Since the unofficial start of the NBAβs trade season on Dec. 15, much of the discussion surrounding which players might be on the move has focused on perennial All-Star and All-NBA-caliber performers with marquee names: Giannis Antetokounmpo, Anthony Davis, Trae Young, Ja Morant, et al. But with the Feb. 5 trade deadline now just over a month away, it seems like thereβs an increasing level of interest around the league in the availability of β and the potential market for β Brooklyn Nets forward Michael Porter Jr.
Just six months ago, the Nuggets sent the Nets an unprotected 2032 first-round draft pick to take on the final two years and $79.1 million of the five-year rookie-scale-maximum contract that Porter signed in the summer of 2021. After an excellent start to his tenure in Brooklyn, though β one that has seen him play his way into potential All-Star consideration β Porter may well have gone from distressed asset into in-demand target.
Advertisement
Jake Fischer of The Stein Line reports that the Nets have shown a willingness to βlisten to pitchesβ on their veteran players, including Porter, but they havenβt been βactively shoppingβ the 27-year-old swingman. Itβs entirely possible that, as ESPNβs Shams Charania and others have reported, the Nets eschew a big move in favor of just continuing to serve as a cap-space-renting waystation for other teams looking to get off money and willing to pay with draft picks to do so.
If and when conversations begin to perk up over the next few weeks, though, Fischer highlighted several teams to keep an eye on in the potential running for Porterβs services: the Milwaukee Bucks, Detroit Pistons, Golden State Warriors and Chicago Bulls. All four prospective suitors make at least some sense.
[Get more Nets news: Brooklyn team feed]
According to multiple reports, despite a dismal 14-20 start that currently has them outside the Eastβs play-in spots, the Bucksβ braintrust continues to signal an intent to try to add talent at the deadline rather than detonating their build through any much-rumored-but-never-actually-consummated blockbuster that sends Antetokounmpo away from Milwaukee. While the Pistons sit atop the Eastern standings, theyβre a middling 10-7 since their scorching 15-2 start, ranking 25th or worse in the share of their shots that come from 3-point range, team 3-point accuracy and half-court scoring efficiency in that span, according to Cleaning the Glass.
Advertisement
The Warriors, similarly, have struggled mightily to find a consistent secondary source of offense beyond the seemingly ageless Stephen Curry. And while attempting to discern the motivations behind the machinations in Chicago has long been a mugβs game, Fischer notes that the Bulls and Nuggets had βserious discussionsβ about a swap that wouldβve landed Porter in the Windy City before pivoting and shipping Zach LaVine to Sacramento; itβs at least possible a fresh round of discussions could be struck up with Brooklyn brass, if Chicagoβs decision-makers are still fond of Porterβs talent.
Michael Porter Jr.’s stellar start in Brooklyn could make him a hot commodity on the NBA’s trade market. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)
(Mitchell Leff via Getty Images)
And judging by what heβs put on film this season, they β and plenty of other front offices around the league β should be.
Porterβs averaging a career-high 25.8 points, 7.5 rebounds and 3.3 assists per game, shooting 58% on 2-pointers, 41% from 3-point land on more than nine attempts per game, and 81.2% from the free-throw line. There are only 14 NBA players this season averaging at least 25 points per game on .600 true shooting, according to Stathead β a list that includes five MVPs (Curry, Nikola JokiΔ, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Kevin Durant, James Harden), three multi-time All-NBA selections (Luka DonΔiΔ, Anthony Edwards, Donovan Mitchell) and two former All-Stars (Lauri Markkanen, Tyrese Maxey). Porter is on that list.
Advertisement
Thatβs the kind of company Porterβs been keeping offensively this season β the cream of the crop of high-volume, high-efficiency point producers. He has also more than doubled his previous career-best assist rate, dishing the helper on nearly 20% of his teammatesβ baskets during his floor time, and is clearing the defensive boards more consistently than he has since his rookie season. And while heβs not a top-flight defender on an individual basis, Porter has shown a capacity to play his part in a defense playing at a top-flight level. Since shifting to supersized long-ball lineups featuring Porter at small forward alongside the 6-foot-11 Nic Claxton and 6-10 Noah Clowney up front with 6-8 rookie Egor DΡmin and 6-6 vet Terance Mann in the backcourt, with plenty of size coming off the bench, Brooklyn owns the NBAβs No. 3 defense since the start of December β all with Porter leading the team in minutes.
Add it all up, and by a handful of metrics β estimated plus-minus, value over replacement player, box plus-minus and player efficiency rating, among others β Porter has performed like a top-20-to-30 player in the NBA this season. A 6-10 sharpshooter who can contribute in a smaller role, can scale up his usage without a drop in efficiency, can cook with the ball in his hands and open up both your playbook and the rest of the floor for his teammates with his off-ball activity and gravity would seem to have a lot of value around the league if he actually hits the market. Whether the fact that Porterβs under contract for $40.8 million next season makes him more attractive (not a rental!) or less attractive (big chunk of money on the books for a guy with persistent back problems and a drop-foot issue!) likely lies in the eye of the would-be suitor.
The question the Nets have to answer between now and Feb. 5: Is this as good (and as healthy) as Porterβs likely to be, making it the ideal time to sell high and try to get more draft capital and/or young talent for him in the perpetual game of asset arbitrage that rebuilding teams must play? Or is this really who Porter is, and what he can consistently be in Jordi FernΓ‘ndezβs system β and, thus, maybe an ideal play-finishing building block for the upwardly mobile team that Sean Marks and Co. are trying to build with all those big, young playmakers?
Advertisement
The answer will likely depend on a number of factors: how Porter plays over the next month; how many teams think of themselves as just one moderately sized swing from playing more meaningful basketball come springtime; how motivated Brooklynβs front office is to do whatever it can to improve the chances of landing as high in the 2026 NBA Draft Lottery, given the fact that the Nets do control their own first-round pick this summer, and donβt control it in 2027. (Though, as Brian Lewis of the New York Post notes, there could be other paths to dropping in the standings that donβt include re-routing MPJ before February.)
Ultimately, though, it likely depends primarily on just how hefty a price other teams signal theyβd be willing to pay for Porter. Fischer reports that βre-tradable salary and a future first-round pick β¦ might not be enoughβ to pry him away mid-season, given the possibility that the Nets might have their sights set on making bigger, more aggressive additions to their roster come the summer β moves that might require a significant salary like Porterβs as a financial make-weight. If someone ponies up a Mikal Bridges/Desmond Bane-style package of several legit first-round picks, then Porter will likely finish the season in a different uniform.
Advertisement
If not? Well, continuing to employ a top-25-to-35 player who fits what you want to do, and who already netted you an unprotected future first, doesnβt seem like too bad a deal β even if it means one fewer potential deal for NBA observers to obsess over.