CBS Sports has published its biannual rankings of NBA front offices following the 2026 trade deadline, with the Oklahoma City Thunder and Boston Celtics retaining the top two spots. The Charlotte Hornets have risen significantly from 20th to 12th, while the Los Angeles Lakers have fallen in the standings. The rankings evaluate teams on factors including track record, vision, creativity, and contract management amid league challenges like aprons and repeater taxes.
The rankings, conducted twice yearly in February and July, assess how NBA front offices navigate modern challenges such as financial restrictions, injury concerns from playing styles, and the need for precise forecasting of draft assets. Author Sam Vecenie emphasizes that building competitive teams is harder than ever, with no easy inefficiencies left to exploit, yet opportunities arise from others' constraints.
Oklahoma City Thunder hold the No. 1 position unchanged from July, praised for drafting and developing most of their roster, including Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams, neither top-10 picks. Their deadline acquisition of Jared McCain from a first-round pick adds cheap depth, and executive Sam Presti excels at sustaining success. Boston Celtics remain at No. 2, having flawlessly managed finances after Jayson Tatum's torn Achilles, ducking the luxury tax without losing picks and scouting underutilized players like Neemias Queta and Derrick White.
Houston Rockets climb to No. 3 from 4, edging San Antonio Spurs at No. 4 due to bolder moves like acquiring Kevin Durant at a pay cut and strong non-lottery picks such as Alperen Sengun. Cleveland Cavaliers stay at No. 5, highlighted for bold trades like Darius Garland for James Harden and owner Dan Gilbert's spending willingness. Indiana Pacers rise to No. 6, with their Ivica Zubac trade seen as a calculated risk despite critiques on spending history.
New York Knicks drop to No. 7, questioned on bets like Mikal Bridges and Karl-Anthony Towns. Charlotte Hornets surge to No. 12, boosted by 2025 draft hits including Kon Knueppel, a Rookie of the Year candidate, and the Charles Lee hire. The rankings note more smart teams league-wide, with the top four clear but the middle closely contested.