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Durant

Kevin Durant traded to Rockets: Grades, reaction, Suns' next steps
Esports

Kevin Durant traded to Rockets: Grades, reaction, Suns’ next steps

by admin June 24, 2025



Jun 22, 2025, 05:13 PM ET

It’s not every day the NBA world gets a Game 7 of the Finals and a future Hall of Famer changing teams via blockbuster trade.

But just hours before the Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers play for the 2025 title (8 p.m. ET, ABC), the Phoenix Suns and Houston Rockets linked up to send Kevin Durant to Houston in a deal for Jalen Green, Dillon Brooks, the No. 10 overall pick in Wednesday’s draft and five second-rounders.

Which franchise won the trade? How will Durant fit within the Rockets’ young roster? Are the Suns going full rebuild?

ESPN’s NBA insiders are examining the deal from every angle, including trade grades, the biggest winners and losers in the deal’s aftermath and intel from around the league on what lies ahead for Houston and Phoenix.

Jump to a section:
Grading the trade
Winners and losers

Leaguewide reaction

Trade grades: KD to Houston

Houston Rockets: B+

There was a strange contrast over the past month as discussion of Durant’s next destination heated up at the same time the 2025 NBA playoffs were reaching their conclusion. Youth and depth led the Pacers and Thunder to the NBA Finals, yet teams were competing to catch them by giving up multiple contributors to bring in Durant, who will turn 37 around the start of training camp.

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Coming off finishing second in the West with only one starter (guard Fred VanVleet) older than 28, the Rockets were surely best positioned to thread the needle of surrounding Durant with enough talent to contend for a championship — particularly as the price dropped to the point where they didn’t have to include any of their most prized young players in return.

The seven-game series Houston lost to the veteran-laden Golden State Warriors in the opening round exposed the Rockets’ need for more half-court scoring punch. The Rockets ranked 22nd in points per play on their first attempt to score outside of transition, per Cleaning the Glass, ahead of only the Orlando Magic among playoff teams.

During the regular season, Houston was able to compensate with frequent use of transition and by dominating the offensive glass. According to Cleaning the Glass, no team averaged more points per missed shot on second chances. Both of those factors tend to dry up in the playoffs, especially late in close games. The Rockets went 0-3 in “clutch” games against the Warriors, posting an ugly 91 offensive rating with the margin inside five points in the last five minutes of those games per NBA Advanced Stats.

Although Durant is no longer as singular a scorer as in his prime — when he posted a true shooting percentage (TS%) at least 15% better than league average nine times according to Basketball-Reference — he’s still as good as just about anyone creating his own offense. Among players with a usage rate of 28% or higher in at least 500 minutes last season, only Denver Nuggets three-time MVP big man Nikola Jokic surpassed Durant’s .642 TS%.

The contrast with Green especially favors Durant. Also a No. 2 pick, Green had Houston’s highest usage rate last season with a below-average .544 TS%. (All-Star center Alperen Sengun, who had the team’s second-highest usage, wasn’t any better at .545 but makes more plays for others and has scored more efficiently in the past. Green’s TS% was a career high.)

All the Rockets’ young stars faced a tough adjustment to the playoffs, but none more so than Green, who averaged 13.3 PPG on 37% shooting. His 38-point Game 2 was the only time Green surpassed 12 points or shot better than 40% in the series. Essentially, Golden State condensed all the fears about Green’s weaknesses as a leading scorer into one, salient seven-game sample.

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0:58

The numbers behind KD’s trade to the Rockets

With Kevin Durant heading to Houston, check out some key statistics and facts from his time with the Suns.

The bigger loss for Houston in the short term will surely be Brooks, whose arrival was key to the Rockets’ rapid evolution from 60-plus losses in both 2021-22 and 2022-23 to 52 wins last season. Along with VanVleet and coach Ime Udoka, Brooks helped transform Houston’s defensive culture. And as much as the Rockets utilized depth to finish atop a crowded pack of West contenders during the regular season, they’re suddenly thin on the perimeter.

Amen Thompson will undoubtedly be a key part to solving whatever issues this trade creates. Thompson, who got my vote for Defensive Player of the Year, surpassed Brooks as Houston’s perimeter stopper last season. (Having two elite defenders was certainly a luxury, one that helped the Rockets defend both Stephen Curry and Jimmy Butler in the opening round.)

Because Thompson can defend on the perimeter at 6-foot-7, swapping two wings for the 6-foot-11 Durant essentially moves him from the Rockets’ power forward to their shooting guard without fundamentally altering the structure of Houston’s offense.

It will be interesting to see where Udoka settles on a fifth starter alongside Durant, Sengun, Thompson and VanVleet. Jabari Smith Jr. could move back into the starting five after Thompson replaced him in the lineup midseason, which would give the Rockets a frontcourt full of players listed at 6-foot-11. Alternatively, Houston’s most like-for-like replacement for Brooks would be sixth man Tari Eason.

Promoting one of those players to the starting five does put more pressure on recent first-round picks Reed Sheppard and Cam Whitmore to step forward. Sheppard, the No. 3 overall pick, played just 654 minutes as a rookie, while Whitmore was at the fringes of Udoka’s rotation when everyone was healthy. Whitmore has been productive when he has gotten opportunities and Sheppard was my top-rated prospect in last year’s draft, so the Rockets’ front office is justified in believing both players are capable of contributing more.

Adding Durant, and presumably signing him to an extension beyond 2025-26, will force difficult financial choices for Houston. Having signed center Steven Adams to a three-year, $39 million extension, the Rockets are already pushing the luxury tax this season. If they fill out their roster with players making the minimum, they’re about $33 million below the projected luxury-tax line before addressing VanVleet. Houston holds a $44.9 million team option for the veteran point guard but could decline it in favor of a long-term deal that pays him less in 2025-26.

Breaking News from Shams Charania

Download the ESPN app and enable Shams Charania’s news alerts to receive push notifications for the latest updates first. Opt in by tapping the alerts bell in the top right corner. For more information, click here.

Paying a small amount of luxury tax this season wouldn’t affect the Rockets much, but delaying the clock on the repeater tax could have huge ramifications down the road. Houston will get much more expensive once Thompson’s rookie contract expires in 2027. The Rockets are surely penciling in a max deal for Thompson, while Eason and Smith are eligible for rookie extensions now. Meanwhile, Durant’s salary could increase on an extension as he heads into his late 30s.

Those are problems for another day. Houston has moved on to the next phase of an impressive roster build without giving up any of the team’s most valuable draft picks. The Rockets retained Phoenix’s unprotected 2027 first-round pick, plus the opportunity to get the two best of picks from the Suns, Brooklyn Nets and Dallas Mavericks in 2029. They also have a swap with the Nets in 2027 that puts pressure on Brooklyn’s rebuild to accelerate.

Based on their combination of young talent and the lack of a go-to scorer, Houston was always the best fit as Durant’s next team. Now we’ll see whether he can lift the Rockets to their first playoff series win since former Oklahoma City Thunder teammate James Harden was starring in Houston.

Phoenix Suns: B

This Durant trade is surely the beginning of a roster makeover rather than the completion of it. Phoenix got back a pair of wings, exacerbating the imbalance of a roster whose five highest-paid players (Bradley Beal, Devin Booker, Green, Brooks and Grayson Allen) could all be called natural shooting guards.

Pending those future moves, this Durant trade seems pragmatic for the Suns, who never stood a chance of recouping the value they gave up to get him from the Nets at the 2023 trade deadline. Durant is more than two years older now and a year away from free agency, meaning Phoenix had far less control of negotiations. And after the team’s relationship with Durant frayed when the Suns discussed trading him in February, bringing him back wasn’t a realistic threat.

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1:32

What Kevin Durant trade means for Rockets, Suns

Tim Bontemps breaks down what the Rockets and Suns are gaining from the Kevin Durant trade.

The worst-case scenario for Phoenix was trading Durant for veterans who fit better alongside Beal and Booker in a misguided attempt to win now. Again, let’s not rule out that happening down the line, but for now the Suns got what could be the best 2025 draft pick to change hands and the 23-year-old Green.

I never liked the three-year extension the Rockets gave Green, which both pays him like an above-average starter ($33.3 million in 2025-26) when he’s not currently one and allows him to become an unrestricted free agent at age 25 in 2027 if he does break out. (That extension did serve its purpose for Houston, as structuring this deal as a sign-and-trade involving Green as a restricted free agent would almost certainly have been impossible.)

Still, it’s certainly possible Green can tap into his upside if he sticks around. He has never played alongside a creator as talented as Booker, and Green could get more opportunities as a “second-side guy” when the ball swings over to him after defenses have loaded up to stop Booker.

Brooks would immediately become the Suns’ best perimeter defender, and it’s amusing to see him finally land in Phoenix six-plus years after the miscommunication over which “Brooks” the Suns were getting in a deal involving Trevor Ariza, who is long since retired. If Phoenix is going to cut payroll to avoid exceeding the second apron and having another first-round pick frozen from trades, however, Brooks is a likely candidate given his value throughout the league.

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In five years, the No. 10 pick will likely matter most to the Suns. They haven’t picked that high since 2020, when they jumped from the lottery to the NBA Finals after taking Jalen Smith No. 10, two picks ahead of Tyrese Haliburton. Phoenix, which has only one first-round pick on a rookie contract on the roster (Ryan Dunn), now holds a pair of first-rounders next Thursday.

Acquiring Durant was obviously a failure for the Suns, who ended up winning only a single playoff series during his three seasons on the roster and still owe their 2027 and 2029 first-round picks from that trade. Phoenix didn’t have nearly enough leverage to get those picks back from the Rockets.

That choice, plus the subsequent Beal trade that further limited the Suns’ flexibility and others that lost control of their first-rounders through 2031, is in the past. All they can do now is try to keep making better decisions that incrementally brighten a gloomy future outlook.

— Kevin Pelton

Winners and losers of the deal

Winners: Tari Eason, Reed Sheppard and Cam Whitmore

While Durant raises Houston’s ceiling, the Rockets’ depth took a hit with this deal as they traded two starters for one. Green and Brooks combined to play 65 minutes per game this season, so this exchange opens up 30-35 “new” minutes per night to be distributed among Houston’s existing roster.

Eason, Sheppard and Whitmore are the most likely beneficiaries, especially because Durant slots in as a natural power forward, whereas Green and Brooks are lower on the positional spectrum. All three deserve more playing time: Eason ranked just eighth on the team in playoff minutes, while Sheppard and Whitmore combined for 15 minutes in Houston’s first-round series loss to the Golden State Warriors.

All three also offer skill sets that should help replace Green and Brooks. In his second season, Sheppard will provide backcourt creation beyond VanVleet, after the No. 3 pick didn’t get much run as a rookie. Whitmore is a talented if inconsistent scorer, just like Green — their per-minute numbers were similar this season, and their true shooting percentages were nearly identical — and he won’t turn 21 until next month. And Eason is an even more impactful defender than Brooks, although his offensive game isn’t nearly as developed.

To that end, Sheppard and Whitmore should also provide Houston with much-needed shooting, as Green and Brooks ranked first and third, respectively, on the team in made 3-pointers this season. Durant can help, but he is more of a pure shooter who happens to take some 3s than a long-range marksman; his 2.6 made 3s per game this season tied a career high.

In a best-case scenario, it’s possible that Eason, Sheppard and Whitmore step in and replace Green and Brooks without any meaningful on-court losses. If that developmental plan succeeds, the Rockets would, in essence, be adding Durant just for a small package of picks.

Loser: Oklahoma City Thunder

As of this writing, it’s still unknown whether the Thunder are 2024-25 champions. But regardless of the result of Sunday’s Game 7, Houston’s major upgrade is bad news for Oklahoma City in 2025-26, which the Thunder will surely enter as favorites to repeat as Western Conference champs.

Durant doesn’t just strengthen the No. 2 seed behind Oklahoma City. He also represents a particular player archetype that the Thunder might struggle to guard, because of his height advantage against all of their fearsome perimeter defenders.

The Thunder are still the best-positioned team in the West, both now and into the future. But every strong opponent represents another obstacle that could prevent their potential dynasty. It wouldn’t be a surprise to see Houston develop into their fiercest challenger, just as the Rockets did against the Warriors dynasty last decade — when, ironically, Durant was the one helping the champs maintain their throne, rather than the final piece boosting the upstarts.

Winner: Minnesota Timberwolves

Including the trade deadline, Minnesota has now attempted but failed to acquire Durant in two separate transaction windows. But that’s not necessarily a bad thing for the Timberwolves, who have reached consecutive conference finals for the first time in franchise history without him.

Perhaps Durant could have helped close the gap between Minnesota and Oklahoma City — which might be a wide one, given that the Thunder dispatched the Timberwolves in five games last month. But the cost to acquire the 36-year-old offense-first forward would have hit Minnesota hard, if it included center Rudy Gobert, as was rumored in recent weeks.

Without Gobert, Minnesota’s defense might collapse, taking the team’s identity with it. The other bigs on the roster — Julius Randle and Naz Reid — are, like Durant, offense-first contributors rather than anchor defenders. And a frontcourt with multiple defensive question marks can’t win in the modern NBA.

The difference between the Rockets’ and Timberwolves’ situations is that Durant definitely makes Houston better, because the Rockets can backfill the production they lost in the trade. The fit in Minnesota would have come with a lot more question marks about what moves came next.

It’s unclear what alternate route Minnesota will take this summer, now that a Durant deal is off the table. But it’s equally unclear that Durant would have made the Timberwolves a more potent challenger to the Thunder — to say nothing of the risk Minnesota would have assumed by trading for a star who didn’t want to play there.

Winners: East contenders

Most of the serious Durant suitors play in the West, but the best teams in the East still must be breathing a sigh of relief, now that they don’t have to worry about Durant barging in to boost a competitor.

The East still projects as incredibly wide open next season, which could have incentivized a fringe contender (the Detroit Pistons, perhaps, or the further-down Miami Heat) to gamble on the 15-time All-Star. But none raised an offer to beat the Rockets’, so Durant is staying in the West, keeping the league axis titled firmly in that direction.

It’s still possible that other stars will cross eastward this summer, following Desmond Bane’s move from Memphis to Orlando. But Durant was the most obvious candidate to do so. (The other superstar in trade rumors is Giannis Antetokounmpo, who already plays in the East.)

Loser: Bradley Beal

As Pelton noted, the Suns’ five highest-paid players could all be called shooting guards. While that might change with a Grayson Allen trade, this deal still bumps Beal, who’s set to earn $53.4 million next season, down the depth chart.

Assuming the Suns keep Green rather than trading him to a third team, they will surely devote more playing time and developmental attention to the 23-year-old former No. 2 pick, rather than to a player in his 30s on the downslope of his career. Theoretically, trading Durant could have freed up more on-ball opportunities for a scorer with Beal’s résumé, but Green — and Brooks, who attempted 12 shots per game this season — will receive the lion’s share instead.

Perhaps that state of affairs is OK with Beal, who seems happy in Phoenix; if he were inclined to waive his no-trade clause to move to another city, he might have already been dealt. But Beal’s usage rate already dropped to a career low this season, and his minutes per game were at the lowest rate in nine years. It’s hard to imagine either of those numbers rebounding in 2025-26, with Booker and Green now posing as the future of the franchise. Will Beal still be happy if he’s the No. 3 or 4 shooting guard on his own team?

— Zach Kram

Leaguewide intel: Next for Suns and Rockets?

A quick canvassing of the league in the wake of the Durant trade reached a pretty clear consensus: a great deal for the Rockets and the best the Suns could do for Durant under the circumstances they’d put themselves in.

“They did pretty well, all things considered,” one executive told ESPN of Phoenix’s return in the deal.

For the Rockets, this accomplishes what have been their twin objectives: continue to upgrade a roster that was a surprising second seed in the West last season, while not kneecapping the ability of the team’s young core to continue to improve and develop.

League insiders praised Houston for threading that needle.

Green, the No. 2 overall pick in the 2021 NBA draft, is a talented scorer. But he’s also an inefficient one and struggled mightily in Houston’s seven-game loss to the Warriors in the first round of the playoffs, shooting 37% overall and 29% from 3-point range.

Game 1: Pacers 111, Thunder 110
Game 2: Thunder 123, Pacers 107
Game 3: Pacers 116, Thunder 107
Game 4: Thunder 111, Pacers 104
Game 5: Thunder 120, Pacers 109
Game 6: Pacers 108, Thunder 91
Game 7: at Thunder, Sun. June 22, 8 p.m.
*All times Eastern

• More NBA playoffs from ESPN

Durant, at 36 years old this past season, averaged 26 points per game on 52.7% shooting overall and 43% shooting from 3, and will immediately give Houston’s offense a far higher ceiling — while also creating more room for Alperen Sengun and Amen Thompson to operate. Doing it while keeping all of the team’s premium young talent, plus its future draft capital — it leaves open the possibility of a second big trade for a prime-age star if the opportunity arises and Houston wants to pursue it — makes it an even bigger win.

The widespread expectation across the league is also that Fred VanVleet, who has a $44.8 million team option for next season, will be back in Houston, too. The only question is whether that will be on that option number, or if the two sides will negotiate a longer-term deal to ease Houston’s financial burdens this season.

For Phoenix, the question now is what’s next for a roster that is clearly far from complete. The Suns currently have six players making at least $10 million for the 2025-26 season, and all of them — Devin Booker, Bradley Beal, Green, Brooks, Grayson Allen and Royce O’Neale — are wing players. Booker, Beal and Green, in particular, have extremely overlapping skill sets.

Sources said Phoenix is expected to be aggressive over the next couple of weeks, with a mandate to retool its roster around Booker. He is expected to get a two-year extension next month in the neighborhood of $150 million, tying him to the franchise through the 2029-30 season. But the Suns currently have a roster that doesn’t have a point guard, likely needs an upgrade at center over Nick Richards and doesn’t have a clear-cut starting option at power forward.

“They have a lot of talented players,” another executive said, “but do they fit together?”

Another question: What will the Suns do with the No. 10 pick they have acquired? For a team largely devoid of young talent, certainly adding a lottery pick in a good draft to a core led by Booker is a good long-term investment. But will an opportunity arise to upgrade in the short-term by using that pick?

Before this trade, the Suns were severely depleted in draft pick reserves. By doing this deal, it now gives Phoenix some amount of currency — even if outside of that 10th pick this year most of it is either in late firsts or second-round picks — to try to upgrade.

The truth is, however, that the Suns kept waiting for a team to up its offer, and no one did. The Rockets didn’t move multiple picks or any of their premium young talent. The Heat, the finalist in the Durant sweepstakes, had no interest in including Kel’el Ware, sources said, while Houston wasn’t willing to budge off its offer and no one else was pushing to make a deal, either.

As a result, on the day the Thunder hope to claim its first-ever NBA championship, Durant is now a Rocket, and could enter next season armed with the best potential chance to take down his former team.

— Tim Bontemps



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NBA Finals 2025 - What we're hearing on Durant, Giannis, Knicks coach search
Esports

NBA Finals 2025 – What we’re hearing on Durant, Giannis, Knicks coach search

by admin June 14, 2025


  • Tim Bontemps

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    Tim Bontemps

    ESPN Senior Writer

      Tim Bontemps is a senior NBA writer for ESPN.com who covers the league and what’s impacting it on and off the court, including trade deadline intel, expansion and his MVP Straw Polls. You can find Tim alongside Brian Windhorst and Tim MacMahon on The Hoop Collective podcast.
  • Brian Windhorst

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    Brian Windhorst

    ESPN Senior Writer

    • ESPN.com NBA writer since 2010
    • Covered Cleveland Cavs for seven years
    • Author of two books

Jun 13, 2025, 08:00 AM ET

The NBA world will be focused on Indianapolis’ Gainbridge Fieldhouse on Friday night, when the Oklahoma City Thunder will attempt to bounce back against Tyrese Haliburton and the Indiana Pacers and tie the suddenly fun Finals at two games apiece.

But for the 28 teams not taking part, business hasn’t stopped. So, with less than two weeks until what could be a very eventful NBA draft, and less than three weeks until the start of this year’s free agency period, here’s our latest look at the happenings around the league.

And, with trade chatter involving Kevin Durant, Giannis Antetokounmpo and other stars, the spiraling New York Knicks coaching search and some early free agency buzz, there is no shortage of storylines outside of the Pacers-Thunder Finals duel.

Where is the Giannis saga headed?

Until either a trade materializes involving Antetokounmpo or there is definitive word out of Milwaukee that the two-time MVP will be staying, the offseason’s biggest headline is the Greek Freak’s future.

There are few players in league history of Giannis’ caliber. The chance to potentially acquire him — in his prime at 30 years old no less — is a tantalizing possibility for opposing teams and fans alike.

Game 1: Pacers 111, Thunder 110
Game 2: Thunder 123, Pacers 107
Game 3: Pacers 116, Thunder 107
Game 4: at Pacers, Friday, 8:30 p.m.
Game 5: at Thunder, Monday, 8:30 p.m.
Game 6*: at Pacers, Thu., June 19, 8:30 p.m.
Game 7*: at Thunder, Sun. June 22, 8 p.m.
* If necessary | All times Eastern

• More NBA playoffs from ESPN

A possibility is far from a certainty. And, as things stand today, the expectation is that Antetokounmpo will start next season as a Buck, sources told ESPN. To be clear, the emphasis is on today. There’s still a lot of road to be walked this offseason, and it’s hard to know exactly how everything will shake out.

In meetings with ownership since the end of the season, Bucks coach Doc Rivers and recently extended general manager Jon Horst have presented plans to keep the core of the team intact around Antetokounmpo, with a goal of competing for a top-six playoff spot and with a hope Damian Lillard could return from his Achilles recovery before the end of next season. The Bucks went 10-4 without Lillard to close the regular season as he dealt with a blood clot. That, plus Antetokoumpo’s larger role of keeping Milwaukee afloat, were the cornerstones of the team’s projection.

With Jayson Tatum facing his own Achilles rehab, the Boston Celtics perhaps cutting payroll around him, the uncertainty facing Joel Embiid’s health and several East teams still rebuilding, there is a pathway for the Bucks to ride their MVP back into contention.

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1:12

JWill: Giannis handles things differently than other players

Jay Williams weighs in on Giannis Antetokounmpo’s future in the NBA and how he handles things differently than other players.

Will the Bucks be willing to go into the luxury tax next season to do so? That’s been an open question around the league for months, with starting center Brook Lopez set to be a free agent and with Bobby Portis facing a decision on his $13.4 million player option.

If Lopez is re-signed, Milwaukee doesn’t have many realistic options to get under the tax. If he enters free agency, the Bucks can easily avoid it. Sources said the franchise is prepared to once again enter the tax after spending more than $200 million in luxury tax alone over the past few seasons — more than every team but the Golden State Warriors, LA Clippers, Brooklyn Nets, Los Angeles Lakers and Phoenix Suns since 2012, per Spotrac.

Rival teams suspect the Bucks will end up in the tax but keep their payroll below the $196 million first apron, which would open their ability to access more of the $14 million midlevel exception. They might need a large chunk of it for a starting point guard in place of Lillard, with the candidates including free agents such as Dennis Schroder, Tyus Jones and Malcolm Brogdon.

Much more will be known once Milwaukee’s roster comes into focus after the draft and free agency, and then we’ll have a better sense of where the Bucks stand — and how real the hopes of competing next year with Antetokounmpo really are.

Where will Durant land?

Unlike Antetokounmpo’s, there isn’t much ambiguity around Durant’s situation, with ESPN’s Shams Charania reporting Wednesday that the Suns and Durant are sifting through trade offers.

Charania listed five teams that have registered interest in Durant — the Houston Rockets, San Antonio Spurs, Minnesota Timberwolves, Miami Heat and New York Knicks — and added that several other clubs have checked in on the 36-year-old Durant.

For Phoenix, a trade will be very complex for a trio of reasons.

  • Given the two sides are working together on a potential deal, Durant has to land somewhere he’s invested in going.

  • That team will likely need to be willing to consider giving Durant an extension of more than $60 million per season for his age-38 and age-39 seasons.

  • Perhaps most importantly, the Suns will need to get enough in return in a deal to satisfy owner Mat Ishbia and his front office.

For all of Durant’s brilliance across his career, that’s not going to be an easy task to marry those three things into a deal that works for everyone.

Editor’s Picks

2 Related

At the February trade deadline, the Suns talked to a handful of teams about Durant without his knowledge. When he found out, just as the Suns and Warriors were nearing coming to terms, Durant blew up the talks. There was some disagreement within the team, sources said, about how that process was handled. It was one of the reasons new general manager Brian Gregory and Ishbia have repeatedly, ad nauseum, emphasized the promise of “alignment” in various news conferences since the end of the season.

What’s most important now is keeping Durant in the loop. Though whether there needs to be true alignment with Durant on the eventual deal is yet to be seen. The Suns need a favorable trade more than they need to keep Durant happy. If both can be achieved, terrific.

Besides the Warriors, the team that appeared to be the most serious about trading for Durant four months ago was the Minnesota Timberwolves. At the time, the Wolves and Suns were second apron teams, and it made a deal too complex to happen. But with several Wolves potentially opting out of their contracts (namely Julius Randle and Naz Reid) and Rudy Gobert taking a small pay cut as part of his new deal, Minnesota potentially has more flexibility to execute such a transaction.

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1:28

Shams shares Kevin Durant’s main trade suitors with McAfee

Shams Charania tells Pat McAfee that Kevin Durant is the biggest trade domino, with five teams interested: Rockets, Spurs, Heat, Timberwolves and Knicks.

One additional team to monitor, sources said, is the Clippers, who have the contracts to make another move to augment the roster around Kawhi Leonard and James Harden, presuming the latter either opts into his contract or signs a new deal this offseason.

Multiple league sources said they were skeptical that the price for Durant in a trade would get to a place where Phoenix would be satisfied with it.

What does seem clear is that this saga could easily be wrapped up on, or by, draft night on June 25. And with the weak free agent class and the lack of teams with cap space, one source said this year’s draft could easily wind up being an even busier night than normal — and it could be the high point of activity this summer.

Who, exactly, will coach the Knicks?

Wednesday morning, former Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau did an incredibly classy thing. He put out a full-page ad in The New York Times celebrating his time in New York and thanking the organization, players and fans for his five years in a job he grew up dreaming of having as a kid in Connecticut.

By the end of the day, any dreams the Knicks had of this being a smooth search to replace Thibodeau — already a difficult task, considering he finished his tenure as the fourth-winningest coach in franchise history — had been replaced by what’s quickly becoming a nightmare.

In the span of 24 hours, New York remarkably found itself being rejected by five teams in attempts to speak to their head coaches: the Atlanta Hawks (Quin Snyder); Chicago Bulls (Billy Donovan); Dallas Mavericks (Jason Kidd); Rockets (Ime Udoka); and Timberwolves (Chris Finch). This sort of thing simply doesn’t happen, and it has left plenty of people around the league shaking their heads in amusement. Or, in the case of some of the teams involved in denying permission, anger over the way it’s been handled.

From the play-in tournament to the NBA Finals, ESPN has you covered this postseason.

• Game 3 takeaways: Pacers strike back
• Paine: Five biggest Finals outliers
• Shelburne: Jenny Boucek’s path to Pacers
• MacMahon: Why Finals are a full-circle moment for Alex Caruso
• Shelburne: Tyrese Haliburton’s superstar ascension

Typically, a team in the Knicks’ situation — moving on from a coach who had won a series in three straight playoffs and coming off its first conference finals in 25 years — knows exactly who it is targeting in a new coach.

What has become abundantly clear: New York did not have a plan in place when the decision was made to move on from Thibodeau.

So what happens now? For starters, sources said, there’s some belief that things could change in the cases of Kidd in Dallas and Donovan in Chicago. Kidd has a long history of fiery departures from prior stops — including in 2014, when he wound up getting permission to leave the Brooklyn Nets to join the Bucks. Kidd also has a lot of relationships in New York from his year playing there in 2012-13 and has a relationship with Jalen Brunson from coaching him in Dallas before the guard came to New York three years ago as a free agent.

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3:00

Stephen A.: Knicks’ head coach search is ‘pathetic’

Stephen A. Smith breaks down why the Knicks’ head coach search looks so bad, calling it desperate and pathetic.

Donovan, meanwhile, is a Long Island native who played 44 games with the 1987-88 Knicks after starring at Providence College. He would undoubtedly be the kind of hit the Knicks are looking for locally after moving on from Thibodeau.

But if neither of those scenarios change, where do the Knicks go from there? Perhaps it’s someone like Taylor Jenkins, Mike Brown or Michael Malone, all proven coaches currently without a job. Maybe it’s Cleveland Cavaliers assistant coach Johnnie Bryant, who was a finalist for the Suns job that went to fellow Cavs assistant Jordan Ott last week, and who spent the few seasons before this one working for Thibodeau in New York. Maybe it’s someone completely off the radar.

Right now, the only thing that’s clear about this coaching search is that it’s not going the way the Knicks had hoped.

What will happen with Ty Jerome?

While this summer features a very light free agency class, at least one player will have an intriguing market around him: Cavaliers guard Ty Jerome.

Coming off a top-three finish for Sixth Man of the Year for the 64-win Cavaliers, Jerome averaged 12.5 points in fewer than 20 minutes per game, shooting over 51% from the field and over 43% from 3-point range. His return from an ankle injury that forced him to miss virtually all of the 2023-24 season was a catalyst for Cleveland’s explosion to the East’s No. 1 seed.

The Cavs are wary of losing him and fellow key reserve free agent Sam Merrill, a shooting specialist who could have suitors as a fellow unrestricted free agent.

Jerome, who was on a $2.5 million deal this past season with the Cavaliers, is in line for a very hefty raise from that number, sources said. The expectation around the league is that it will take the full midlevel exception — roughly $14.1 million — to get Jerome signed. Cleveland, however, is hoping to get him to return for a bit less, sources said, as it attempts to navigate the second luxury tax apron and the team-building challenges that go along with it.

Team president Koby Altman has said he has clearance from owner Dan Gilbert to go deep into the luxury tax. But as this new CBA era is showing, the deeper a team goes into the aprons, the harder it is to escape. And all second apron teams have the same desire: Get out as soon as possible.



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June 14, 2025 0 comments
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