Report: Nets regarded as team to trade up in 2025 NBA Draft
The Brooklyn Nets came away from Monday's 2025 NBA Draft Lottery with the disappointing result of the eighth overall pick in the upcoming 2025 NBA Draft. Brooklyn went into the event with the knowledge that the odds weren't in their favor, but with the festivities unfolding like they did, the Nets could be looking for a way to overcome the setback.
Following the events of Monday's Lottery, the Nets have been regarded as one of the teams that could look to move up in the upcoming Draft, according to NBA insider Jake Fischer on Tuesday, via The Stein Line. Assuming that Brooklyn is looking to get a better draft pick, they do have some extra draft capital to work with to possibly entice one of the teams ahead of them into trading back.
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The teams ahead of the Nets in the Draft order are the Dallas Mavericks, San Antonio Spurs, Philadelphia 76ers, Charlotte Hornets, Utah Jazz, Washington Wizards, and New Orleans Pelicans. Time will tell if any of these teams would be willing to trade back in the Draft, especially with teams like the Hornets, Jazz, and Wizards being in the same position as Brooklyn in terms of needing as much talent as possible.
The good news is that the NBA has a history of draft picks being traded considering that in the 2024 NBA Draft as six players who were drafted in the first round were the result of trades. Depending on how far the Nets want to move up in the Draft, that could change the price of what Brooklyn would have to give up in order to make their dream come true if their intent is to trade up.
For example, the Minnesota Timberwolves traded two first-round picks, a 2030 pick swap and a 2031 first-round pick, to the Spurs for guard Rob Dillingham, who was taken with the eighth overall pick in the Draft. After what the Mavericks went through this season with the Luka Doncic trade to the Los Angeles Lakers, they are probably not keen on trading Duke forward Cooper Flagg. However, San Antonio or Philadelphia could be looking to make some moves.
This article originally appeared on Nets Wire: Report: Nets regarded as team to trade up in 2025 NBA Draft

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The Lakers used the power of the moment to chase their 17th (and most recent) championship while in the NBA's COVID-19 bubble in Orlando, Fla. There, James became the first player in NBA history to win NBA Finals MVP with three different franchises as the Lakers re-established their title-winning ways. Davis etched his name in league lore thanks to his longstanding value as a two-way force, leading him to join James, Bryant, Johnson, Abdul-Jabbar and other legends on the NBA Top-75 list. Advertisement Davis' presence also helped them snatch another franchise-altering player off the trade market. The Lakers' blockbuster acquisition of Luka Dončić in exchange for Davis on Feb. 2, 2025, encapsulated why Buss acquired the franchise decades ago. No matter how much money one has, vision is paramount. The bright lights of Hollywood would appeal to any big-name star, but it is hard to think of a franchise in any sport that better balances entertainment, star power and results than the Lakers. And all that while the team itself, no matter its global prominence, was a relative mom-and-pop shop until this week's record-breaking, $10 billion sale to Los Angeles Dodgers majority owner Mark Walter. How will the Lakers look in the coming years? Dončić will be due a new contract soon, JJ Redick is establishing himself among the league's most promising coaches and James remains an unmatched draw even in his advanced years. The NBA's upcoming collective bargaining agreement will also have its say — its newfound financial penalties will ensure that. Walter will have to adjust to leading a basketball franchise's payroll. Repeat bids are harder with roster-construction limitations. Keeping big-name players for long is tougher because there are so many opportunities for them away from the court, broadening their career horizons. For the recent gripes about small markets and boring basketball, it's hard to argue the NBA has established an unmatched global presence. That doesn't happen without the Buss family crafting the Lakers into a premier sports franchise, one ambitious idea at a time. A no-look pass from Magic Johnson couldn't match that vision.