A slew of high-profile wing players have been mentioned in NBA Trade Rumors. What happens if we throw them all in one big deal?
Bradley Beal and Zach LaVine are in trade rumors, and there's a chance that they could be swapped for each other.
As the trade deadline gets closer, other teams trying to get involved in the Jimmy Butler trade, and the Chicago Bulls are one of them.
According to NBA insider Jake Fischer, the Phoenix Suns could be interested in trading Bradley Beal to the Chicago Bulls for Zach LaVine. Beal has a no-trade clause in his contract, so the Suns can’t trade him without his permission.
The Bulls right now are absolutely involved in conversations with the Suns involving the possible Jimmy Butler trade situation. It’s not that Jimmy Butler would end in Chicago,
We're two weeks away from the deadline, and new names who could have a market have emerged. But No. 1 remains the same.
The Phoenix Suns and Chicago Bulls had ground-level talks about a Bradley Beal trade, reports ESPN's Brian Windhorst.
Ever since Denver’s interest in Zach LaVine became a talking point, Jamal Murray has provided a firm reminder that he already operates in that role for the Nuggets, averaging 21 points and six
What makes Beal's deal even worse is that he and LeBron James are the only players with true no-trade clauses negotiated into their contracts. That will travel with him if he gets moved, and it makes it harder to get rid of him once he's on a team's books.
During the Hoop Collective discussion, Windhorst’s ESPN colleague Tim Bontemps also questioned why the Bulls would be motivated to swap out LaVine for Beal, given the limited draft assets the Suns could offer as sweeteners and the All-Star caliber season LaVine is having so far this year (24.0 PPG on .512/.444/.792 shooting).
We've reached the point in NBA trade season in which the distance from the deadline is no longer measured in weeks, but days. We're now 10 days out and buyers and sellers alike are starting to get their ducks in a row.
Nikola Vučević is in rare form this season and contending teams could benefit from a stretch-center shooting 40.6% from 3-point range.