Free agency is about to get moving, and Marcus Smart is suddenly one of the more interesting names sitting out there.
The former Defensive Player of the Year passed on returning to the Los Angeles Lakers on a one year, $5.4 million deal and chose unrestricted free agency instead. That came shortly after Draymond Green’s surprising opt-out with the Golden State Warriors, adding another wrinkle to what’s already been a busy offseason.
Atlanta hasn’t been linked to Smart in any concrete way, but it’s easy to see why the Hawks would at least make sense as a possible landing spot. Smart is 32, and for a young team looking to keep stacking useful pieces, he fits the profile of a veteran who can matter right away.
What stands out most is how well he could slide into a bench role. Even though he started most of his games with the Lakers last season, Smart has long shown he can adapt to whatever role a team asks of him. That flexibility has been a big part of why he’s been able to fit so smoothly in different places.
The Lakers, a team that clearly needs more help defensively in the backcourt, letting him walk would be a notable choice. Smart was important in late-game moments, whether the task was getting a stop or finding a bucket on the other end.
There’s also the offensive piece. After his brief run in Memphis, plenty of people wondered if his scoring impact was fading, especially from three-point range. He’s not a high-end shooter, but he can still make outside shots at a respectable clip.
Atlanta still needs more dependable shooting across the roster, but there’s nothing wrong with adding another defensive specialist. In fact, with Dyson Daniels and Nickeil Alexander-Walker already helping lock down opposing guards every night, Smart would deepen what the Hawks already have going on that end.
This is the kind of move that would fit Onsi Saleh’s patient roster-building approach. Some fans appreciate that long view, and others want the team to push harder now.
That’s how it goes. People want their team to win.
Signing Smart to a cheap, short-term deal wouldn’t suddenly turn Atlanta into a sure thing, but it would move the needle. More than that, it would signal that winning is still the priority. And for a move like this, the risk would be pretty small.
In Other News...
Hawks Just Got A Huge Break In The Southeast Division
The Southeast Division just got a fresh jolt, and the ripple effects should matter in Atlanta. With Miami and Charlotte reshuffling the top end of their rosters, the short-term balance in the division suddenly looks a little friendlier for the Hawks, who have spent the last few seasons trying to climb back into the East's upper middle class.
Atlanta also has some history of preparing for the division's biggest problems in creative ways, especially against Giannis Antetokounmpo, using unusual defensive looks since 2021 to try to slow his path into the paint. If those kinds of matchups become less frequent in the division race, it could give the Hawks a cleaner runway while Charlotte's timeline gets pushed back a bit more. [Read more 🡒]
Former Hawks Big Suddenly Lands In A Much Bigger Free Agency Battle
The Lakers are shopping for frontcourt help, and Jock Landale has surfaced as one of the bigger names in that mix. The former Hawks center spent part of last season in Atlanta after being waived by Utah, then appeared in 23 games for the Hawks before moving on, and his value around the league has only grown since then. With his physical style and size, he fits the kind of depth teams tend to chase once the market opens.
Atlanta, though, may have a familiar reason to keep an eye on where this goes. Landale is drawing interest from multiple suitors, including teams that can put together a much more aggressive pitch than a simple depth spot, and he is expected to command offers beyond the bi-annual exception. For a Hawks team that already knows what he brings, the question is less about whether he belongs on a roster and more about whether his next deal gets pushed into a range that changes the entire competition. [Read more 🡒]
Hawks Are One Costly Offseason Decision Away From Changing Everything
After a busy stretch of roster shuffling, the Hawks have already checked off a handful of offseason items by re-signing CJ McCollum, adding Aaron Wiggins in a trade, drafting three players and picking up Mouhamed Gueyes team option. Even with those moves in place, Atlanta is still working through how to balance its depth chart with the hard realities of the cap as free agency approaches.
The biggest pressure point is the front offices next contract decision, one that could push the roster into a far more restrictive financial lane if the club decides to keep moving forward with its current plan. Atlanta is also weighing whether it can clear enough room by exploring trades involving Buddy Hield, Corey Kispert and Zaccharie Risacher, a reminder that one more move could reshape not just the rotation but the teams entire offseason flexibility. [Read more 🡒]
