The Atlanta Hawks have traded four-time All-Star Trae Young to the Washington Wizards in exchange for CJ McCollum and Corey Kispert, with no draft picks involved. This move ends Young's nearly eight-year tenure in Atlanta and provides the Wizards with an offensive leader for their young roster. The deal, executed on Wednesday, reflects shifting NBA priorities away from ball-dominant point guards like Young.
The trade marks a significant pivot for the Hawks, who have gone 2-8 with Young on the floor this season compared to 16-13 without him. Atlanta's performance improved defensively and in ball movement during his absence, highlighting concerns over his defensive shortcomings and ball-dominant style. By moving Young before his $49 million player option for next season, the Hawks gain approximately $30 million in potential cap space this summer, allowing flexibility to pursue stars like Anthony Davis or sign multiple role players. Corey Kispert, a cost-controlled shooter averaging 9.2 points per game, adds spacing to Atlanta's offense, while McCollum's expiring contract provides short-term scoring without long-term commitment.
For the Wizards, currently holding the fourth-worst record at 10-26 but 7-6 in their last 13 games, acquiring Young represents a low-risk bet on his offensive prowess. A former league assists leader and 2021 Eastern Conference finals participant, Young can structure Washington's offense, ranked 27th this season, by creating advantages for young talents like Alex Sarr, Bilal Coulibaly, Kyshawn George, and Tre Johnson. The Wizards, who trace this acquisition back to the 2023 Bradley Beal trade through Chris Paul, Jordan Poole, and now McCollum, committed no draft assets and retain over $47 million in cap space next offseason. Young's reunion with former Hawks executive Travis Schlenk, now in Washington, could aid development, though his poor shooting (26.1% on pull-up 3s this season) and defensive issues remain.
The deal underscores a league-wide devaluation of small, defensively limited point guards on max contracts, impacting similar players like Ja Morant and LaMelo Ball. It also boosts the New York Knicks' trade leverage via a top-eight protected pick owed by Washington. While the Hawks position themselves for a rebuild around Jalen Johnson and Nickeil Alexander-Walker, the Wizards aim to accelerate growth without long-term ties, as Young's contract ends after 2026-27.