2023 NBA trade grades: How did Lakers do in Russell Westbrook deal?

National Basketball Association

1 hour ago

NBA trade season is here! The deadline is Feb. 9, and we’re finally beginning to see teams discuss and pull off deals. 

On Sunday, the Mavericks and Nets reportedly connected on a deal centered around star guard Kyrie Irving.

Here are our grades for completed deals:

Feb. 8: Lakers part ways with Westbrook, Russell returns to L.A.

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Lakers get: D’Angelo Russell, Malik Beasley, Jarred VanderbiltTimberwolves get: Mike Conley Jr., Nickeil Alexander-Walker, draft picksJazz get: Russell Westbrook, Juan Toscano-Anderson, Damian Jones, lightly protected 2027 first-round pick

Grade for Lakers: B

Let’s start with the positives. The Lakers’ desperately needed to bolster their depth and, between the Rui Hachimura deal and this one, they’ve done so. D’Angelo Russell, aside from being a better player than Russell Westbrook, is also a better fit alongside LeBron James and Anthony Davis. For one, unlike Westbrook, he can shoot. He’s also good at it. He’s a career 36% 3-point shooter and has canned 39% of his triples this season. He can run offense for the second unit, by himself or alongside Davis. And while he’s never exactly been the strongest or most-willing defender, the presence of Davis (and LeBron, at least when he’s engaged) can cover for that. It’s also worth mentioning that Russell’s contract expires after this season. So if a certain point guard in Dallas decides he’d like to play alongside LeBron again, the Lakers should be able to make that happen. Adding Beasley and Vanderbilt bolster the Lakers’ depth even further. Beasley is a nice shooter off the bench (career 38% from deep), while Vanderbilt is good backup big and one of the league’s premier offensive rebounders.  

There’s no question the Lakers are better than they were yesterday. But after being so stingy with their future draft picks, it is fair to wonder whether this return was one worthy of finally pulling the trigger. The Lakers are going to make the playoffs. But this is a team that’s supposed to have championship goals. 

Grade for Timberwolves: A-

Minnesota was in desperate need of a point guard, someone who could feel comfortable playing alongside Anthony Edwards, Karl-Anthony Towns and run pick-and-rolls with Rudy Gobert. They’d done a good job tilting Russell in that direction over the past few months, and Russell deserves credit for adapting. But he also has an ability to grate on coaches and teammates. Conley is a steady, respected veteran, who can shoot (38.1% 3-pointer shooter for his career) and, even at the age 35, is a better defender than D-Lo. He also does a better job of hanging onto the ball (2.8 turnovers per 100 possessions, compared to Russell’s 3.9), an essential skill for a team with the third-worst turnover rate in the league. The Timberwolves could use some veteran leadership as well. At 29-28, they’re in ninth place in the West, but just 3.5 games behind the currently-third-seeded Sacramento Kings

Grade for Jazz: A

The Jazz are all about the long term and, well, there are few better long term plays than shorting the Lakers. This deal cost them nothing of importance, and they now have 15 unprotected or lightly protected first-round picks through 2029.

— Yaron Weitzman

Feb. 5: Mavs acquire Kyrie in blockbuster deal

Mavericks get: Kyrie Irving, Markieff MorrisNets get: Spencer Dinwiddie, Dorian Finney-Smith, 2027 second-round pick, 2029 first-round pick, 2029 second-round pick

Grade for Mavericks: B-

You can understand the reasoning behind this move on the surface. The Mavericks have a superstar in Luka Dončić and desperately needed to find him a co-star. Otherwise, they appeared doomed to be one of those teams that hovers around .500 and, maybe, if everything breaks right, is able to win a couple of playoff series like they did last season. But is Kyrie really the guy you want to bet on? Not only is he unreliable as, well, a professional, but are we sure he fits next to Luka? How’s he going to feel watching Dončić dance with the ball for 12 seconds? And what about on the defensive end, where the Mavericks will be even weaker now without Finney-Smith? That said, there’s logic here. Irving gives the Mavericks an upside they didn’t possess before. And if things don’t work out and Irving walks in the offseason, they’ll now have close to max cap-space to play with.

Also, there’s the whole, “Kyrie seems to blow up every situation he enters” thing, which is probably not what you want if you have a generational talent like Luka.

Grade for Nets: A-

It’d be harder to do better given the situation. Sure, the Nets could have ignored Irving’s request and held onto him, but doing so could have nuked their entire season. Also, given Kyrie’s history, are we sure he would have suited up if no deal had been made? Instead, the Nets let some of the league’s most desperate teams fight over themselves — the Lakers, the Clippers, the Mavericks — and in doing so, received a nice return. Dinwiddie isn’t close to as dynamic as Irving, but he can replace some of his shot creation. Finney-Smith is a solid wing defender and career 36% 3-point shooter. And they also got a nice selection of picks which they can package for another win-now player before the deadline.

It’d probably be best to give them an incomplete until we see what they do next, but all things considered, the Nets did a good job recouping some value.  

— Yaron Weitzman

Jan. 23: Lakers beef up frontcourt, reportedly make deal with Wizards

Lakers get: Rui Hachimura Wizards get: Kendrick Nunn, 2023 second-round pick via Bulls, 2028 second-round pick, Lakers’ second-round pick in 2029

Grade for Lakers: B

This is an upgrade for the Lakers. Hachimura, the No. 9 pick in the 2019 draft, is averaging 13 points a game on 48.8 percent shooting, so he could help spread the floor and potentially give the Lakers another much-needed offensive weapon. But the Lakers really need a 3-and-D specialist and Hachimura is shooting 33.7 percent from beyond the arc this season, a significant dropoff from the impressive 44.7 percent he shot last season. Also, he’s not considered to be a standout defender, which is another area the Lakers need to address, considering they’re 20th in the league in defensive rating (113.8).

That being said, the Lakers gave up very little in this deal, considering Nunn has been ineffective, averaging career-lows this season in points (6.7), field-goal percentage (40.6) and minutes (13.5). And perhaps most importantly, after standing pat at the trade deadline last season, the Lakers are signaling to their stars that they’re going to try to make some changes. Hachimura is only 24 and has a lot of upside. He’s a strong catch-and-shoot player who has proven he can make a 3 – and he has the athleticism to be developed into a strong defender.

Grade for Wizards: C

As for the Wizards, it’s clear that their priority is trying to re-sign Kyle Kuzma to a long-term deal. And after not being able to agree to a rookie extension with Hachimura, it became increasingly likely that things weren’t going to work out. The Wizards didn’t get much in return for Hachimura – they likely could’ve done better than Nunn and three future second-round picks in exchange for a recent top-10 pick. That being said, Nunn was playing much better basketball before a knee injury sidelined him all of last season, so maybe a franchise change will serve him well. Also, there’s still a lot of time left before the trade deadline so perhaps the Wizards have Nunn and the picks in mind for another deal.

– Melissa Rohlin

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