Zach LaVine Dustin Bradford/Getty Images

Offseason Trade Ideas for NBA's Most Hopeless Teams

Grant Hughes

It's encouraging that so few NBA teams appear truly lost this season. It's also a little surprising.

Flattened lottery odds and the advent of the play-in tournament have discouraged tanking, but those changes also incentivize the pursuit of mediocrity—something we tend to judge harshly. Stuck-in-the middle teams typically lack premium young talent, high-volume draft equity and current stars. They aren't pushovers, but they're also miles from title contention.

Scan the league, and only four obvious options present themselves. Even among that sad-sack group, things aren't all that bad. The Charlotte Hornets have LaMelo Ball, the Chicago Bulls have Zach LaVine, the Portland Trail Blazers have Damian Lillard and the Washington Wizards have Bradley Beal. Those last three teams are also still alive in the play-in chase.

Still, all four of those squads have lost more than they've won this year. More importantly, none of them have clear routes to immediate or long-term improvement. There's a sense that each of them are just about maxed out in their growth trajectories, with troubling downsides on the horizon.

The league's worst teams don't belong here. The Houston Rockets, San Antonio Spurs and Detroit Pistons are rebuilding around young talent, and they currently share the best odds of landing Victor Wembanyama in the 2023 draft. Scoot Henderson could be a fine consolation prize at No. 2. The Indiana Pacers are already ahead of schedule with All-Star point guard Tyrese Haliburton blossoming before our eyes, and the Orlando Magic, Utah Jazz and Oklahoma City Thunder possess oodles of projectable youth and extra first-round picks.

It's a tall order, but we've cooked up offseason trades for the teams with the bleakest outlooks over the next few years. Hopefully, they'll serve as reminders that there's always a way forward—even if it means taking a few steps backward first.

Charlotte Hornets

Terry Rozier Kent Smith/NBAE via Getty Images

The Trade

Charlotte Hornets Receive: Kyle Lowry and a 2027 first-round pick (top-8 protected)

Miami Heat Receive: Terry Rozier and James Bouknight

First on the list alphabetically but also probably first in terms of sheer hopelessness, we have the Charlotte Hornets. The sheer difficulty of fabricating a halfway-reasonable trade for them illustrates how dire things are.

Saddled with overpaid veterans and underperforming lottery picks, the Hornets have little reason for optimism beyond LaMelo Ball, whose season barely got started because of left ankle injuries and ended early following a fracture in his right.

The Hornets need options, and the cap relief they'd get when Lowry's $29.7 million salary comes off the books in 2024 would give them some. Gordon Hayward's $31.5 million also expires after 2023-24, freeing up a total of over $61 million just between those two contracts.

Free agency hasn't always been kind to the Hornets, and cap space won't matter as much for them as it would for a bigger-market operation. But clean books are clean books, and it's been a long time since the Hornets had them.

James Bouknight's sophomore season has been almost unfathomably bad. He's shooting 32.8 percent from the field and 25.0 percent from deep, and the most notable event of his brief NBA career had nothing to do with basketball. For the Hornets, the top-eight-protected first-rounder they're getting from Miami will be more valuable than Bouknight by default.

If a pick that won't come for another three-plus years seems too distant to be valuable for Charlotte, understand that any legitimate rebuild is going to take at least that long to get off the ground. If the Hornets get impatient—OK, when the Hornets get impatient—they can at least trade that selection or package it up with others in a bigger deal.

On the Heat's side, this is about getting off of Lowry's 2023-24 salary and adding a more productive, younger and cheaper guard in Rozier. The 28-year-old is putting up 21.4 points, 5.0 assists and 4.2 rebounds in an obvious "somebody's got to get numbers" situation this season, but his inefficiency (23rd percentile in points per shot attempt at his position) owes mainly to a lack of surrounding talent and a slightly larger role than befits his skill set. If Rozier slots in as a fourth or fifth option in Miami, we'll see a return to his days of shooting around 40 percent from deep.

Bouknight is just a flier—a 2021 lottery pick who scored the ball effectively in college and who might benefit from the militaristic discipline the Heat have become known for. It might not be the worst thing for him to get an early-career change of scenery. Miami has a strong record of getting talented players into prime shape and bringing the best out of them.

Chicago Bulls

Zach LaVine Bart Young/NBAE via Getty Images

The Trade

Chicago Bulls Receive: Ben Simmons, Cam Thomas, 2023 first-round pick, 2025 first-round pick (via PHX), 2027 first-round pick (HOU holds swap rights), 2027 first-round pick (via PHI)

Brooklyn Nets Receive: Zach LaVine

The first presumption this trade requires is the trickiest: The Bulls need to acknowledge that the way to the top, in a long-term sense, requires them to head for the bottom. Based on the team's multi-year track record of fighting hard to stay in the middle, that's a big ask.

It shouldn't be. Chicago is scrapping to make the play-in tournament, and the best-case scenario will be a quick first-round dismissal by either the Boston Celtics or Milwaukee Bucks. After that, the Bulls will head into the offseason facing Nikola Vučević's unrestricted free agency with no realistic hope of improving on what'll almost surely be a sub-.500 record. Lonzo Ball potentially needing a third knee surgery lowers the odds of him returning healthy in 2023-24 and magically making the Bulls look like they did in their early surge last season.

No, Ben Simmons doesn't figure to make Chicago a better team next year. He's simply matching salary in a swap designed to get the Bulls the assets they'll need to undertake a deliberate rebuild.

Because his performance and availability have cratered since leaving the Philadelphia 76ers, Simmons may very well have the league's worst contract. Combined with LaVine's value as a high-end scorer, which the Nets need on a roster full of three-and-D wings, that's what earns Chicago four first-rounders and Cam Thomas in the exchange.

Those firsts coming from the Nets aren't all golden tickets. They mostly come from other teams and may not return high-lottery value, though it isn't the worst idea to bet that the Phoenix Suns will come apart by 2025 or that the Sixers will be done contending in 2027. You might argue that taking on Simmons' money should earn Chicago more draft capital, but it's not like LaVine's deal is some great bargain. He's due $178.1 million over the next four seasons and comes with real durability concerns due to multiple knee surgeries.

Don't overlook Cam Thomas. His per-36 numbers—23.0 points, 3.7 rebounds and 3.2 assists on a 57.3 true shooting percentage—look a lot like LaVine's did in his age-21 season. Then with the Minnesota Timberwolves, LaVine averaged 18.3 points, 3.3 rebounds and 2.9 assists per 36 minutes with a 57.6 true shooting percentage. Nobody's arguing that Thomas has multiple All-Star nods in his future, but he's much more than a throw-in here.

The Bulls make the first move toward starting over (which should be followed by deals involving DeMar DeRozan and anything else not nailed down), and the Nets get the first-option offensive weapon they need alongside Mikal Bridges and a potentially elite collection of defenders. If any team can hide LaVine's weaknesses on that end, it's the one with Nic Claxton, Dorian Finney-Smith, Royce O'Neale and Bridges.

Portland Trail Blazers

O.G. Anunoby Mark Blinch/Getty Images

The Trade

Portland Trail Blazers Receive: O.G. Anunoby, Precious Achiuwa

Toronto Raptors Receive: Anfernee Simons, 2025 first-round pick (top-4 protected)

Jerami Grant and Gary Payton II (who barely played before returning to the Golden State Warriors via trade) weren't enough to change the Portland Trail Blazers' defensive fate. Yet again, they're in the league's bottom five on that end, struggling to make the play-in tournament despite a stellar offense and a career year from Damian Lillard.

Too small, lacking versatility and short on shutdown options, Portland needs further roster rebalancing to make good on promises to chase contention during Lillard's prime. Enter O.G. Anunoby, an opponent-field-goal percentage destroyer who ranks third in the entire league in Defensive Estimated Plus/Minus.

Among wings who've defended at least 75 isolation possessions, nobody holds opponents to fewer points per play than Anunoby. He spent much of this season in trade rumors, but it seems the multiple-first-round-pick packages Toronto may have wanted to execute a deal weren't offered. Perhaps the Raptors, less than enthused about Anunoby's looming pay raise in 2024 free agency, would be willing to take back a lead guard in Anfernee Simons and a lightly protected first-rounder this offseason.

Precious Achiuwa's physical tools make him more than a salary-matching inclusion here. Essentially positionless, the 6'8" mystery box has so far been an inefficient offensive player whose athletic gifts haven't translated into the elite steal or block rates you'd expect.

But Achiuwa still has the potential to become a versatile two-way game-wrecker. It's just that the Raptors need what he (and, to a similar extent, Anunoby) can provide less than they need offensive facilitation and shooting. And that's before considering the fallout of possibly losing both Fred VanVleet and Gary Trent Jr. in free agency this offseason.

Simons, a 23-year-old with elite three-point-shooting skill and burgeoning on-ball creativity, could slot into Toronto's first unit with or without VanVleet and provide the playmaking and spacing the team has lacked since Kyle Lowry left.

Portland may have to pay upward of $30 million per year to retain Jerami Grant this offseason, and Anunoby could cost at least that much on his next deal. But those two together would finally give the Blazers the defensive oomph they need to complement Lillard's offensive brilliance.

Washington Wizards

Bradley Beal Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images

The Trade

Washington Wizards Receive: RJ Barrett, Evan Fournier, 2024 first-round pick (unprotected), 2025 first-round pick (via MIL), 2026 first-round pick (top-8 protected)

New York Knicks Receive: Bradley Beal

In terms of pure on-court value, Bradley Beal is probably worth a package that includes three first-round picks, two of which have significant upside. But when you factor his contract into the equation, maybe not so much.

The three-time All-Star is putting up 23.2 points and 5.4 assists per game with a 59.1 true shooting percentage, but he's due $207.7 million over the next four seasons. The Washington Wizards, in their infinite wisdom, also gave him a no-trade clause in his supermax deal.

For the New York Knicks to go for something like this, they'd have to be strongly convinced of their one-player-away status as contenders. Considering their run during the second half of this season, and depending on how the playoffs shake out, they might not be far from believing that.

Beal's deal makes him among the toughest players in the league to trade, but nothing is impossible. Fortunately, we're more concerned with the Washington Wizards' side of this exchange. They, not the Knicks, are the "hopeless" team in need of a fresh start.

Staunchly resistant to trading Beal for the better part of a decade, the Wiz must understand at a gut level that moving on from him is the only way to get off the mediocrity treadmill. With so much cash tied up in a good-not-great player, it's basically impossible to bottom out or add enough talent to contend.

Most likely, Washington will keep spending this offseason. Kyle Kuzma and Kristaps Porziņģis are good bets to opt out and get new long-term agreements to return, committing the team to some version of its current roster for another half-decade or so.

It doesn't have to be that way. What should happen involves future first-rounders coming back to the Wizards for Beal, clearing the decks for a tank and finally, mercifully, a rebuild.

RJ Barrett has looked surprisingly expendable in New York with the arrival of instant fan favorite Josh Hart, but the Wizards could do worse than a player with a career scoring average of 18.1 points per game who has yet to start his age-23 season. That Barrett's average annual salary is right around half of Beal's over the next four years only adds to the appeal.

Evan Fournier...well, at least his 2024-25 salary can come off the books via a declined $19 million team option.

This is all about the picks and financial flexibility for the Wizards, and it's admittedly underwhelming that they're only getting three first-rounders here. That's their own fault. Beal's deal is onerous, and the Knicks (or anyone else) would probably balk at giving up more than two.

Washington has resisted a teardown for years, but all it has to show for that approach is one playoff series win since the 2015-16 campaign. Enough is enough.

Stats courtesy of NBA.com, Basketball Reference and Cleaning the Glass. Accurate through March 13. Salary info via Spotrac.

Grant Hughes covers the NBA for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter (@gt_hughes), and subscribe to the Hardwood Knocks podcast, where he appears with Bleacher Report's Dan Favale.

   

Read 0 Comments

Download the app for comments Get the B/R app to join the conversation

Install the App
×
Bleacher Report
(120K+)