Current:Home > StocksThis year's NBA trade deadline seemed subdued. Here's why. -Blueprint Wealth Network
This year's NBA trade deadline seemed subdued. Here's why.
View
Date:2025-04-18 04:44:08
The biggest name that moved at Thursday’s NBA trade deadline was Gordon Hayward, a former All-Star who's now a role player.
No offense to Hayward. He’s a quality player and going from the rebuilding Charlotte Hornets to the contending Oklahoma City Thunder makes him important in the Western Conference title chase.
But this year’s trade deadline lacked the fireworks of the 2023 trade deadline when Kyrie Irving and Kevin Durant were traded from the Brooklyn Nets, the Los Angeles Lakers reshuffled their roster, acquiring D’Angelo Russell and Rui Hachimura among others, and the Minnesota Timberwolves added veteran Mike Conley.
The biggest names discussed in potential trades ahead of Thursday’s deadline – Dejounte Murray, Kyle Kuzma, Andrew Wiggins – remained put with teams unable to strike deals.
Here's why it was a tempered NBA trade deadline:
The price of doing business was too high
In trades involving Rudy Gobert from Utah to Minnesota and Kevin Durant from Brooklyn to Phoenix, multiple first-round picks were given up to acquire All-Star caliber players. That set the market, unrealistically so, but as Lakers vice president of basketball operations Rob Pelinka said after he was unable to reach a trade deadline deal, “the market is the market.”
Chatter was that the Washington Wizards wanted two first-round picks for Kuzma, and while the Lakers and Atlanta Hawks engaged multiple times on a potential deal that would send Murray to the Lakers, Atlanta is trying to recoup draft picks they gave up to get Murray from San Antonio. The Lakers, who had just one first-round pick to trade, didn’t have the draft capital to meet the Hawks’ demands.
Teams want to remain competitive
Let’s take the Chicago Bulls. They are 25-27, in ninth place in the East and with a chance to make the postseason play-in and even crack the top six for a guaranteed playoff spot. They could have traded DeMar DeRozan, Alex Caruso and/or Nik Vucevic.
But they didn’t.
"We want to stay competitive," Bulls executive vice president of basketball operations Arturas Karnisovas told reporters Thursday. "We have an obligation to this organization and to this fanbase and to this city to stay competitive and compete for the playoffs. And that’s what we are doing."
That doesn’t mean the Bulls will compete for a title. But in an Eastern Conference that has parity, injuries and teams in flux, there are pathways to some success.
There isn't an appetite for a long, painful rebuilding process.
All-NBA caliber players weren’t available via trade
Teams simply didn’t see a player out there who was available in a trade, worth multiple first-round picks and could make a team a title contender. They’re going to wait until after the season and see how those picks can be used at the draft for that kind of player. That’s the Lakers’ plan.
New collective bargaining agreement has an impact
Without getting too deep into the salary cap weeds, the new 2023 collective bargaining agreement between the NBA and National Basketball Players Association has made some trades more difficult to execute.
The new luxury tax rates starting in 2025-26 are more onerous for teams $10 million or more over the luxury tax line. Instead of paying $2.50 for every dollar over the luxury tax line between $10 million and $14.99 million, teams will pay $3.50 and instead of paying $3.25 for every dollar over the luxury tax line between $15 million and $19.99 million, teams will pay $4.25. For repeat tax teams – those teams that pay a luxury tax in three of the previous four seasons – the tax grows even higher.
ESPN front office insider Bobby Marks used this example for last season’s Golden State Warriors. Under the new tax rates, instead of a $163 million tax payment, it would have been nearly $220 million. They would have paid almost $60 million more. It’s enough to give a franchise like the Warriors reason to reconsider that kind of spending.
Plus, teams approximately $7 million over the luxury tax line will have restrictions on their ability to build a roster, limiting what they could do in trades and the use of exceptions to the salary cap. Like all new CBAs, teams are cautious until they fully understand the ramifications.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- NBA power rankings: Houston Rockets on the rise with six-game winning streak
- New 'NCIS: Sydney' takes classic show down under: Creator teases release date, cast, more
- Hamas' tunnels: Piercing a battleground beneath Gaza
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- 'March for Israel' rally livestream: Supporters gather in Washington DC
- NBA power rankings: Houston Rockets on the rise with six-game winning streak
- Jill Biden tells National Student Poets that poetry feeds a hungry human spirit
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Horoscopes Today, November 14, 2023
Ranking
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- Donald Trump Jr. returns to witness stand as New York fraud trial enters new phase
- Dr. Tim Johnson on finding a middle-ground in the abortion debate
- CBS shows are back after actors' strike ends. Here are the 2024 premiere dates
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- NCAA Division I men's soccer tournament: Bracket, schedule, seeds for 2023 championship
- RHOSLC's Monica Garcia Fiercely Confronts Mom Linda For Kidnapping Her Car
- White House hoping Biden-Xi meeting brings progress on military communications, fentanyl fight
Recommendation
Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
As gasoline prices fall, U.S. inflation cools to 3.2%
Video captures long-lost echidna species named after Sir David Attenborough that wasn't seen for decades
Retired NASCAR driver Kevin Harvick buys 'Talladega Nights' mansion, better than Ricky Bobby
Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
2 men released from custody after initial arrest in the death of a Mississippi college student
FBI, Capitol police testify in the trial of the man accused of attacking Nancy Pelosi’s husband
Parents of Michigan school shooter will have separate trials, judge says