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Blazers GM Joe Cronin revealed he proposed a trade at the deadline approved by owner-in-waiting Tom Dundon. The trade aimed to save the other team money while providing Portland with a young asset and pushing the team into the tax bracket.
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Apr 2, 2026; Portland, Oregon, USA; Portland Trail Blazers GM Joe Cronin visits courtside before a game between the Portland Trail Blazers and the New Orleans Pelicans at Moda Center. Mandatory Credit: Troy Wayrynen-Imagn Images
On Thursday, at the Blazersā end-of-season interviews, General Manager Joe Cronin shared that he had presented a trade to the owner-in-waiting, Tom Dundon, at the trade deadline, to which Dundon gave the green light.
According to Cronin, that trade would have:
Those four pieces of information are more than enough to make a guess as to who Cronin was targeting at the 2026 deadline. Based on the details Cronin shared and utilizing the internet to learn about the NBAās luxury tax penalties, the player who would have been the centerpiece of this deal is crystal clear.
The first thing to look at is the teams that were over the luxury tax heading into the trade deadline by more than $5 million, which would have constituted them being saved āa bunch of moneyā by going through with a salary-dump-style trade. Those teams are:
Joe Cronin proposed a trade that would save the other team money, provide Portland with a young asset, and push the team into the tax bracket.
The trade proposed by Joe Cronin was approved by Tom Dundon, the owner-in-waiting of the Portland Trail Blazers.
The proposed trade would have forced the Blazers to pay $20 million due to tax implications.
The trade would have provided the Blazers with a nice, young asset to enhance their roster.
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These are our starting list of teams we will work from.
From there, there are a few we can eliminate based on the assumption that the team in this trade was focused on their finances, which would not have been the case for some bona fide contenders (or teams that believe theyāre competing, at least).Ā
That eliminates the Knicks and Cavaliers. James Dolan is all in on the Knicks winning the title this year, and Dan Gilbert, clearly, does not care how much he has to spend to try and win a title.
The team Portland is trading with in this scenario would have supposedly traded a young player to the Blazers. That eliminates a few teams.
The Clippers were the oldest team ever before bringing in young players. The Mavericks are trying to pivot to a Cooper Flagg timeline and offloaded AD.
That cuts the list down to seven teams.
This final clue lets us project that whatever nice, young asset Portland received would have been roughly $7 million more than whatever Portland shipped out.Ā
Why $7 million? Because first, the Blazers currently have $7,094,491 of room before they hit the 1st Apron; that figure was slightly different, but only negligibly, before the Vit Krecji trade.Ā
Second, that $7 million figure matches the $20 million penalty that Dundon would have had to pay for going over the tax line.Ā
So, if a team does not have a ānice, young assetā who is making at least $7 million per year, then they are eliminated.
That gets rid of:
What weāre left with are the Warriors and the 76ers.
The Warriors make sense because with Butler tearing his ACL, dumping expensive players to save some money and re-positioning themselves for next season could have been on the table.
The 76ers make a ton of sense because they actually enacted one of these trades with the Thunder in the form of Jared McCain. However, McCain, when it comes to this scenario, was on too cheap a contract.
That leaves three potential players that fit the bill:
Giving Cronin credit, itās hard to believe that he would have thought trading for Kuminga, who canāt shoot, would have made any logical sense for the Blazers to trade for. Portland already has plenty of athletic wings who canāt shoot.
Moses Moody would have been a pretty solid pickup for the Blazers in a trade. He can shoot and defend, and heās on a really team-friendly contract. Too team-friendly for the Warriors, who have been dying for consistent play from their role players, to want to move on from.
This leaves us with Quentin Grimes, which makes perfect sense.
The 76ers offloaded salaries to save money at the 2026 trade deadline. They dumped McCainās $4.4 million contract and Eric Gordonās $3.6 million contract for a total dump of $8 million. Grimes is making $8.7 million this year.
Quentin Grimes makes a ton of sense for the Blazers. He can shoot, which was a need that Cronin not only admitted to in the same press conference from Thursday, but was one the Blazers addressed in the form of Krecji.
Grimes is a good player, but as heās on the final year of his deal, he likely wasnāt worth a whole lot on the trade market, nothing the Blazers couldnāt pay, certainly. The 76ers were clearly trying to move one of him or McCain, given that they have a dynamic young starting backcourt in Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe.
Grimes is also a nice, young asset, given that heās only 25 years old.
What likely ended up happening (speculating) is that the Blazers had put an offer for Grimes on the table with the 76ers. However, the Thunder, with their chest of draft assets, came over the top of that offer, giving the 76ers a first-round pick and a few second-round picks, opting to snag McCain instead of Grimes, because McCain is on a cheaper contract.
Itās impossible to truly say whether the deal would have been good for Portland, given thereās no knowledge of just how many draft assets the Blazers gave up.
However, since Portland was able to make it all the way to the No. 7 seed without Grimes, and since Grimes is an unrestricted free agent who could walk for nothing this offseason, itās safe to say that the Blazers accomplished all they could without Grimes anyway, and itās probably for the best that they saved some draft capital for another day.
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