Hawks Just Inherited The Buddy Hield Problem Warriors Escaped

Deck: The Atlanta Hawks find themselves tangled in a complex contract situation with Buddy Hield after a risky mid-season trade.

The Atlanta Hawks have turned Buddy Hield into a trade chip, and that may be the only way his contract ends up helping them.

On Sunday, Atlanta fully guaranteed Hield’s $9.7 million salary for next season, a move that came after the mid-season trade with the Golden State Warriors sent him to the Hawks. The deal that was built around Jonathan Kuminga and Kristaps Porzingis also brought Hield along, and with it came a tricky contract call Golden State was glad to avoid.

Before Sunday’s decision, only $3 million of Hield’s money was guaranteed. The Hawks could have let things ride and still taken a $3 million cap hit, but instead they locked in the full amount. The logic now appears clear: Atlanta is treating the veteran sharpshooter’s salary as a matching piece, not as a guaranteed rotation answer, especially after Hield struggled to carve out a role for Quin Snyder.

That makes the situation more complicated than a simple expiring contract. Hield also has a $10.1 million player option for the 2027-28 season, and $3.1 million of that is already guaranteed as part of the unusual four-year deal he signed with the Warriors two years ago.

So the Hawks are not holding a clean one-year asset they can easily flip. They’re holding a contract that still carries baggage.

And the on-court return hasn’t given Atlanta much leverage. Hield played in only seven games after arriving, and the pile of DNPs only reinforced how little value he seems to have right now.

That’s why moving him by himself looks unlikely. If the Hawks deal him, it probably won’t be as the lone piece in a transaction.

Jake Fischer reported Sunday that Atlanta is already working through multiple trade scenarios that could use Hield’s salary for 2026-27.

One possible route would involve combining Hield with Zaccharie Risacher, if another team still believes in the former number one overall pick. That kind of package could bring back a player in the $20-25 million range, the sort of contributor who could help in the playoffs.

What Hield no longer is, though, is a free-agent option. His shooting would have made him attractive on the open market as a veteran minimum target, and the Miami Heat were among the teams that could have had interest, according to the Miami Herald last week, as they build around the new superstar duo of Giannis Antetokounmpo and Bam Adebayo. A return to the Warriors also could have been in play if he had reached free agency again.

That path is gone now. With Atlanta’s decision on Sunday, Hield is back in the trade conversation, and the Hawks are left trying to turn a contract the Warriors were eager to move into something more useful.

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