in the fourth quarter against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse in Cleveland, Ohio, on Jan 15, 2024.
Caruso has emerged as a top target for the Warriors :: David Richard/USA TODAY Sports

Charlotte Hornets

Team needs: Draft picks

The Hornets, facing a sub–20-win season, are going all-in on a LaMelo Ball/Brandon Miller rebuild. Charlotte is actively trying to trade Kyle Lowry, who was acquired in a deal for Terry Rozier last month, though they have not been interested in long-term salaries in return, sources say. The Phoenix Suns have been aggressive in their pursuit of Miles Bridges, who is averaging 20 points after sitting out all of last season due to a domestic violence arrest. The Dallas Mavericks, sources say, also have registered interest in Bridges.

The Lakers, Mavericks and Suns are among the teams interested in P.J. Washington. Gordon Hayward has an expiring $31.5 million contract, but as veteran NBA insider Marc Stein first reported, there is mutual interest between Hayward and the Hornets to bring Hayward back next season.

Dallas Mavericks

Team needs: Perimeter defenders

Dallas, stuck in the play-in mix, is aggressively pursuing upgrades to play alongside Luka Dončić and Kyrie Irving. Name a wing player, the Mavs have probably kicked the tires on him. Dallas has inquired about Washington Wizards forward Kyle Kuzma, Hornets forward Washington and Portland Trail Blazers wing Jerami Grant, sources say.

Wiggins is on the Mavericks’ radar, though Dallas would likely want Golden State to attach a first-round pick. Grant Williams, who has been underwhelming in his first season in Dallas, is available, as is Richaun Holmes.

Four Unlikely NBA Trade Deadline Moves Teams Should Consider

The teams worth watching tier

Chicago Bulls

Team needs: A full rebuild

Did Zach LaVine’s season-ending foot injury set the stage for a Bulls fire sale? That’s what rival execs have been asking since the news of the extent of LaVine’s injury was revealed. Caruso is Chicago’s most coveted asset, both for his two-way play and team-friendly contract ($9.8 million) next season. It’s expected that interest in DeMar DeRozan, who has extensive playoff experience along with an expiring contract, will pick up as the deadline gets closer.

Another player generating strong interest: Andre Drummond, who has been a durable, reliable rebounder (18.9 per 36 minutes) in a limited role with the Bulls.

New York Knicks

Team needs: Frontcourt defenders

Even after the deal for O.G. Anunoby—a deal that has worked out very well for New York—the Knicks have remained active. Bruce Brown, who several execs expect to be dealt somewhere by Thursday, is high on New York’s wish list, per sources, as is Washington and Malcolm Brogdon, as the Knicks continue to pursue wing defenders in advance of the playoffs.

Boston Celtics

Team needs: Frontcourt depth

Depth continues to be the Celtics’ top priority. Kelly Olynyk and Drummond are two potential players of interest, with Boston looking to fortify its frontcourt behind Kristaps Porziņģis and Al Horford. The Celtics are armed with a $6.2 million trade exception and have a handful of smaller salaried players on the roster who could be packaged together.

Olynyk, in particular, could be appealing. Olynyk, who spent his first four NBA seasons in Boston, is the kind of versatile, three-point shooting big man who would fit seamlessly into the Celtics’ rotation.

Utah Jazz forward Kelly Olynyk reacts after a play during the game against the Houston Rockets at Toyota Center in Houston on Jan. 20, 2024.
Could Olynyk return to the Celtics? Boston needs a versatile, three-point shooting big like him :: Troy Taormina/USA TODAY Sports

Milwaukee Bucks

Team needs: Perimeter defenders

A coaching change didn’t solve Milwaukee’s defensive issues—the Bucks are 20th in defensive rating in the last four games—and the Bucks have been canvasing the league for perimeter defenders. There’s interest in Milwaukee in Williams and the Bucks would love to pry either Finney-Smith or O’Neale out of Brooklyn.

Getting in the mix for one of those players will be challenging. There’s league-wide interest in Bobby Portis, but Portis, a reliable rebounder shooting 50% from the floor and 38% from three-point range, is a key piece of the Bucks’ rotation. And it’s unclear if some combination of Pat Connaughton, second-round picks and pick swaps will get anything substantive done.

Brooklyn Nets

Team needs: Backcourt help

Let’s start here: Bridges is not available, at least that’s what the Nets have been steadfastly communicating to teams. Brooklyn officials insist they are not planning a rebuild and have internally discussed several upgrades, including Wizards guard Tyus Jones, per a team source. Still, the Nets have discussed Finney-Smith and O’Neale, demanding at least one first-round pick in any deal for its three-and-D forwards.

Portland Trail Blazers

Team needs: Draft capital

The Blazers continue to field calls—but not making many of them—about Brogdon, who has publicly campaigned to remain in Portland beyond the trade deadline. Grant’s contract—four years, $130-plus million remaining—makes a Grant trade extremely unlikely, despite Grant’s productivity (20 points per game, 40% from three) this season. The Bucks are among the teams that have registered interest in Matisse Thybulle, one of the better wing defenders available.

Sacramento Kings

Team needs: Perimeter defenders

Chatter around the Kings has quieted in recent days, as Harrison Barnes and Kevin Huerter, two role players who got off to rocky starts, have played better of late. Sacramento, like many teams, would love to land Caruso, but it’s believed the cost—multiple first-round picks—is not one the Kings are willing to pay.

The wild card tier

Houston Rockets

Team needs: Veteran talent

The Rockets really want to make the playoffs, which is the impression teams that have discussed deals with Houston have come away with. The Rockets, as Yahoo! Sports reported, made a run at Mikal Bridges, who Brooklyn, as noted above, has taken off the table.

Houston’s reported willingness to include Jalen Green in a Bridges trade makes sense; Bridges is a better fit for Ime Udoka’s style than Green. Still, Houston has made it clear to teams that Green, who has struggled mightily with his shot this season, is only available in deals that would involve a veteran, All-Star–caliber player.

Houston Rockets guard Jalen Green controls the ball as New Orleans Pelicans guard Jose Alvarado defends during the third quarter at Toyota Center in Houston on Jan. 31, 2024.
Green has struggled mightily with his shot this season and is only available in deals for a veteran player :: Troy Taormina/USA TODAY Sports

Utah Jazz

Team needs: Playmaking

Are the Jazz buyers or sellers? In recent weeks, Utah has been engaged on several fronts. The Jazz have desirable assets, including Olynyk, Collin Sexton and Jordan Clarkson. But Utah has also engaged Atlanta on Murray, a sign that the Jazz, still in the play-in mix with quality wins over the Denver Nuggets, Indiana Pacers and Bucks in recent weeks, could look to add to this group.

The guess here is that Utah offloads at least one of its veterans. Olynyk has generated significant interest while teams that strike out on Murray could pivot to someone like Clarkson, who has struggled with his shooting this season but is a proven scorer off the bench.

As for Lauri Markkanen, the sense rival execs get is it would take a Donovan Mitchell/Rudy Gobert–type offer to extract Markkanen—an offer that is unlikely to materialize.

Philadelphia 76ers

Team needs: Playmaking

Joel Embiid’s injury obviously changes the calculus in Philadelphia. And the Sixers, for now, seem more inclined to ride out this season and go into the summer with two All-Stars (Embiid, Tyrese Maxey) and more than $50 million in cap space. Still, with Tobias Harris’s expiring contract and a cache of first-round draft picks, Philadelphia is in play for any major deal.

Oklahoma City Thunder

Team needs: Rebounding

It’s been pretty quiet in OKC, which is likely to use the postseason to gather information on what, if any, changes it needs to make. Still, with a surplus of young talent and draft picks—14 first-round picks and 21 second-rounders across the next seven drafts—the Thunder, which could use some size up front, are always in play.

Orlando Magic

Team needs: Playmaking, shooting

The Magic have shopped around for backcourt help in recent weeks, with Jones, Brogdon and Bojan Bogdanović among the players Orlando execs have considered to help bolster what’s been an anemic offense. Expect the Magic to be shrewd over the next few days. The team has improved its win totals in each of the last three seasons and is on pace for the first plus-.500 finish since the 2018–19 season. Lowry, if he’s bought out in Charlotte, is someone the Magic would pursue on a short-term deal, a source says. 


Published
Chris Mannix
CHRIS MANNIX

Chris Mannix is a senior writer at Sports Illustrated covering the NBA and boxing beats. He joined the SI staff in 2003 following his graduation from Boston College. Mannix is the host of SI's "Open Floor" podcast and serves as a ringside analyst and reporter for DAZN Boxing. He is also a frequent contributor to NBC Sports Boston as an NBA analyst. A nominee for National Sportswriter of the Year in 2022, Mannix has won writing awards from the Boxing Writers Association of America and the Pro Basketball Writers Association, and is a longtime member of both organizations.