NBA trade deadline: Running analysis for every notable deal
Welcome to your one-stop shop for analysis of every major transaction leading up to Thursday's NBA trade deadline.
Jazz make stunning move for JJJ 🚨
| Jazz receive | Grizzlies receive |
|---|---|
| Jaren Jackson Jr. | Walter Clayton Jr. |
| Jock Landale | Kyle Anderson |
| Vince Williams Jr. | Taylor Hendricks |
| John Konchar | Georges Niang |
| 2027 1st-Rd Pick (LAL) | |
| 2027 1st-Rd Pick (UTA/CLE/MIN) | |
| 2031 1st-Rd Pick (PHX) |
Last summer's Desmond Bane trade gave Memphis two options: Trade Ja Morant and retool around former Defensive Player of the Year Jackson, or trade both Jackson and Morant to rebuild completely. Though Morant remains (for now), Tuesday's trade signifies that the Grizzlies have clearly chosen the latter option.
Jackson has long been one of the league's most underrated players. But considering Memphis' long-term plans and the fact that the 26-year-old will be playing on a 30% (of the salary cap) max contract next season, it's not a bad piece of business for the Grizzlies. Acquiring three first-round picks is nothing to sneeze at, while Clayton is a rookie guard who's shown promise, and Hendricks is a young big with shooting upside.
As for the Jazz, Jackson may not have been the star we envisioned them chasing with their surplus of draft picks. Still, given the reasonable price to acquire him, the team did well to add a legitimate building block under long-term team control.
Although we can quibble over whether Jackson will be worth nearly 30% of the cap in the coming years and nitpick his rebounding and playmaking limitations, his impact as a defensive big is undeniable. Jackson offers elite rim protection at center or can serve as a more mobile defensive force at power forward. His defensive versatility and floor-spacing ability - he's a career 35% 3-point shooter on nearly five attempts per game - give his team options in the frontcourt. Jackson could easily anchor Utah's defense for the next half-decade or form a devastating frontcourt trio beside Walker Kessler and Lauri Markkanen. Over the last three seasons, he's also averaged 21.6 points per game while shooting 52% inside the arc.
In the short term, Utah's priority should still be trying to keep a top-eight protected pick (owed to Oklahoma City) this campaign, but it looks like it's time to accelerate this rebuild as soon as next season. Jackson could just be the first domino, as the Jazz still own six first-round picks between 2028 and 2032 in addition to coveted talents like Jackson, Markkanen, Kessler, emerging youngster Keyonte George, and Ace Bailey.
Celtics get frontcourt help with Vucevic
| Celtics receive | Bulls receive |
|---|---|
| Nikola Vucevic | Anfernee Simons |
| 2nd-Rd Pick |
The Celtics were expected to take a gap year as franchise superstar Jayson Tatum rehabbed a devastating Achilles injury. Instead, the third-place Celtics have made a win-now move to plug their biggest hole. Who can blame them? Boston is a hardworking team that boasts the league's second-ranked offense and could get Tatum back for the playoffs, all the while somehow thriving with Neemias Queta and Luka Garza filling in at center.
Vucevic won't solve any defensive concerns, but the two-time All-Star can still help. He's averaging 16.9 points per game, shooting nearly 57% inside the arc and 38% from deep. The two-time All-Star gives the Celtics an interior scoring threat they didn't have before and a dynamic big man who could ease the offensive load currently shouldered by Jaylen Brown (and Derrick White and Payton Pritchard to a lesser extent). Vucevic's top-20 defensive rebound rate also won't hurt a Celtics squad that ranks 23rd when it comes to cleaning the defensive glass.
An already elite offense just got much tougher to stop. The Celtics did well to turn a second-round pick and Simons - who they acquired in last year's Jrue Holiday trade - into a more helpful former All-Star on an expiring contract. Boston also cut its luxury-tax bill by more than $22 million and got under the first apron. Among the many advantages of this maneuver, the Celtics can now sign a buyout player who was earning more than the non-taxpayer mid-level exception ($14.1 million) as they continue to load up for the playoffs.
Meanwhile, the Bulls resisted calls to rebuild and sell high on their veteran stars in recent years, which has led them here.
Simons is a terrific shooter and should be able to score efficiently off the bench for as long as he wants. However, he's also a pending unrestricted free agent, making the upside of this return a little cloudy for Chicago.
Bulls-Pistons-Wolves deal could have big implications
| Pistons receive | Bulls receive | Timberwolves receive |
|---|---|---|
| Kevin Huerter | Jaden Ivey | TBA |
| Dario Saric | Mike Conley | |
| 2026 1st-Rd Swap (MIN) |
This three-team trade is notable enough. Ivey has struggled to find his rhythm in Detroit since left leg and right knee injuries, but the speedy guard has star upside. Chicago taking a flier on such a youngster rather than chasing overpriced veterans is a step in the right direction for an organization obsessed with mediocrity rather than long-term planning. Though Conley's career is on its last legs, the floor general's expiring contract won't complicate things for the Bulls.
The first-place Pistons desperately needed shooting, and Ivey was always assumed to be part of the package that would help Detroit fill that hole. But rather than having to attach a large salary (like Tobias Harris') and draft capital to the young guard in order to get a star, the Pistons are actually the team acquiring an extra first-round pick in this deal (a protected pick swap with Minnesota). Huerter, despite currently mired in his worst shooting slump, is a career 37% 3-point shooter whose volume and off-ball activity demand defensive attention. He and Saric are also both on expiring contracts.
If Huerter finds his stroke in Detroit, a Finals contender will have gotten better. However, even with the pick swap in the mix, this feels like a disappointing return for giving up on Ivey.
Finally, the Timberwolves cut their tax bill and ducked under the first apron, giving the reigning two-time West finalists much more flexibility in their reported pursuit of Giannis Antetokounmpo. A protected first-round swap in a contending year is a small price to pay.
Joseph Casciaro is theScore's lead NBA reporter.