The Hawks’ reported interest in Peyton Watson says plenty about what Atlanta wants from the wing spot - and, by extension, what it still needs from Zaccharie Risacher.
Watson, a 23-year-old restricted free agent who broke out with the Denver Nuggets during the 2025-26 season, has become one of the league’s most intriguing young two-way wings. Atlanta’s reported pursuit makes sense on its own. It also reads like a clear signal to Risacher: the Hawks are looking for a player who can impact the game at both ends and fit in different roles.
Per Marc Stein of The Stein Line, the Hawks are among the teams trying to land Watson in a sign-and-trade. Stein wrote:
“And some fresh rumbles have been relayed to The Stein Line that the Bucks are joining the Clippers and Hawks on the list of teams trying to pry Watson away from the Nuggets via sign-and-trade.”
Watson checks a lot of boxes for Atlanta. At 6'8", he brings size, strong defense on and off the ball, efficient off-ball scoring, and enough handle to create for himself and for teammates. Put him next to All-NBA forward Jalen Johnson, and he would have room to play off a rising star while also helping shoulder some of the creation load.
That’s the lane Risacher needs to find for himself. He does not have to become Watson, but the Hawks clearly need him to provide value on both ends and show he can function with or without the ball. If he can absorb some of the traits that have made Watson so valuable, he could grow into the kind of two-way piece Atlanta envisioned when it took him No. 1 overall.
Watson’s numbers are solid rather than flashy, but the efficiency and impact are what make him stand out. In 2025-26, he averaged 14.6 points, 4.9 rebounds, 2.1 assists, 1.1 blocks, 0.9 steals, and 1.5 three-point field goals made across 54 games. He shot .491 from the field, .411 from three and .730 from the line, while also posting four 30-point games and 16 games with at least 20 points.
That blend of steady production and occasional scoring bursts is exactly the kind of profile modern teams chase in role players. The best ones can spike when needed without disappearing when the shot isn’t falling.
Watson also brings the kind of defensive edge that pushes him into a different category. According to Basketball Index, he ranked in the 97th percentile in perimeter isolation defense and the 92nd percentile in off-ball chaser defense.
Risacher’s defensive numbers lag behind that standard. He ranked in the 25th percentile in perimeter isolation defense and the 72nd percentile in off-ball chaser defense. Offensively, he shot 36.8 percent from the field and 64.4 percent from the free throw line.
If Risacher wants to work his way back into the starting lineup and earn a bigger role, the path is pretty straightforward: become the kind of two-way wing Watson already is.
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