Phoenix got a one-year wing rental. Charlotte got another unprotected pick in the 2030s, and the Suns handed them the rope to do it with.
ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Sunday that the Charlotte Hornets are sending Miles Bridges, a top-5-protected 2029 first-round pick and a 2027 second-round pick to the Phoenix Suns in exchange for Grayson Allen, Royce O’Neale and an unprotected 2033 first-round pick. The deal is done. Now comes the accounting.
| Asset | Phoenix Suns Receive | Charlotte Hornets Receive |
|---|---|---|
| Player(s) | Miles Bridges | Grayson Allen, Royce O’Neale |
| First-round pick | 2029 (least favorable of CLE/MIN/UTA, top-5 protected) | 2033 (unprotected) |
| Second-round pick | 2027 (least favorable of BOS/ORL) | N/A |
| Bridges 2026-27 cap hit | $22,826,087 | N/A |
| Allen 2026-27 cap hit | N/A | $18,125,000 |
| O’Neale 2026-27 cap hit | N/A | $10,875,000 |
Source: Spotrac
Phoenix Suns: D
The Suns are a team that keeps confusing motion for progress.
Bridges posted 17.1 points, 5.8 rebounds and 3.2 assists per game across 77 games in 2025-26, per Basketball Reference. He’s athletic. He’s versatile on the wing. He’ll slide into a starting role alongside Dillon Brooks and give Jordan Ott a genuinely switchable duo on the perimeter. None of that is the problem.
The problem is the 2033 first-round pick attached to his name.
The Cost of the Trade
The Miami Heat recently used a pick in the 2030s to acquire two-time MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo, as detailed in Giannis Antetokounmpo stats, Bio, and everything you need to know. Similarly, Minnesota used a 2033 pick to land LaMelo Ball, one of the most talented guards in the league. Those trades set the market rate for what an unprotected pick seven years out is worth. Phoenix just cleared that bar for an expiring $22.8 million contract on a player who turns 29 in March.
The 2029 pick coming back in return carries top-5 protection and represents the least favorable selection from Cleveland, Minnesota, or Utah, per Spotrac. That pick will almost certainly convey in the teens or twenties. It doesn’t balance the ledger.
Financial Motivation
There’s a tax angle here, and it clearly motivated the Suns. Allen carries a $18.125 million cap hit in 2026-27 while O’Neale hits at $10.875 million, per Spotrac, a combined $29 million leaving Phoenix in exchange for Bridges at $22.826 million. Phoenix saves roughly $6.2 million in salary and meaningfully cuts into a luxury tax penalty that ESPN reported reaches approximately $30 million in total savings once tax multipliers factor in.
That’s real money. It also doesn’t change much on the court.
Western Conference Outlook
The Suns finished last season as a play-in team before falling in the first round to Oklahoma City, a series that exposed exactly where Phoenix sits in the Western Conference. The Thunder operate at a different level. The San Antonio Spurs are rising fast. Portland could yet add Jaylen Brown. As covered in LeBron James Isn’t a True Laker: Byron Scott and Olden Polynice Spark Debate, even the Lakers remain a meaningful step above Phoenix right now.
Bridges moves the needle from 40 wins to maybe 42. He doesn’t move it toward a conference finals appearance.
The more damaging reality is this: the only first-round pick Phoenix controls before the 2030s is the 2032 selection, and that pick sits frozen because the Suns exceeded the second apron in 2024-25. Devin Booker turns 37 that season. The franchise has now mortgaged the exact years that matter most for a cycle of competence that won’t threaten the elite.
Charlotte Hornets: A
Jeff Peterson has had a remarkable ten days.
First Ball. Now Bridges. The Hornets dispatched their two highest-profile veterans in back-to-back trades and emerged richer each time.
Assets Coming In
Bridges was entering the final year of a three-year, $75 million contract, per Spotrac. He was going to hit free agency regardless. Either Charlotte re-signed him at significant cost for a wing whose efficiency fell noticeably once Ball left the floor or he walked for nothing. Peterson removed that decision entirely by converting Bridges into an unprotected 2033 first and two veteran contributors who fit Charlotte’s next roster.
Allen is a career 40-percent-plus three-point shooter who averaged a career-high 16.5 points per game in 2025-26 before injuries cut his season to 51 games. O’Neale started 67 of 78 games for Phoenix last season and gives coach Charles Lee a switchable, experienced defender who can slot alongside Brandon Miller. Both players remain under contract for multiple seasons, per Spotrac.
The Draft Picture
The pick haul is what makes this transformative. Charlotte now holds two unprotected first-round picks in the 2030s: this one from Phoenix and a separate 2033 selection from the Minnesota deal. They also hold a top-2-protected 2027 pick from Dallas and a lottery-protected 2027 selection from Miami that converts unprotected in 2028. In effect, the Hornets are holding short positions on four different franchises. One of them will almost certainly collapse before those picks land.
Naz Reid, acquired in the Ball trade, slides into the starting power forward role. He’s a better fit there than Bridges was, and his value isn’t tied to a single playmaker. Kon Knueppel and Miller anchor the young core. For context on how many rivals Charlotte is now stacking picks against, How Many Teams are there in the NBA? (2025-26 Full List) covers all 30, and the Hornets have financial leverage over several of them heading into the next decade.
The Hornets gave up a protected late first in 2029 and a second-rounder. In return, they received a pick with a franchise-altering ceiling if Phoenix continues its current trajectory. As NBA Commissioner Silver visits Portland after the passage of a bill to help fund arena renovations, the story shows Western Conference teams are actively building around Charlotte’s timeline. That’s not an accident. That’s leverage.
Watch Devin Booker’s next contract negotiation closely. If the Suns can’t give him a realistic path to contention, the 2033 pick Charlotte holds becomes even more interesting. LeBron James Surpasses Kareem Abdul-Jabbar for Most Field Goals in NBA History signals what era the Miles Bridges trade grades will ultimately be judged against: the West’s elder statesmen are aging out, and the Hornets now hold the assets to capitalize on whatever that transition produces.
