The Utah Jazz’s Rudy Gobert deal just keeps getting bigger. What started in the summer of 2022 as a blockbuster with the Minnesota Timberwolves now looks even more lopsided after the Jazz moved Walker Kessler to the Lakers for four first-round picks.
That original package already had a huge footprint: Malik Beasley, Patrick Beverley, Jarred Vanderbilt, Leandro Bolmaro, the No. 22 pick in the 2022 NBA Draft, which became Walker Kessler, and five first-round picks, including one swap. With Kessler now gone, the Jazz have turned that one trade into a sprawling asset pile that has touched multiple rosters and draft boards across the league.
The Lakers have been at the center of the whole chain reaction. Every player the Jazz got in that deal except Bolmaro eventually found his way to Los Angeles.
Patrick Beverley was moved for Talen Horton-Tucker and Stanley Johnson before the February 2023 trade that sent Russell Westbrook to Utah. That same sequence brought Beasley and Vanderbilt to the Lakers while also delivering Utah LA’s 2027 first-round pick, top-four protected.
Three years later, the Lakers went back to the Jazz for Kessler, sending their 2028 and 2030 first-round swaps along with unprotected first-round picks in 2031 and 2033. Utah had developed Kessler into its de facto Rudy Gobert replacement and still managed to pull in a massive return, even though he was nowhere near as proven as Gobert had been when the original trade happened.
Beverley later moved on for Mo Bamba, while Beasley left as a free agent before his off-court troubles began. Vanderbilt remains with the Lakers for now, putting up 4.9 points and 5.0 rebounds across 156 games in Los Angeles.
The Jazz also squeezed real value out of the draft capital that came with the Gobert haul. The No. 16 pick in the 2023 NBA Draft ended up in Utah because of the trade, since Minnesota would have owned it otherwise.
The Jazz used that selection on Keyonte George, and he has already become a major part of their future, averaging 23.6 points, 3.7 rebounds, and 6.1 assists last season. He’s expected to start in the backcourt alongside Darryn Peterson.
That kind of payoff is exactly why the trade has started drawing comparisons to other franchise-altering pick windfalls. The source of the idea is simple: sometimes the picks in the teens are the ones that end up mattering most.
The Gobert deal also continues to ripple through other moves. One of the Jazz’s later pieces, the 2025 first-round pick they got from Minnesota at No. 21, which became Will Riley, was flipped in a move to go up and get Walter Clayton Jr. from the Washington Wizards. Clayton then became part of the package that sent Jaren Jackson Jr. to the Grizzlies, along with Minnesota’s 2029 pick, two other picks, and three players.
Jackson averaged 19.4 points, 5.7 rebounds, 1.1 steals, and 1.4 blocks last season and is now set to be Utah’s starting center and backline protector after Kessler’s departure.
Final return for Rudy Gobert
Malik Beasley
Patrick Beverley
Jarred Vanderbilt
Leandro Bolmaro
2022 No. 22 Pick (Walker Kessler)
2023 First-Round Pick (Keyonte George)
2025 First-Round Pick (Will Riley, traded for Walter Clayton Jr.)
2026 First-Round Pick Swap (unexercised)
2027 First-Round Pick (MIN)
2027 First-Round Pick (LAL, top-four protected, traded for Jaren Jackson Jr.)
2028 First-Round Pick Swap (LAL)
2029 First-Round Pick (MIN, top-five protected, traded for Jaren Jackson Jr.)
2030 First-Round Pick Swap (LAL)
2031 First-Round Pick (LAL)
2031 First-Round Pick (LAL)
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