The Clippers’ future with Kawhi Leonard keeps circling back to Toronto, and that conversation is not going away anytime soon.
Marc Stein and Jake Fischer of The Stein Line report that the Raptors remain a real possibility if Los Angeles decides to move the two-time Finals MVP. Dallas has also shown interest, but the Mavericks are not considered a realistic destination at this point.
One reason Toronto keeps coming up is Leonard’s reported willingness to sign an extension there. Stein and Fischer also note that Clippers officials are believed to have interest in Brandon Ingram, a move that could help them stay competitive while getting younger.
Los Angeles is not locked into one path, either. League sources told Stein and Fischer that the Clippers have not ruled out creating cap space this offseason, and they are also still open to bringing back free-agent forward John Collins.
In Houston, the Marcus Smart pursuit is picking up steam. After the Rockets were first tied to the former Defensive Player of the Year earlier this weekend, Stein and Fischer now say the interest is “only sounding more serious.” Dan Woike of The Athletic is hearing the same kind of buzz, with the expectation that Houston could offer Smart a three-year deal after he declines his player option.
The Kings are also lurking in the center market. Stein and Fischer report that Sacramento would like to join the Lakers and Nets in the Mitchell Robinson chase, though the financial piece is the obstacle. Right now, the Kings are projected to be above the first tax apron, so they would likely need additional moves before making a competitive bid.
Orlando, meanwhile, appears ready to keep Robinson. Stein and Fischer report the Magic plan to retain him, in large part because the team is preparing for the chance of losing Moritz Wagner in free agency.
In Other News...
Clippers Search For A Real Answer In The Middle Just Got Tense
The Clippers are still hunting for help in the middle after dealing Ivica Zubac to the Indiana Pacers, and that search has put a familiar Orlando reserve in the conversation. Goga Bitadze has become a player to watch because the Magic have valued his role as they try to maintain depth at center, especially with Moritz Wagner expected to reach free agency.
Orlandos reluctance makes sense from a roster-building standpoint, since losing one big man could leave the frontcourt thinner than it already is. Bitadze has given the Magic usable minutes and steady protection around the rim, which is exactly the kind of stability teams tend to protect when the market starts circling, so the question now is whether Los Angeles can find a path that changes Orlandos stance. [Read more 🡒]
The Tracy McGrady Trade Changed Everything For The Rockets
Two decades later, the Tracy McGrady deal still reads like the kind of move that can redirect a franchise. On June 29, 2004, Houston landed McGrady from Orlando in a seven-player trade, and the Rockets instantly had the kind of perimeter star who could change a game every night. McGradys arrival gave them a marquee scorer to pair with Yao Ming, and the fit pushed Houston back into the playoff picture in a way that felt sustainable at the time.
For Orlando, the trade was part of a longer search for a new direction after the promise around McGrady and Grant Hill never fully materialized. Hills injury struggles left that partnership short of its ceiling, while McGrady went on to put up big production in Houston and help lead the Rockets to multiple postseason trips. The intriguing part of the story is how close that era came to becoming something bigger, only to keep running into the same wall when the stakes got highest. [Read more 🡒]
