It began as a blockbuster rumor at the close of the 2026 NBA Draft, and quickly became reality overnight. The Charlotte Hornets have traded superstar point guard LaMelo Ball to the Minnesota Timberwolves for a package that involves forward Naz Reid and a bevy of draft capital.

First reported by Shams Charania on Thursday morning, here are the full trade details:

Minnesota Timberwolves get:

Charlotte Hornets get:

  • Unprotected first round pick (2033)

  • Three first-round pick swaps (2028, 2029, 2030)

  • Three second-round picks (2029, 2032, 2033)

It’s a staggering deal that gives Minnesota one of the most exciting and dynamic backcourts in the NBA with Anthony Edwards and Ball, while the Hornets now turn the page on the Melo era to a new chapter where Brandon Miller and Kon Knueppel are the focal points of the franchise. Let’s break down the deal from both sides.

Minnesota Timberwolves

The Wolves opened up a large trade exception by trading Julius Randle, hoping to get in on the Giannis Antetokounmpo sweepstakes, only to miss out. By landing a legitimate star in LaMelo Ball they achieve two goals: Firstly, make use of that trade exception to where they don’t lose Randle for nothing, and more-importantly, show Anthony Edwards they are serious about improving the roster and surrounding him with talent, ensuring he doesn’t ask for a trade in a year or two.

Losing fan-favorite Naz Reid hurts, but this was brilliant work by Minnesota to keep their core starters together while getting a mammoth upgrade at point guard. Ensuring they kept Jalen McDaniels is mind-boggling and incredible work by the front office. Not only that, but by only giving up one future 1st round pick, the team is betting on themselves to finish deep in the playoffs for the next four years — which can be easily achieved.

The big question about this deal is how Minnesota will balance having two ball-dominant guards on the roster at the same time. The Wolves’ front court is also incredibly thin now behind Rudy Gobert. The Wolves need to hope Ball can stay healthy and maintain the level he showed in the second half of last season. They need to hope Edwards and Ball can mesh together. It’s a huge risk, but there’s no doubt the Wolves raised their ceiling if everything goes according to plan.

Grade: B+

Charlotte Hornets

LaMelo Ball’s individual brilliance is unquestioned, but there was definitely some friction under the surface between his loose, vibes-based style of play and head coach Charles Lee’s more precise, exacting offense. The rub is that while Melo was incredible with the Hornets during the 2025-26 season, his individual success often came at the expense of utilizing Brandon Miller and Kon Knueppel to their full potential.

This trade paves the way for the Hornets to re-sign Coby White (which was a priority for them this off-season), while opening a path for rookie Christian Anderson Jr. to get significant minutes at point. There is no doubt Charlotte will miss out of Ball’s offense, but the hope will be that adding defensively at forward and getting Miller/Knueppel more looks will ameliorate that.

Regardless of how much the Hornets may have been ready to part ways with LaMelo Ball, they absolutely did not get back good trade value. The team has essentially traded its franchise player for a nice complementary player and a handful of magic beans. It’s entirely possible none of those pick swaps will be realized, which results in one heck of a gamble that the Wolves will be bad by 2033 to realize that unprotected first.

The haul could look better for the Hornets if things explode in a bad way for Minnesota. If this doesn’t work out, it’s possible Edwards is pushing for a new home before those pick swaps are realized, suddenly making them more valuable. Charlotte was so good with Ball leading the charge in the second half of the season that this feels like a baffling decision and underwhelming return.

Grade: C



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