Jonathan Kuminga is still sitting in the center of one of the offseason’s more interesting stalemates, and Atlanta keeps coming up as the place that makes the most sense.
The 23-year-old remains an unrestricted free agent, one of the biggest names still unsigned, alongside LeBron James, Peyton Watson, and Jalen Duren. So far, there hasn’t been much real movement for any of them.
The Lakers, Bucks, and Cavaliers have all been floated as possible landing spots for Kuminga, but each of those paths comes with the same obstacle: none of them can currently pay him the kind of salary he wants. That means any deal with one of those teams would likely have to be done through a sign-and-trade.
And that’s where Atlanta matters. The Hawks have Kuminga’s bird rights, which gives them control over any sign-and-trade involving him.
That leverage is a big part of why Atlanta looks like the most realistic outcome if Kuminga is not willing to take a veteran minimum or some major pay cut. There has been no reporting suggesting that kind of sacrifice is on the table.
Cleveland is the easiest team to cross off for now. Until LeBron James signs with his new team, the Cavaliers are effectively unavailable. If they miss out on James, they could turn hard toward Kuminga, but that would still require a sign-and-trade.
If that scenario did develop, the likely outgoing pieces would be Max Strus, Sam Merrill, and Dennis Schroder. Strus is on an expiring contract, Merrill is on a very manageable deal, and Atlanta probably would not want to take Schroder’s contract back onto its books. That package is more appealing than what the Lakers could offer, but it still does not sound like the kind of return that would make the Hawks jump.
Milwaukee has been mentioned less often than Los Angeles or Cleveland, and the roster situation there is already crowded. The Bucks currently have 16 players on the roster, not counting the contract Gary Trent Jr signed over the weekend. Their sign-and-trade possibilities do not appear especially attractive to Atlanta either, which makes them a tough sell unless Kuminga is willing to come in at a low number.
Los Angeles had the most buzz last week, with a possible sign-and-trade built around Jarred Vanderbilt and a 2032 first-round pick swap. But reports have said the Hawks have no interest in Vanderbilt. If the Lakers cannot move Vanderbilt somewhere else, it is hard to see a Kuminga deal getting done unless Atlanta changes its stance.
That is why the Hawks hold the cards here. If Kuminga is not taking a drastic discount, Atlanta does not have to approve a deal unless it actually helps them. That is a big reason this still feels more likely to end with Kuminga back in Atlanta than some might think.
And from a basketball standpoint, the fit is obvious. Kuminga was Atlanta’s best bench player by far after the All-Star Break, and he brought rim pressure, athleticism, and more defensive value than expected. The Hawks’ bench also has some uncertainty once you get past Jock Landale, Aaron Wiggins, and Kingston Flemings.
The catch is roster math. Atlanta already has 16 standard contracts, so adding Kuminga would mean clearing at least two spots, either by waiving players or moving them in trades. Those kinds of moves could happen before the Hawks make any serious push to bring him back, so their next roster decisions are worth watching.
Kuminga is good enough to matter anywhere he lands, but the market points in one direction. Atlanta has the financial edge, the roster control, and the ability to block any sign-and-trade that does not suit them. The real question is whether Kuminga would be comfortable returning to Atlanta in a bench role, or whether he is holding out for a starting job that only the Lakers and maybe Milwaukee could provide.
Either way, he is one of the offseason’s most intriguing names, and his next move is going to be a major story in the next stage of the summer.
In Other News...
Ranking The Hawks Moves That Could Define This Front Office
The Hawks spent the offseason trying to thread a tricky needle: get better now without losing sight of what comes next. That meant swinging big for Aaron Wiggins from Oklahoma City at the cost of two first-round picks, then turning around and adding three rookies with the No. 8, No. 23 and No. 57 selections while also keeping familiar veterans around on one-year deals to stabilize the rotation.
There is a clear logic to the mix, even if the front office is still waiting to see how it all fits together. CJ McCollum gives Atlanta another proven shot creator, Jock Landale adds insurance behind Onyeka Okongwu, and Mouhamed Gueyes option keeps a developmental piece in place, but the move that may say the most about where the Hawks are headed is the one for Devin Carter, a former lottery pick whose defensive upside could make him another useful layer in the bench picture. [Read more 🡒]
What The Hawks Really Preserved In The Jock Landale Deal
The Hawks move for Jock Landale came with more than just a new big man on the roster. As part of the broader contract picture around the deal, Landale, Jordan Clarkson and Charles Bassey all agreed to waive the implicit no-trade protection in their contracts, a small but meaningful detail that gives teams more flexibility down the road. For Atlanta, that kind of cleanup matters almost as much as the player acquisition itself, especially when every roster move has to be weighed against future cap maneuvering.
Landales agreement also fits into a wider league-wide run of contract housekeeping, with details emerging on players such as Trey Lyles, Jaylen Clark, Marcus Smart, Norman Powell, Ousmane Dieng, Jaxson Hayes, Josh Okogie and Jusuf Nurkic. One of the more interesting side notes for the Hawks is how little room the deal leaves in their non-taxpayer mid-level exception, which is the sort of constraint that can shape the rest of a teams offseason just as much as the headline move. [Read more 🡒]
Mouhamed Gueye Suddenly Faces A Real Hawks Rotation Threat
Mouhamed Gueye has given the Hawks something to like on the defensive end, where his length and activity have helped him carve out a place on the roster conversation. Atlanta also recently picked up his one-year team option, a sign that the organization still sees value in keeping him around, even as the bigger question remains whether his game can grow enough on the other side of the floor to make him more than a situational piece.
Now the pressure is coming from a different direction, with rookies Zuby Ejiofor and Henri Veesaar turning heads in summer league and adding more bodies to a frontcourt mix that is starting to feel crowded. For Gueye, the path forward is pretty clear: keep defending, cut down the mistakes, and show enough offensive progress to stay ahead of the newcomers, because if that part of his game stalls, Atlanta may start looking at its options sooner rather than later. [Read more 🡒]
