Hornets Quietly Added A Long Term Piece In The LaMelo Trade

The Charlotte Hornets' strategic acquisition of Matteo Spagnolo in a blockbuster trade hints at long-term gains as they build for the future.

One of the quieter pieces in the four-team deal that sent LaMelo Ball to the Minnesota Timberwolves may end up mattering for the Charlotte Hornets later on. NBA insider Marc Stein reported that Charlotte picked up the NBA draft rights to Italian guard Matteo Spagnolo from Minnesota.

The move did not carry the same buzz as the bigger names and future first-round picks in the trade, but Spagnolo gives the Hornets another developmental swing. Minnesota originally took him with the 50th pick in the 2022 NBA Draft, and the 6-foot-4 guard has kept his game moving overseas ever since.

Spagnolo spent two productive seasons with Alba Berlin in the EuroLeague before signing with Spanish club Saski Baskonia. He is still competing there against high-level European competition in both Liga ACB and EuroLeague play.

His game has long pointed toward a patient “draft-and-stash” path. Spagnolo is known for polished passing and mid-range scoring, and Charlotte can let him keep building overseas while head coach Charles Lee shapes the roster around Brandon Miller, Kon Knueppel and the rest of the young core.

The Italian guard’s rise has been on the radar in Europe for years. He debuted professionally in Italy’s third division at 14, then sharpened his game during loan stints with Vanoli Cremona and Aquila Basket Trento. He has also become a regular part of Italy’s senior national team.

Now Charlotte owns his exclusive NBA rights, giving the Hornets a long-term option with real upside if and when the timing is right.

In Other News...

Grant Williams Weighed In On The Hornets' Stunning Ball And Bridges Loss

The Hornets roster has been turned over in a major way after moving on from Miles Bridges and LaMelo Ball, and Grant Williams was quick to acknowledge just how much talent walked out the door. Even so, the veteran forward framed the changes with a dose of optimism, pointing to the teams added shooting and the possibility that the new mix can still make Charlotte an entertaining group to watch.

Williams also made clear that the Hornets are not done adding pieces, with expectations already attached to incoming rookies Hannes Steinbach and Christian Anderson. For a team trying to reset its identity around a very different core, his comments offered a glimpse of the balancing act ahead: respecting what was lost while trying to find out whether the next version of the roster can come together fast enough. [Read more 🡒]

Hornets Season Outlook Just Put Their Post LaMelo Reality In Focus

The Hornets offseason has already changed the shape of the conversation around next year, with LaMelo Ball and Miles Bridges no longer part of the picture and a new mix of young talent expected to carry more of the load. Brandon Miller and Kon Knueppel sit at the center of that shift, and the front offices bet is clear: Charlotte needs its next wave to grow up quickly if the team is going to stay competitive in a crowded East.

Coby White is part of that broader evaluation too, because the roster now has to find enough shot creation and stability from within rather than leaning on the familiar star power it used to have. The Hornets may still hang around the playoff conversation if things break right, but the more realistic question is whether this group can keep pace with last seasons standard while also avoiding a slide into the lottery race. [Read more 🡒]