The NBA’s unofficial trade season is underway, and one of the guys the Knicks are potentially shopping is Obi Toppin.
The third-year player has one more season under-contract before a payday is due, and he’s missed time this season while New York has found its defensive footing. It’s unclear how or if Toppin will work his way back into this rotation, given how well it’s working without him.
Couple that with the financial cost of keeping him long-term, and perpetual awkwardness of playing the same position as their best player, and it may be time for the Knicks to move on.
Here are five Toppin-centered trade packages the Knicks could reasonably consider in the coming weeks:
Knicks get: Oshae Brissett and a first-round pick
Pacers get: Obi Toppin
Starting off with a simple flip to a party rumored to be interested in Toppin. The Knicks send him to a longtime franchise rival in exchange for draft compensation and a more natural fit at the backup four.
Indiana reportedly likes the idea of adding Toppin to their young core, which is understandable given his offensive ceiling if paired with the right situation and lead guard. The Pacers’ well-coached rebuild led by Tyrese Haliburton may be what fully unleashes Toppin.
For the Knicks, they net draft compensation while filling that backup four spot with more of a straight up 3-and-D option that won’t need to eat into Julius Randle’s minutes.
Brissett has been a consistent three-point shooter for longer than Toppin and has better success defending wings, making him an arguably easier fit with the current team’s construction.
Knicks get: Eric Gordon
Rockets get: Toppin and Evan Fournier
Another less aggressive, perhaps even downright resigned move would be using Toppin to dump a larger salary.
The Knicks can attach him to Fournier to get his guaranteed $19 million in 2023-24 off the books, potentially setting up free agency moves this summer.
In the meantime, Gordon should be an immediate short-term upgrade over Fournier, despite his age. He could be helpful come the postseason, on top of the long-term benefits.
Houston, meanwhile, would pick up another prospect for their rebuild for the trouble of taking on extra salary.
It’s unlikely the Knicks would go this route without much bigger plans, and for good reason, as giving up a lottery pick just to get out of a bad contract is generally poor management.