Spurs Suddenly Face A Real De'Aaron Fox Crossroads

Exploring the potential of a high-stakes trade, the San Antonio Spurs weigh financial flexibility and player performance in a deal that could reshape their lineup for future success.

The De’Aaron Fox noise around San Antonio hasn’t gone anywhere, and if the Spurs ever decide to actually move him, there’s a mock deal that does a lot of basketball sense.

The Spurs keep saying they don’t plan to trade Fox anytime soon, but the chatter keeps circling back for a reason. He’s on maximum salaries for each of the next four seasons, which could get expensive fast for San Antonio. And with Dylan Harper breaking out as an elite player in his own right, there’s already a real question about whether Harper might be better than Fox right now.

That matters because Fox’s value is not exactly soaring after the Finals. Even so, one team could be willing to absorb the contract if it means upgrading its own roster: the Los Angeles Clippers.

Sportsnaut’s Jason Burgos floated a setup that would send Fox to the Clippers, likely with some draft capital attached, and bring Brandon Ingram to San Antonio. The catch is that the Clippers and Toronto Raptors still haven’t finalized the deal that would send Kawhi Leonard to Canada for Brandon Ingram and other assets, and there’s speculation that Los Angeles wants to bring a third team into that arrangement to move Ingram’s contract.

As Burgos put it, "He is a player who has scored 21 or more points a night for the last seven seasons," Burgos wrote. "So the Spurs would not lose much offensively by swapping him for Fox."

That’s the heart of the appeal for San Antonio. Ingram would give the Spurs a wing scorer they don’t currently have, and his fit looks clean on paper. He shot 38.2 percent from 3-point range last season and can handle some playmaking, which would ease the load on Harper and Stephon Castle.

The lineup picture gets even more interesting from there. Harper would slide into the starting five, Devin Vassell could move to the bench and instantly become a Sixth Man of the Year frontrunner, and Ingram would add another scoring option on the wing. On top of that, Ingram is owed roughly $40 million per year for only the next two seasons, which means he’d be off the books in time for Castle and Harper to sign massive extensions of their own.

That kind of flexibility is part of what makes the idea appealing for San Antonio. Fox’s deal runs much longer, and that could be a tougher fit for the Spurs financially.

The Clippers would likely need a first-round pick to take on Fox and pair him with Darius Garland, but the broader framework still makes sense: Fox and a pick for a proven wing scorer. And if the Spurs ever built out a group with Harper, Castle, Ingram, Tobias Harris, and Victor Wembanyama, with Vassell, Julian Champagnie, Luke Kornet, Keldon Johnson, and Carter Bryant coming off the bench, it would be one of the longest and best lineups in the NBA.

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Instead, the Spurs have spent their energy on the group they already have, a young core built around Victor Wembanyama, Stephon Castle, Dylan Harper and Carter Bryant. After recently reaching the NBA Finals, San Antonio has little reason to reopen old doors, and the league is expected to address the Leonard situation at an upcoming Board of Governors meeting. [Read more 🡒]