The Los Angeles Clippers have traded veteran point guard Chris Paul to the Toronto Raptors in a three-team deal involving the Brooklyn Nets, ending Paul's exile from the team since December. The 40-year-old future Hall of Famer, who announced plans to retire at season's end, heads to Toronto amid reports that it may not be his final destination before the trade deadline. The move clears a roster spot for the Clippers and helps the Raptors escape the luxury tax.
Chris Paul's tenure with the Los Angeles Clippers came to an unceremonious end in early December, when the team sent him home during a road trip in Atlanta ahead of a game against the Hawks. On December 3, Paul posted on Instagram, "Just Found Out I'm Being Sent Home," marking the start of his basketball exile. Clippers president of basketball operations Lawrence Frank soon issued a statement: "We are parting ways with Chris and he will no longer be with the team." Coach Tyronn Lue echoed the sentiment, stating, "I just think it wasn't a good fit for what he was looking for. It is what it is. Do I want to see CP go out like this? No. I have a lot of respect for him. He's been a friend of mine over the years. You never wanna see a great go out like this. But I'm pretty sure he will find something because he's a great player. ... I didn't wanna see it end like this."
In his second stint with the Clippers, the 12-time All-Star and 40-year-old point guard appeared in 16 games, averaging 2.9 points and 3.3 assists in 14.3 minutes per game while bouncing in and out of the rotation. The Clippers were struggling at 5-16 when they parted ways, but have since gone 18-10, improving to 23-26 overall and ninth in the Western Conference.
The trade, reported by ESPN, involves three teams: the Raptors receive Paul; the Nets get shooting guard Ochai Agbaji, a 2032 Toronto second-round pick, and cash; and the Clippers acquire the rights to Vanja Marinkovic, a 29-year-old second-round pick from 2019 who has never played in the NBA and currently plays in Serbia. Agbaji, 25 and the No. 14 pick in the 2022 draft, has appeared in 42 of Toronto's 51 games this season but saw his role diminish, averaging 4.3 points per game after 10.4 last season.
Toronto, sitting at 30-21 and fourth in the Eastern Conference, benefits by shedding luxury tax burdens. However, ESPN's Shams Charania reports that Paul may not stay long, as the Raptors could flip him before Thursday's deadline. For the Clippers, the deal opens a roster spot and saves on tax payments. Paul had announced retirement intentions in late November, capping a storied career that now shifts to an uncertain final chapter.