The Lakers’ summer shakeup has all but pushed Rui Hachimura toward the exit, and the market is already taking shape around the veteran forward. With Los Angeles bringing in Sandro Mamukelashvili and Quentin Grimes on big-money deals to fill similar wing duties, a reunion looks unlikely. That leaves Hachimura - a $51 million sharpshooter - searching for a new landing spot as free agency keeps moving.
Athlon Sports’ Nathaniel Holloway pointed to two teams at the front of the line: the San Antonio Spurs and the Brooklyn Nets.
“During his time in Los Angeles, Hachimura has turned into a key role player who is a reliable scorer and defender at the forward position, which many teams around the NBA are in need of,” Holloway wrote.
Hachimura’s time with the Lakers changed his value around the league. The former Washington Wizard has shot over 40% from three in each of the last three seasons, and he has also shown he can hold up defensively across four positions.
San Antonio has been the team most closely tied to him. The Spurs want more experience and shooting, and Hachimura checks both boxes. At 28, he’d fit neatly as a two-way presence next to Victor Wembanyama, with the flexibility to start at small forward or power forward, or provide scoring and defense off the bench.
The Spurs also have a clean way to make it work financially, using their $15 million non-taxpayer mid-level exception to add him while deepening an already loaded frontcourt.
Brooklyn is in a different spot, but the interest still makes sense. Even after adding Keon Ellis and Mo Wagner, the Nets still have plenty of money to spend, and Hachimura could be a useful rotational piece for a rebuild. There’s also another layer to that fit: Brooklyn may not be especially competitive in the East in 2026, but it could sign Hachimura and move him at the February trade deadline for draft capital if a contender comes calling.
For now, the Spurs look like the clear favorite to land him, though the Nets could still step in with a deal strong enough to change the picture. Free agency still has time to reshape this one.
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