Lakers-Knicks uneven trade idea would send young center to Los Angeles

Colin Keane

Lakers-Knicks uneven trade idea would send young center to Los Angeles image

Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

The Los Angeles Lakers might try to pry away a center from the New York Knicks this summer, but would LA have any luck doing so?

On Tuesday, Bleacher Report’s Greg Swartz proposed a deal between the Knicks and Lakers.

The Trade

Lakers receive…

  • Mitchell Robinson

Knicks receive…

  • Jarred Vanderbilt
  • 2025 second-rounder
  • 2026 first-round pick swap

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“The Lakers don't need an All-Star center, but rather just someone with size who can protect the rim and be a vertical lob threat for Luka Dončić and LeBron James to find,” Swartz wrote.

“Robinson, 27, is a true 7-footer who knows his role and plays it well. He does a good job of cleaning the offensive glass and has blocked 2.7 shots per 36 minutes in his seven-year career.”

“The addition of Karl-Anthony Towns has meant a full-time move to the bench for Robinson, who previously started 170 of his 193 games the past four years. He isn't nearly as valuable to this new-look group as he was alongside Julius Randle and Co.”

“Vanderbilt, 26, is a more versatile defender who can play and guard multiple positions and brings an outside shooting threat that Robinson doesn't. For a Knicks bench that isn't very deep, this kind of versatility is important.”

“New York also gets the right to swap first-round picks with the Lakers next season and collects their second-rounder in next month's draft. The Knicks currently have just one pick (No. 50 overall) in the entire draft.”

Swartz’s idea of Robinson on the Lakers isn’t a bad one, but this trade doesn’t make sense for the Knicks, who could find a better package than Vanderbilt and picks for Robinson on the summer market.

Also, Swartz’s characterization of Vanderbilt as an outside shooter is way off. Vanderbilt is a career 28.8 percent three-point shooter, and he was slightly worse at 28.1 percent from downtown this season.

The first-round pick swap would be intriguing if the Lakers were likely to have a bad record next season, but that isn’t the case.

If the Lakers tried to make this deal happen, New York wouldn’t bite.

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Colin Keane

Colin Keane is a contributing journalist for The Sporting News. Born in Illinois, Colin grew up in Massachusetts as the third of four brothers. For his high school education, Colin attended St. Mark's School (Southborough, MA), where he played basketball and soccer and served as student body president. He went on to receive a Bachelor of Arts in English Literature from Villanova University. Colin currently resides in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.