Knicks Suddenly Face A Tougher East Than Anyone Expected

Blockbuster trades have reshaped the NBA Eastern Conference, creating an intense race for dominance and playoff glory.

The Eastern Conference has been flipped on its head.

With Giannis Antetokounmpo, Kawhi Leonard and Jaylen Brown all changing teams inside the conference, the offseason has already redrawn the map. What used to look like a softer path in the East now feels loaded with contenders, and the Knicks still sit at the center of it all as the team everyone is chasing.

Here’s a look at how the conference stacks up after those three massive trades.

  1. New York Knicks

The Knicks are still the standard in the East after bringing back most of their championship group from 2025-26. The one real concern is how they patch the center spot after losing Mitchell Robinson, but the rest of the rotation is built to win.

  1. Toronto Raptors

Toronto makes one of the biggest jumps in these rankings after landing Kawhi Leonard. The Raptors were already strong defensively last season, but their playoff offense stalled, and Leonard fits that need perfectly if they’re going to make another deep run.

  1. Philadelphia 76ers

Jaylen Brown gives Philadelphia a different kind of weapon than Paul George. Brown brings more versatility and flexibility, and if Joel Embiid is healthy - a huge if - the Embiid-Brown-Maxey-VJ Edgecombe-Dean Wade group would be tough for anyone to deal with.

  1. Detroit Pistons

The Pistons were the only East team to win 60 games last year, and Cade Cunningham’s leap changed everything. If Jalen Duren is back, Detroit should still be a force, though adding shooting around Cunningham and Duren would help them keep pace with the rest of the conference.

  1. Miami Heat

Giannis Antetokounmpo is the kind of swing that changes a franchise’s ceiling, but Miami is still going to be figuring things out for a while. There will be growing pains as Antetokounmpo and Bam Adebayo learn to play together, though that pairing could be dangerous once the playoffs arrive.

  1. Indiana Pacers

Indiana feels like one of the bigger wild cards in the East. Last season was a lost year because Tyrese Haliburton missed the whole thing, but this roster still resembles the group that won the conference two seasons ago. Everything depends on how Haliburton looks coming back from an Achilles injury.

  1. Cleveland Cavaliers

The Cavaliers may have taken the hardest hit from all the movement around the conference. Losing Dean Wade to Philadelphia hurts, and while James Harden helped get Cleveland to the Eastern Conference Finals, his impact is clearly starting to fade as he gets older.

  1. Boston Celtics

Boston took a step back on paper by moving from Jaylen Brown to Paul George, but the Celtics still have plenty going for them. They’re talented, they’re well coached, and it wouldn’t be a shock if they finished in the top four again, even if the ceiling is lower without Brown next to Tatum.

  1. Atlanta Hawks

The Hawks showed last season that they can be a well-run team and push the Knicks in the first round. Still, their roster is more solid than star-driven, and that lack of top-end talent could keep them from matching the East’s best.

  1. Orlando Magic

After a disappointing season, Orlando is hoping a new coach can spark something different. Sean Sweeney will have a chance to reset the tone, and the Magic could break through in 2026-27 if things click quickly.

  1. Washington Wizards

The Wizards suddenly have a trio worth watching in A.J. Dybantsa, Trae Young and Anthony Davis. That makes them interesting, and maybe even sneaky enough to fight for a playoff spot, but the crowded East probably leaves them a year away.

  1. Charlotte Hornets

Charlotte took a step back by trading LaMelo Ball to the Timberwolves. The Hornets still look like a competitive team headed in the right direction, but Ball’s absence will be felt as the conference gets stronger.

  1. Chicago Bulls

The Bulls seem to be trending upward, especially with Caleb Wilson looking like a franchise-changing piece. With Tiago Splitter taking over as head coach, the focus in 2026-27 is more about building something real than chasing a playoff berth right away.

  1. Brooklyn Nets

Brooklyn has spent the last few years stockpiling young talent in hopes of climbing into contention, but that road looks tougher than expected. Julius Randle brings experience, but the Nets’ youth is still likely to keep them from moving up much this season.

  1. Milwaukee Bucks

The Bucks are now in full rebuild mode with Giannis Antetokounmpo headed to Miami. Milwaukee does have a few intriguing pieces and could be a little feisty, but there just isn’t enough here to compete this year.

In Other News...

Celtics May Have Finally Solved The One Problem Fans Feared Most

Boston spent the offseason looking for help in the middle, and the answer may have arrived in a pair of veteran additions that should change how the roster looks on both ends. Mike Conley gives the Celtics another steady hand in the backcourt on a veteran minimum deal, while Mitchell Robinson brings the kind of size and physicality that can make life easier for everyone around him.

Robinsons arrival is the bigger swing for a team that wanted more reliability at center, especially in the areas that matter most over a long season. Boston is betting on him to clean up the paint, finish possessions and handle the kind of interior work that can keep the Celtics from being overexposed when the games get tighter, and the early fit is exactly why this move has drawn so much attention. [Read more 🡒]

Lakers Just Crashed Into The Celtics Biggest Offseason Problem

The Celtics offseason has already been complicated enough at center, and now the Lakers are adding another layer to the problem. As Los Angeles reshapes its roster around Luka Doncic, it is surveying the free-agent market for help, including Sandro Mamukelashvili, a name Boston has had on its radar as the team tries to patch a thin frontcourt and keep its options open.

Quentin Grimes is another move worth watching for Celtics followers, even if the immediate action is happening in Los Angeles. The former 76ers guard is on the market after a strong playoff showing in Philadelphia, and any push to pry him away would matter in Boston because it chips at a division rival while the Celtics keep sorting through a center market that has not exactly broken their way. [Read more 🡒]

Rival All-NBA Big Man Wants Boston As Celtics Fans Fear Cost

Jalen Durens restricted free agency has turned into one of those summer situations that can tell you as much about the market as the player. The Pistons remain in control, since they can match any offer, but the gap between the two sides has opened the door to outside interest and a sign-and-trade path that has naturally put Boston in the conversation, right as the Celtics continue searching for ways to reshape the roster without losing their footing.

For Celtics fans, the appeal is obvious and the price tag is the part that can make you wince. Duren has been linked to a few different suitors as frustration builds in Detroit, and any real pursuit would require careful salary balancing and a willingness to part with serious talent, all while the Pistons still hold the power to keep him. The idea is intriguing enough to follow, but for now it remains one of those playoff-caliber name watches that could go nowhere fast if Detroit decides to simply shut the whole thing down. [Read more 🡒]