Where does Atlanta go from here?
ESPN Insider
State of the rosterOffseason financesSpoiler:
The Dejounte Murray and De'Andre Hunter trades have taken Atlanta out of financial purgatory. Instead of straddling the luxury tax line like in years past, Atlanta enters the offseason right at the salary cap. Besides the possibility of two first-round picks, the Hawks have the flexibility to use their $14.1 million non-tax mid-level exception and still be active in the trade market. Atlanta also has the $5.1 million biannual, veteran minimum and four trade exceptions ($25.3 million, $13.1 million, $3.7 million and $3.5 million).
Top front office priority
Pick a direction with Young's future. The four-time All-Star has been the face of the organization since he was drafted in 2018. But Atlanta is facing a decision on whether to commit to the guard. He is eligible to sign a four-year, $229 million extension up until next June 30 or a five-year, $345 million super max extension if he is named All-NBA this season. If an extension is not reached, Young could become a free agent next summer but only if he declines the $49 million player option in 2026-27.
Young averaged a league-high 11.6 assists this season, the most since Russell Westbrook in 2020-21. And Young's 200 assists in the fourth quarter are the most since John Stockton in 1996-97. The positives of Young sharing the basketball were met with a less-than-efficient shooting season. He shot a career low 53% on shots at the rim and the second-worst effective field goal percentage of his career. His 355 turnovers this season led all players.
Extension candidate to watchTeam needsSpoiler:
The Hawks improved defensively but there is still work to do. Atlanta ranked 28th in points per direct pick and last in defending on-ball screens this season, according to GeniusIQ tracking.
Draft assetsSpoiler: