The final numbers from the trade deadline: no fewer than eight current and past All-Stars, some of them recent All-NBA selections, some among the league's highest scorers and even three Olympic gold medalists, all headed to new homes.
The trade deadline in the NBA has come and gone. Time for the dust to settle
The final numbers from the trade deadline: no fewer than eight current and past All-Stars, some of them recent All-NBA selections, some among the league's highest scorers and even three Olympic gold medalists, all headed to new homes.
By TIM REYNOLDS
Luka Doncic and Anthony Davis got blindsided by a blockbuster. De'Aaron Fox gets to throw lobs to Victor Wembanyama now. Jimmy Butler got his wish, sort of. P.J. Tucker has, on paper, been on four teams in about a week. Dennis Schroder was basically part of four teams in the span of about 18 hours. Zach LaVine went to Sacramento, a place he considers home.
It's over. It was wild, but the trade deadline has passed. Thursday at 3 p.m. Eastern has come and gone and more than a few teams — the Los Angeles Lakers, Dallas, Miami, Golden State, San Antonio, Sacramento, Milwaukee and Charlotte among them — have to be feeling good about what they pulled off over the last few days.
''That's the NBA that we live in," said LaVine, who went from Chicago to Sacramento, a team that he signed an offer sheet with in 2018 and now gets to finally play for after all this time. ''And that's the business of basketball.''
Teams navigated their ways around first aprons, second aprons, tax lines and more. Some did it with an eye on the future. Some did it with eyes on contending now, like the move that brought Butler to the Warriors. The Lakers did it with eyes on both now and the future, figuring Doncic alongside LeBron James will be great immediately and betting that Doncic — if they can keep him — will be the face of the franchise for years to come.
''We're talking about a 25-year-old that is a top-three player in the universe,'' Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka said. ''I can't think of a more amazing starting point to build a roster for the next decade.''
Phoenix was Butler's preferred destination after his relationship with Miami deteriorated and couldn't be salvaged. Talks surrounding Kevin Durant were had; Durant stayed with the Suns, as did Bradley Beal and Devin Booker. In the end, it was Golden State that got the Butler deal done — at a big price, with Andrew Wiggins leading the list of what the Warriors had to give up.
Warriors guard Stephen Curry texted Butler at halftime of the Golden State-Utah game Wednesday night. Butler sent a response; Curry didn't say what it was, other than revealing it was ''a very pleasant message.''
''I understand there's a lot of drama down there and who really knows what the story is,'' Curry said. ''We expect to have a motivated, committed Jimmy that's ready to impact our team for the better. Got to work out the kinks of what it looks like and I'm excited to get to work and kind of feed off the energy of something new.''
Butler has been an Olympic gold medalist, like Davis and Khris Middleton (who got sent to Washington after a long, great run in Milwaukee). Doncic, Davis, Butler and Fox were recent All-NBA picks; that list doesn't include Minnesota's Julius Randle and New York's Karl-Anthony Towns, who were swapped for one another as camps were beginning last fall. LaVine has been an All-Star, as has Brandon Ingram — sent from New Orleans to Toronto.
Big names. Big moves. Some big risks were taken. Eastern Conference-leading Cleveland added De'Andre Hunter from the Hawks, while defending champion Boston kept its core basically intact. Western Conference-leading Oklahoma City already had its trade-deadline acquisition; Chet Holmgren is back after missing three months with a hip injury.
Game on. The All-Star break starts next week, then the stretch run awaits.
''It's just turning the page and moving forward,'' Heat forward Kevin Love said. ''I think it's been — considering the whole Luka-AD trade and everything that's kind of happened since — in some ways unprecedented."
___
AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba
about the writer
TIM REYNOLDS
The Associated PressBlake Lander scored 18 points as Long Island University beat Wagner 60-47 on Thursday night.