The NBA trade deadline is almost here, and everyone is talking about Giannis Antetokounmpo. The writing is on the wall for the Greek Freak to finally find a new home, but it’s highly possible the Milwaukee Bucks will wait until the summer to accept a deal. Fear not: there are plenty of other players who should have appeal on the immediate trade market. Check our list of 30 potential trade candidates for a long list of names who could be on the move.
The byzantine mechanics of the NBA salary cap makes some trades almost impossible to complete. I wanted to come up with a trade that sent Zach LaVine to the shooting-deprived Toronto Raptors for Jakob Poeltl and a first-round pick, but the salaries just don’t work out. I tried it as a three-team deal and still couldn’t figure it out.
There are a few teams with the right mix of draft picks, expiring contracts, and veterans looking for a new home who are uniquely suited to make deadline deals. This includes two teams hunting the championship in the Oklahoma City Thunder and Detroit Pistons, plus play-in tier clubs like the Chicago Bulls and Portland Trail Blazers. Here are three deals we’d like to see.
The Thunder get aggressive for Michael Porter Jr.
The Thunder are the favorites to win the championship this season, but their lack of shooting around Shai Gilgeous-Alexander threatens to doom their back-to-back bid. In this deal, the Thunder trade Lu Dort and two first-round picks to Brooklyn for Michael Porter Jr. MPJ is one of the best shooters in the NBA by draining 40 percent of his threes on nearly 10 attempts per game. Dort has been a foundational figure for the Thunder, but the team already has multiple gritty perimeter defenders who could fill his void with Alex Caruso and Cason Wallace remaining. The Thunder are sending Philly’s pick in this draft which is currently slated to be No. 18 overall, plus Denver’s first-round pick next year. The Nets could probably flip Dort this summer for even more draft capital. OKC hasn’t looked all that dominant since their 24-1 start, but this trade would give them even better odds of repeating as champions.
The Blazers push for playoffs with Ayo Dosunmu

The Blazers are already buyers at the deadline after adding Vít Krejčí from the Hawks. They also already owe the Bulls a lottery-protected first-round draft pick from the Lauri Markkanen-Larry Nance Jr. three-team trade from 2021. In this deal, Portland lowers the protections on the pick to top-4 to get Ayo Dosunmu from Chicago. Dosunmu is having a career-year with 45 percent three-point shooting and solid on-ball defense as he gets ready to enter unrestricted free agency this summer. The Blazers need a guard right now to push for the playoffs. The guard rotation next year could get crowded with Damian Lillard and Scoot Henderson returning from injury and Jrue Holiday still around, but Dosunmu’s quick-hit driving ability and newfound three-point stroke works in almost any lineup. The Bulls get back a likely mid first-round pick in this scenario, and Portland still covers itself if it misses the playoffs and gets lottery luck. A tip of the hat to Blog-a-Bull for coming up with this one.
The Pistons buy low on Coby White

What can the Bulls get for Coby White on the brink of free agency? The Minnesota Timberwolves are reportedly interested, but I’m skeptical Minnesota would accept on a deal that sends Joan Beringer and Rob Dillingham to Chicago for White. Chicago should prefer that Minnesota deal over this Pistons offer if it has it on the table, but if not, I still think this package from Detroit is acceptable. The Pistons need another ball handler and shooter next to Cade Cunningham, and White can be instant offense when he’s at his best. This trade returns Paul Reed to Chicago, a DePaul alum, who is on a cheap $5.5 million deal next year and can provide big man depth. It also gives the Bulls four second-round picks that have a chance to be in the top half of that round. If the Bulls aren’t going to sign White in free agency, getting a haul for him now makes sense even if they can’t land a first-rounder.
James Harden returns to the Rockets

James Harden wants out from the Clippers, and his former team the Houston Rockets make a lot of sense. The Rockets and Clippers can haggle over the protections on this 2028 first-round pick, but deal essentially sends three of Houston’s non-contributors this season to Los Angeles for a near All-Star level point guard. Harden is still pretty damn good at age-36, and he could give the Rockets the shooting and playmaking juice they need for a playoff run.
The Hornets swing big on Jaren Jackson Jr.

The Charlotte Hornets were by far the best team in the NBA during January. This team has an extremely bright future if LaMelo Ball can stay healthy next to Brandon Miller and Kon Knueppel, but they still need a big man who can block shots and stretch the floor as a shooter. Those players are extremely hard to come by, but Jaren Jackson Jr. fits the bill. I debated whether there should be two or three future first-round picks going back to Memphis in this deal, but it makes sense for both sides either way. The Hornets really could be poised to contend in the East next year, especially if they land a player like JJJ. Memphis would be leaning fully into a rebuild.
Cam Thomas to the Raptors

The Raptors need a little more offensive firepower for the playoff push, so why not take a chance on Thomas for some end-of-bench guys? Thomas clearly isn’t in Brooklyn’s long-term plans, but maybe someone like Jonathan Mogbo could find a home there. Toronto would get to test run Thomas to see if they’re interested in re-signing him. With the East wide open, it makes sense for the Raptors to add another guard with some shooting ability.
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