After months of speculation about whether the Lakers would include both of their tradable future first-round picks (2027 and 2029) in a Russell Westbrook trade, the club only attached its 2027 first-rounder to Westbrook in a three-team trade agreement with Minnesota and Utah. Perhaps most importantly, the Lakers’ front office retained its ability to trade its 2029 pick despite lightly protecting the 2027 selection.
As Zach Lowe of ESPN tweets, the top-four protected 2027 first-round pick the Lakers are sending to the Jazz in the deal won’t carry over to 2028 if it lands in its protected range. In that scenario, the Lakers would instead send their ’27 second-round pick to Utah.
If the protections on the first-round pick had carried over to 2028 (or 2029), the Lakers’ ability to trade their 2029 first-rounder would’ve been significantly hampered due to the Stepien rule that prohibits teams from leaving themselves without first-round selections in consecutive future seasons. But because Los Angeles’ obligations to Utah will end in 2027 no matter where that pick lands, the Lakers still have the ability to dangle their 2029 first-rounder, unencumbered, in trade talks today or during the offseason.
Here’s more on the three-team deal that’s sending D’Angelo Russell back to Los Angeles and Mike Conley to Minnesota:
- “Addition by subtraction” was part of the Lakers‘ thinking in moving Westbrook, according to Jovan Buha of The Athletic, who hears from team and league sources that Westbrook’s situation in Los Angeles had become “untenable” during the last week, with both sides ready to move on from the partnership.
- The Lakers took a patient, diligent approach to solving the Westbrook problem, passing on opportunities last offseason and earlier this season to trade both of their available first-round picks in deals with Indiana, Brooklyn, and others, writes Eric Pincus of Bleacher Report. While the Lakers still have a ways to go to even qualify for the postseason, they’re far better equipped now to earn a spot and to be competitive in a playoff series, in Pincus’ view.
- Losing Malik Beasley, Jarred Vanderbilt, and especially Conley hit the Jazz‘s locker room hard, according to Sarah Todd of The Deseret News. “You know that trades are like a legitimate thing, but to go through it,” rookie center Walker Kessler said, before trailing off. “I’m a very empathetic person, so you just kind of feel for them. I’m not saying anything was done wrong. It’s part of the business, but it’s definitely a hard thing to go through.”
- Although Conley was “universally beloved” within the organization, the Jazz‘s front office wanted to move his contract, which was a factor in the decision to make the trade, says Eric Walden of The Salt Lake Tribune. Conley’s deal includes a $14MM+ partial guarantee for next season.
- In a column for The Star Tribune, Chip Scoggins says that trading Russell was the right move for the Timberwolves, but suggests that the team’s long-term plan is still unclear. As Scoggins notes, the Wolves are ostensibly in win-now mode, but just traded away their starting point guard and still don’t have a timeline for Karl-Anthony Towns‘ return.
- Assuming no new pieces are added to the three-team trade once it’s made official, the Jazz will create trade exceptions worth approximately $5MM and $4.4MM, while the Timberwolves will generate a trade exception worth $3.7MM. The Lakers will create two trade exceptions as well, though neither will be worth more than $2.3MM.
They should trade Towns as well. He’s not a winner, will stifle Ant’s control of the team and the two bigs thing doesn’t work
I am really surprised and disappointed in Ainge. He got trash for Bogdanovic and got trash in this deal too. I don’t get it. The whole point of that 27 lakers pick is that is going to at the top of the draft. LA will be a wasteland in 4 years. It’s almost 100% going to be top. So Ainge might end up with a single second rounder. He fleeced the wolves on Gobert and got really good value for Mitchell but blew these two big time
None of those guys in this trade were worth a first rounders by themselves.
They are worth more than a second rounder.
Taking on Westbrook’s salary is worth more than a second by itself. Never mind including 3 productive players.
Seriously, even if the 2027 pick is #5 it’s close
to an F
The Lakers are the Yankees of the NBA, always getting sweetheart deals to keep them at the top.
With the new lottery rules, there’s a decent chance it falls outside the top 4.
Seems that Ainge is all about cleaning up the books even as early as next season, and despite it likely having cost some draft capital in its place. It’s an interesting priority considering their rebuild.
Whatever you think of his recent moves, it’s pretty clear he has big plans over the next year or two. I don’t think he’s just going to have a firesale and call it a day. Otherwise, all the cap considerations wouldn’t make sense.
Cap space must be the most overrated asset. Yes its awesome to build from scratch with freedom in terms of salary and not be stuck with bad contracts, but it never ends with teams making big positive splash in FA. Wich is the best FA signing from the last two decades? I can only came up with LeBron.
Neither of Kawhi, KD, Kyrie, Amare, Dwight, etc. were succesfull.
…did KD not sign with the Warriors in FA? Because I’m pretty sure that helped them. Bosh also matters. Yeah, LeBron was better, but the Heat weren’t winning two championships without him.
Your point is taken, but I don’t agree that it’s so all-encompassing.
Yes, sry! i forgot about KD to GSW, that was massive.
My point is that absolutely more often than not teams fail to sign and get success via FA. Even more when we talk about Utah, maybe the least FA destination for big name players. I think Ainge lost this trade and the Bogdanovic one; you can’t win them all though.
Agreed. Signing your way to a title isn’t as “easy” as the 2010’s Heat made it look. And they didn’t make it look easy xD
Life guarantees only a few things – death, taxes, and Timberwolves’ managerial incompetence.
From the Jazz’s perspective idk what Danny is smoking. He could have just completed a DLo for Conley deal and not even involved the Lakers. He could have then traded Beasley and Vanderbilt separately, not even involving the Lakers. Several teams had interest and I imagine they would have gotten more than a possible 1st, guaranteed 2nd.
Like we just saw a trade involving a 1st turning into 4 2nds.
Obtaining expiring contracts is very simple. There’s a plethora on contenders. Danny Green, Thybulle, K Love, LeVert, Barnes, Ross, Crowder, Saric.
The compensation is very fishy. It’s almost a blatant tank trade, no?
Worst trade in Jazz history. Ainge should resign. The team will not recover on a decade.
did you say a plethora? do you even know what a plethora is?? I just dont want someone saying there’s a plethora….when they don’t know what a plethora is!
Inconceivable!
Ainge will end up back on his feet within the next few seasons.
Westbrook will never step into the Jazz locker room. He gone!
I really love this from a Lakers and Wolves perspective as both teams got so much more watchable… They just make better sense constructed as they are now…
The Jazz tho… Maybe Ainge wasn’t getting the offers he wanted and took what he could… Or has plans to ship Westbrook off somewhere… But a single pick for that?… Doesn’t make sense…
I see Utah buy out Westbrook, then signs with Miami or LA Clippers.