Blake Snell Headed Back to Injured List After One Start
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Miami Heat's Tyler Herro remains untradeable due to a lack of market interest stemming from his contract size, defensive issues, and recent injuries. An NBA executive highlighted that teams are hesitant because of Herro's expiring contract and his current discontent.
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NBA executive explains exactly why Miami can't move Tyler Herro originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
Tyler Herro's trade situation in Miami has been a slow-moving problem for years. The reasons have changed, but the result is the same: there's no real market for him. And according to one league executive, both versions of this problem are rooted in the same fundamental lack of confidence.
An Eastern Conference executive's assessment, reported by Heavy on Sports, laid it out plainly:
"So before no one wanted to trade for Tyler Herro because his contract was too big and no one trusted his style of play, he is a defensive liability and all that. Now, no one wants him because of the injuries and because the contract is expiring and he is a little bit disgruntled and all of that."
The Heat's problem with Herro has essentially flipped. When he was locked into a sizable long-term deal, teams passed because of the financial risk. Then his defensive deficiencies were consistently exposed, and nobody was willing to bet on him.
Also, his availability has been a persistent issue; he played only 33 games in the 2025-26 season, dealing with ankle injuries, a toe issue, and rib complications.
Tyler Herro's trade value is low due to concerns about his large contract, defensive liabilities, and recent injuries.
Factors affecting Herro's potential trade include his expiring contract, injury history, and perceived dissatisfaction with his role.
An NBA executive stated that teams are reluctant to trade for Herro because of his contract issues, injuries, and lack of trust in his playing style.
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Herro is entering the final year of his deal at roughly $33 million. He wants an extension. The Heat, at least right now, don't appear eager to meet that number, creating the exact type of situation front offices typically look for: a productive player on an expiring contract with something to prove. But the injury history undercuts that narrative before it can build momentum.
The disgruntlement element compounds things further.
According to the Sun-Sentinel's Ira Winderman, Herro should be under the impression that his time in Miami is over. A player believed to be unhappy, on a short-term deal, with real injury questions doesn't exactly inspire bidding wars in the front office community.
Miami has tried to leverage Herro's value in blockbuster trades before and never found a willing partner at the price they wanted.
Heading into the offseason, Herro's trade value is at its lowest point, and the Heat only have themselves to blame for refusing to sell high after he made his first All-Star team.
The window to move him before he potentially reaches unrestricted free agency is narrowing quickly, and the market, if one forms at all, won't reflect what Miami hoped to get back.