Bulls Fans Are Split Over One Patrick Williams Trade Idea

With Kyle Kuzma's fit in Milwaukee failing to deliver, the Bucks are exploring strategic trades to recoup value and focus on their rebuilding strategy.

The Bucks are at the point where Kyle Kuzma is no longer the kind of player you keep around just because you already made the move. Milwaukee traded Khris Middleton to Washington for Kuzma two seasons ago while trying to get younger around Giannis Antetokounmpo, but the fit never really clicked. Kuzma’s production dropped hard after arriving in Milwaukee, and with the Bucks now headed into a full rebuild under a new coach, holding onto him starts to make less and less sense.

That’s why the best path now is to treat Kuzma like a buy-low chip and see what kind of return is out there. He’s not a dependable starter, but he still brings enough two-way skill to interest teams looking for help on the wing. And if Milwaukee can turn him into picks or a useful contract, that’s a win for a team trying to reset its roster.

One possible landing spot is Minnesota. The Timberwolves have already made major moves, trading Naz Reid to the Charlotte Hornets and Julius Randle to the Brooklyn Nets, though that deal won’t be officially finalized by the league until July 6.

Minnesota sent Randle’s salary into Brooklyn’s cap space and created a $33 million traded player exception, but after re-signing Ayo Dosunmu to a five-year, $112 million deal and trading for LaMelo Ball’s $40.7 million contract, the Wolves are light at power forward. There was speculation that Charlotte’s trade of Miles Bridges to the Suns for Grayson Allen and Royce O’Neale could grow into a broader deal, and with Kuzma and O’Neale carrying smaller contracts, Minnesota could potentially use that $33 million exception to add both without giving up much.

For Milwaukee, the cleanest version is simple: Minnesota gets Kyle Kuzma, and the Bucks get a 2030 second-round pick via Memphis. It’s not a flashy haul, and Bucks fans would probably want more, but Milwaukee’s roster crunch matters here.

Minnesota already moved three second-round picks, three first-round pick swaps, and an unprotected first-round pick for LaMelo Ball, so it doesn’t have a lot of draft ammo left. Even so, that 2030 second-rounder via Memphis still has real value.

Chicago is another team that could make sense. The Bulls are rebuilding in a way that looks a lot like Milwaukee’s direction, and there’s a deal here that helps both sides. The Bucks would take a swing on Patrick Williams while sending Kuzma out for matching salary.

In that scenario, Milwaukee gets Patrick Williams, a 2029 second-round pick via New York, a 2031 second-round pick via Denver, and a 2032 second-round pick via Houston. Chicago gets Kyle Kuzma and the draft rights to Dimitrios Argavanis.

For the Bulls, the move clears out Williams’ contract and gives them a player who should be easier to move at the deadline and better suited to their style. For the Bucks, it’s about stockpiling second-rounders while taking on a bad contract.

Then there’s the most complicated option: a three-team deal with Denver and Memphis. The Nuggets want to shed the salary of Christian Braun and Cameron Johnson without taking money back, and that opens the door for Milwaukee to get involved.

In this version, the Bucks would receive Christian Braun and a second-round pick swap with Memphis in 2032 via Philadelphia. Memphis would get Kyle Kuzma through its $28.9 million traded player exception plus Denver’s 2033 second-round pick.

Denver would clear $21.6 million in cap space.

It’s a big help for Denver, even if it costs them a player and a useful second-round pick for nothing, and it would create room to re-sign Peyton Watson. Memphis would use its exception to absorb Kuzma’s expiring deal, then flip him later while also picking up another second-rounder.

Milwaukee, meanwhile, would turn Kuzma into a younger player in Christian Braun, who has shown flashes in Denver, plus the 2032 second-round swap. The contract is a little concerning, but the Bucks could try to rebuild Braun’s value by giving him a bigger role in the offense.

None of these returns is going to make Milwaukee rich, because Kuzma’s expiring deal doesn’t carry a huge market. But the Bucks can still do damage if they use him to grab second-round capital or take on contracts that come with extra assets attached.

The Minnesota deal brings the least back but helps most in the long run. Chicago’s package delivers the most second-round picks.

Denver and Memphis offers the best swap value, though it also comes with a longer contract.

With a rebuild coming, the Bucks need to keep aiming at deals that move them toward the right kind of future as quickly as possible. That means treating depressed assets like Kuzma - and Turner - as tools, not keepers.

In Other News...

Bulls Just Made Their First Truly Unsettling Rebuild Decision

Bryson Grahams first draft with the Bulls had a clear front-end plan. Chicago used its first-round picks on Caleb Wilson and Dailyn Swain, giving the new lead executive two young pieces to shape into part of the next core while the franchise continues sorting out what the rebuild is supposed to become.

The part that lingers is how the Bulls handled the rest of the board, especially with shooting still sitting near the top of the rosters needs. Around the league, teams were able to turn useful rotation players like Isaiah Joe and Isaiah Stewart into draft capital, the kind of moves that at least hint at value extraction during a reset. Chicago, though, is still facing the bigger question of whether it is collecting enough assets to accelerate this process or simply leaving opportunities on the table while the roster waits for help through free agency or trade. [Read more 🡒]

Bulls May Be Closing In On A Move Fans Will Debate

Chicagos offseason flexibility has put the Bulls in position to poke around on a move that would make immediate sense on paper, especially with a roster that still needs more shooting. League chatter has pointed to a veteran guard who can help fill that gap, and the fit is easy enough to see for a team with cap room and a clear need for reliable scoring on the perimeter.

The wrinkle is that Chicago is not alone in the pursuit, with Miami and Detroit also in the mix as the Bulls weigh how aggressively to use what remains of their spending power. If the front office does decide to make a push, it would be the kind of signing that says plenty about how the Bulls want to use the rest of their cap space, and why this one could split the fan base before any paperwork is even signed. [Read more 🡒]