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10 things we learned at NBA trade deadline
Timberwolves forward Andrew Wiggins was traded to the Warriors. Jayne Kamin-Oncea-USA TODAY Sports

10 things we learned at NBA trade deadline

Another exciting NBA trade deadline is in the books, with stars, draft picks and expiring contracts flying across the league, as teams chase the playoffs and flee from the luxury tax. Here are 10 things we learned about Woj's favorite day of the season.

1. No one is untradeable

Andrew Wiggins signed a maximum extension in 2017 after the Timberwolves' owner famously made him promise to try to improve — not a great omen when they were giving him $148 million. But the Warriors took on the millstone of a deal in exchange for D’Angelo Russell, a first-round pick in 2021 (top-three protected) and a second-rounder in 2021. Wiggins makes about the same as Russell, and a small forward fits the Warriors better, given that there’s only room for two Splash Brothers in one backcourt. Neither one plays defense, but the Warriors must be hoping that getting out of Minnesota and alongside Draymond Green will help Wiggins defend at a decent level. But he’s been a huge disappointment. The million-dollar suites with personal butlers and wine cellars are only the second-most overpriced thing at the Warriors' new arena now.

It’s hard not to conclude that the Warriors primarily wanted to dodge the luxury tax this year. They dealt Alec Burks and Glenn Robinson III to Philadelphia for three lousy second-round picks this week, and dumped Omari Spellman and Jacob Evans in this deal. Getting under the tax this season lets them avoid the harsh “repeater tax” penalty for overspending next year, especially if they plan to use their large trade exception from dealing Andre Iguodala. They can also use the full mid-level exception. The dowry for agreeing to the three-year marriage with Wiggins is a likely lottery pick in 2021. But Minnesota desperately wanted to keep Karl-Anthony Towns happy, so a first-rounder is a small price to pay for acquiring your franchise player’s BFF.

2. Biggest winner: Andre Iguodala

The Grizzlies traded for Andre Iguodala on the first day of free agency in order to get a first-round pick from the Warriors. Then they let him stay home and wait out a trade. But Memphis turned into a playoff team earlier than expected, and frustration mounted with the young Grizzlies that he was staying away. Meanwhile, Iguodala was on a four-month paid vacation, hiking with Klay Thompson, promoting his book and holding out for a deal to one of the Los Angeles teams. Now he’s going to the playoffs with the Miami Heat, and for the great personal sacrifice of moving to South Beach, he demanded and received a two-year, $30 million contract extension at age 36. He may not get a ring this season, but he definitely got the bag.

3. Pat Riley believes Heat team can win it all

The Miami Heat began the summer capped out, disappointed after narrowly missing the playoffs in Dwyane Wade’s farewell campaign. Then Riley and the front office started making moves. They turned Hassan Whiteside and Josh Richardson into Jimmy Butler and Meyers Leonard, found two great rookies in Tyler Herro and Kendrick Nunn and even weathered the storm of Dion Waiters’ gummy incident. Now they’ve added Iguodala and Jae Crowder, dumped the unwanted contracts of James Johnson and Waiters, all while keeping their picks and preserving their 2021 cap space. It would have been a perfect deadline if they’d snagged Danilo Gallinari from OKC, but ultimately, the Thunder had too many of Miami’s picks already.

4. Memphis got a lot for a player they never really had

Rumors were floating that the Grizzlies would settle for something like the Warriors’ second-round pick this June by trading Iguodala, a player who never actually reported to the team. But they didn’t panic, holding on to Iguodala until they got a dynamic 23-year-old in Justise Winslow, who’s missed most of the season with a back injury — though he’s played 10 more games than Iguodala. Winslow is on an extremely team-friendly contract: $26 million for the next two years, and the 2021-22 deal is a team option. Plus, they got a first-round pick just for keeping Iguodala on their books, if not in their locker room. They extended 24-year-old Dillon Brooks for three years, after he called out Iguodala for not reporting, proving he had the proper grit 'n' grind fire to play for the Grizz. Memphis also picked up Gorgui Dieng and Dion Waiters for free, because why not? Memphis may pull off the trick of rebuilding while still competing for the playoffs, as long as Waiters sticks to vaping.

5. Future is now for Daryl Morey, Mike D’Antoni

Coach Mike D’Antoni’s love of small ball perfectly meshed with owner Tilman Fertitta’s hatred of paying the luxury tax in their deadline moves. Perhaps emboldened by the Rockets playing (and winning!) a full game with no players taller than 6-foot-6, the Rockets traded Clint Capela for the switchy and cost-controlled Robert Covington, who at 6-foot-9 is now their biggest man, with 6-foot-6 P.J. Tucker the new center. Covington is a three-and-D guy who’s not so great at the threes or the one-on-one defense, but he’s a fantastic help defender, which is very necessary paired with the help-averse James Harden and Russell Westbrook. D’Antoni’s in the last year of his contract, so why not go out playing "seven seconds or less" ball on steroids? It’s the first step in helping Daryl Morey get under next year’s luxury tax, which will be lower than expected thanks to a tweet by, you guessed it, Daryl Morey. And it only cost a first-round pick, which doesn’t matter to Morey since he could be getting fired too. Hey, the Knicks have a job opening and Morey loves musicals.

6. The Clippers acquired Marcus Morris so the Lakers couldn’t

Adding talent anywhere on the court helps a team with championship aspirations, but trading for Marcus Morris mainly kept him away from the Clippers’ cross-town rivals. Don’t get us wrong; Morris is a quality defender who enjoyed a dream season in New York, where he got to shoot at will on an awful team, absolutely lighting it up from three-point land. The Clippers can use him, but the Lakers really could have used him, which is why the Clips sacrificed a first-round pick and 2018 lottery pick Jerome Robinson to get him. They also acquired Isaiah Thomas and cut him immediately, proving Doc Rivers is still a Celtic at heart. The biggest shock about this deal was that the Knicks did something reasonable. And all it took was firing the team president!

7. Atlanta finally got Trae Young some help

Atlanta got Capela, a 25-year-old rim-running Swiss rebounding machine to fill its hole at center for the next few years, giving up matching salary and the Brooklyn pick it got for Taurean Prince. Houston may not have wanted to pay Capela, but Atlanta was glad to use some of its massive cap space next year on a player who is actually good, instead of amassing second-round picks for taking wildly overpaid players like Chandler Parsons. All we know is Trae Young will throw him a ton of lobs. Is Capela redundant with John Collins? Maybe, but when the price is this low, you get the stud big man and figure out the fit later.

8. Detroit really, really didn’t want Andre Drummond next year

By all accounts, Andre Drummond wanted to stay in Detroit next season, and the Pistons clearly did not want him to pick up his $29 million player option. When Drummond first went on the block, the Pistons were hoping for a first-round pick. Instead, they settled for expiring contracts and a lone second-round pick, out of fear that he’d pick up his option. Cleveland has few cap obligations besides Kevin Love, so it’s a cheap price to pay for the NBA’s rebounding leader. Drummond has effectively clinched the rebound title with this move, since the Cavs miss even more shots than the Pistons.

9. The Nuggets don’t think they can win it all this year

Denver wasn't going to be able to afford Malik Beasley and Juancho Hernangomez when they hit restricted free agency this summer, so they cashed them in to get different bench pieces and a first-round pick that effectively replaces the one they dealt for Jerami Grant last summer. Did they get better this year? Tough to argue that. Shabazz Napier could help at backup point guard, and Noah Vonleh is a quality big man, but he’s also sixth in their big-man rotation. All they’re really doing is reuniting the old Portland Trail Blazers bench with Napier, Vonleh, Mason Plumlee and Will Barton. Maybe Evan Turner will take a buyout and join the crew!

10. Vlade Divac loves his Serbs

Though they were both in trade rumors for months, Vlade Divac didn’t trade either of his sharp-shooting Serbians, Bogdan Bogdanovic or Nemanja Bjelica, at the deadline. In fact, Divac gave up two second-rounders to dump Dewayne Dedmon to free up extra cash to match offers for restricted free agent Bogdanovic this summer. It’s a good sign that the Kings will pony up to keep the excellent Bogdanovic, but it’s discouraging that they had to give up picks to dump Dedmon months after signing him to a multiyear deal. They traded Trevor Ariza, another summer signing, even earlier. Maybe it’s not just his loyalty to fellow Serbian players, but Divac deciding that re-signing his own players is safer than the inevitable screw-ups when he tries to bring in an outside free agent.

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