The NBA’s handling of the Kawhi Leonard trade twist has thrown a harsh spotlight back on a move the league approved for the Miami Heat last year, and it’s the Terry Rozier deal with the Charlotte Hornets that suddenly looks even messier.
The latest wrinkle in the Leonard saga says the blockbuster swap between the Toronto Raptors and LA Clippers won’t be completed until the league’s investigation is finished. That alone raises the obvious question: if the NBA wasn’t willing to fully green-light the Leonard deal without knowing where a possible punishment might land, how did it move ahead with Miami’s trade for Rozier while he was tied to “unusual betting activity?”
That’s the part that keeps hanging over the Heat. The league had already been alerted to those red flags before Rozier ever landed in Miami, but at the time there wasn’t enough evidence for the NBA to push any further. Even so, the timeline leaves plenty of room to wonder who knew what, and when, before the trade was made.
The Heat were never given the same kind of warning that the Raptors are getting now in the Leonard situation. And if Miami had been told about those concerns up front, there’s a real question whether the team would have gone through with the deal at all. It’s also why the Heat received a second-round pick as compensation, which only adds to the sense that the league knew the trade came with baggage.
As the Miami Herald reported: “10 months before the Heat acquired Rozier from the Hornets through a trade midway through the 2023-24 season, the NBA was alerted to unusual betting activity involving Rozer in the hours before the Hornets’ home against the New Orleans Pelicans in March 2023. This sparked an investigation by the NBA, with the league determining Rozier did not violate NBA rules. - Miami Herald.”
In one sense, the Leonard situation suggests the league has at least become more cautious. It looks like a sign that the NBA has learned from past mistakes, even if that lesson came at Miami’s expense.
And while the Heat may have had some of the sting softened after acquiring Giannis Antetokounmpo this summer, that doesn’t erase how the Rozier trade has aged. For Heat fans, it still reads like a raw deal.
There’s still a chance the Leonard trade eventually gets completed, even if it comes with a penalty for “circumventing the salary cap.” But the comparison has already done its damage. The Rozier situation looks worse now than it did then, and for Miami, it’s not the kind of memory that fades easily.
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