The Atlanta Hawks may not need to look far if Jonathan Kuminga ends up elsewhere.
Jake Fischer of The Stein Line reported that Atlanta has shown interest in a potential sign-and-trade for Peyton Watson, a young wing whose two-way game could make him a clean fit as a Kuminga alternative. The idea makes sense on paper, but it comes with a catch: Watson would not come cheap.
Kuminga’s situation is still one of the biggest unresolved issues for Atlanta. The Hawks have reportedly stayed interested in bringing him back, even as sign-and-trade possibilities continue to circulate around the athletic forward. If that path closes, Watson would give them another versatile, young piece who can impact both ends of the floor.
And the defensive upside is hard to ignore.
Watson just put together the best season of his career, averaging 14.6 points, 4.9 rebounds and 2.1 assists while shooting 41% from three-point range on 3.6 attempts per game. That kind of offensive growth matters, but what really jumps off the page is the way he defends. He’s earned minutes by taking on tough assignments, using his length, athleticism and physicality to bother opponents across multiple positions.
Put him next to Dyson Daniels and Nickeil Alexander-Walker, and Atlanta suddenly has a perimeter group that could cause real problems. Daniels is already one of the NBA’s premier perimeter defenders, while Alexander-Walker gives the Hawks another physical, versatile option on that side of the ball. Watson would add another layer to that mix.
The offensive piece makes the fit even more interesting. Hitting 41% from deep suggests Watson can space the floor without needing touches to be manufactured for him, which matters for a team trying to keep its offense flowing.
He’s also the same age as Kuminga, so this wouldn’t be a move that forces Atlanta to trade youth for immediate help. Watson would fit the timeline while still offering room to grow alongside the rest of the core.
Still, the Hawks can’t let the fit talk them into overpaying.
President of Basketball Operations Onsi Saleh has stressed the need to make smart roster decisions, and that has to remain the standard here. Denver would have every reason to ask for a strong return in any sign-and-trade involving a young wing coming off a career year with real two-way upside.
That’s where the decision gets tricky.
Would Watson make Atlanta better? There’s a solid case that he would. But if the Hawks have to give up major draft capital or other valuable assets to get him, bringing Kuminga back may end up being the cleaner move.
Atlanta already knows what Kuminga brings. Since arriving from Golden State before the trade deadline, he has supplied athleticism, offensive creation and defensive versatility while showing he can help a playoff team. Watson offers a lot of the same ingredients, especially on defense, but swapping one young forward for another only works if the price makes sense.
And Kuminga still might not be going anywhere. The Hawks reportedly remain interested in re-signing him, which means Watson is more of another option than a must-have answer.
Even so, this is a situation worth watching. A defensive trio of Watson, Daniels and Alexander-Walker would give opposing perimeter players a long night all season.
The Hawks just have to stay disciplined. Watson would be a strong addition and maybe an ideal replacement if Kuminga leaves.
But if the cost gets too steep, Atlanta may find the best answer is already in the building.
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