Hawks Could Shop Kristaps Porzingis as Onyeka Okongwu Shines

With questions mounting about Atlanta Hawks center Kristaps Porzingis’ availability and Onyeka Okongwu playing the best basketball of his career, league conversations have started drifting toward a familiar possibility: the Latvian center could be on the move again. That backdrop frames Forbes reporter Evan Sidery’s latest update, which notes that several rival executives believe Atlanta will shop Porziņgis’ $30.7 million expiring contract before February’s trade deadline in search of a win-now piece.

Porzingis missed his fourth game of the season Thursday night, sitting out Atlanta’s matchup with Utah. That already puts him over a quarter of the Hawks’ early-season absences, reintroducing durability questions that followed him out of Boston. He arrived as a low-risk, high-upside acquisition, but the reliability hasn’t been there.

Porziņgis Hasn’t Delivered the Expected Stability

Through his first nine appearances, Porzingis is averaging 17.3 points, 5.7 rebounds, and 1.6 blocks in under 26 minutes per game. The efficiency—43% shooting and 31.1% from three—is well below his peak stretch, and his inconsistent availability has limited Atlanta’s ability to build continuity.

His recent history hasn’t helped. Porzingis played only 99 of 164 possible games with the Celtics and missed most of Boston’s 2024 title run due to a calf strain. Later, a case of postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS) derailed his postseason, dropping his production to 7.7 points and 4.6 rebounds on low efficiency.

Boston would have kept him if not for the second-apron constraints. Atlanta leveraged that situation for a cost-cutting move, but early returns show why the price wasn’t steep.

The On/Off Numbers Are Impossible to Ignore

The Hawks hoped Porzingis would anchor the interior and stretch the floor for Trae Young. Instead, Atlanta has been 7.4 points per 100 possessions better with him off the court. With Porziņgis on the floor, the defense ranks in the 8th percentile, opponents shoot 9.2% better at the rim, and the Hawks struggle to clean the glass.

Jalen Johnson’s defensive dip contributes to the issue, but Porzingis hasn’t stabilized the back line in the way the front office envisioned.

There is one positive: the Porzingis–Okongwu defensive pairing has worked. Okongwu’s mobility and physicality complement Porzingis’ length, creating one of Atlanta’s few successful defensive combinations. But when Porzingis shares the floor with Johnson, the interior collapses.

Okongwu’s Breakout Changes Everything

That contrast sharpened on Thursday night. Okongwu started in place of Porzingis and delivered a career performance: 32 points on 11-of-18 shooting, 11 rebounds, three blocks, two steals, and eight made threes. He’s now attempting a career-high 4.1 threes per game, hitting 1.6 on average—a major leap for Atlanta’s former energy big.

His development gives the Hawks something far more sustainable: a younger, healthier two-way center whose game is expanding rapidly.

Why Trading KP Makes Sense Now

Porzingis is on an expiring contract and did not enter extension talks this offseason. If Atlanta believes Okongwu can anchor the future—and if Porzingis isn’t the defensive solution they envisioned—then Sidery’s report reflects an increasingly logical path.

Rival executives see the same trend: Porzingis’ contract may be more valuable to Atlanta as a trade chip than as their starting center. If the Hawks want a true playoff push in Trae Young’s contract year, flipping his expiring deal could be the move that reshapes their ceiling before the deadline.

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