Southeast Notes: Heat, Lowry, Hawks, Wizards

Miami has already made one trade this week — it sent Dewayne Dedmon to the Spurs in a salary dump. While that move created more wiggle room under the luxury tax in addition to freeing up a roster spot, it also made it more complicated for the Heat to pull off additional trades, as Anthony Chiang of The Miami Herald explains.

The Heat are highly unlikely to deal away Jimmy Butler or Bam Adebayo, Chiang writes. There are five players — Omer Yurtseven, Haywood Highsmith, Gabe Vincent, Max Strus and Udonis Haslem — on minimum-salary contracts, which are relatively difficult to move because the contracts are so small. Same goes for rookie first-rounder Nikola Jovic, who makes $2.24MM.

Dedmon’s $4.7MM contract might have been useful to pair with one of the minimum salaries to try and find a player in the $6-8MM range, but he was already dealt.

It would be challenging to trade Tyler Herro due to the poison pill provision — there’s a huge difference between his incoming and outgoing salary after he signed a four-year, $120MM rookie scale extension before the season started.

That leaves a small group of possible trade candidates, which includes Caleb Martin ($6.48MM), Victor Oladipo ($8.75MM), Duncan Robinson ($16.9MM) and Kyle Lowry ($28.33MM). Martin’s contract is team-friendly and he’s a starter, so it would take a lot to pry him away.

The latter three players are all currently injured, which complicates matters. Oladipo has the right to veto a trade, Chiang notes, while Robinson and Lowry are viewed as negative assets due to the size and length of their contracts, so the Heat would likely have to attach sweeteners to deal them.

Essentially, it probably makes more sense for the Heat to save their draft picks to upgrade the roster in the offseason unless something favorable comes up before tomorrow’s deadline.

Here’s more from the Southeast:

  • Lowry deserves credit for not complaining about a lesser role with the Heat, but it’s clear the partnership has run its course, argues David Hyde of The South Florida Sun Sentinel. Age and a balky knee have diminished Lowry’s production, and the six-time All-Star is now viewed more as salary ballast than a primary contributor, according to Hyde, who says it’s only a matter of time before the 36-year-old is moved — the only question is when, not if.
  • The Hawks have plenty of individual talent, but at 27-28, they’ve had a relatively disappointing season to this point, and there’s no quick-fix solution to solve some of their issues in the next 24 hours, Jeff Schultz of The Athletic opines. Schultz points out that if Bogdan Bogdanovic picks up his $18MM player option for next season and the team retains its current roster, Atlanta will be near the luxury tax line in 2023/24 with only 11 players on the roster. It’s clear that changes are needed, but Schultz believes it makes more sense to push some off until the offseason.
  • Hawks general manager Landry Fields says no one on the roster is untouchable, but he likes the current group and the team is still evaluating its options. “As far as anybody (being) untouchable, it’s like, you never say never, right?” Fields told Lauren Williams of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (subscriber link). “As you know, obviously, some guys, or you know, all guys have value, add value all over the place. So you’re always weighing that. But it’s a fluid market today, right now, and we’ll see what gets done before the deadline.”
  • The Wizards aren’t where they had hoped to be at this point, currently sitting with a 24-29 record, in a virtual tie for the 10th-best record in the East. Chase Hughes of NBC Sports Washington lists three general things the team could look to improve by tomorrow’s deadline.
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