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Are Jazz finally ready to part ways with All-Star forward?
Utah Jazz forward Lauri Markkanen. Rob Gray-Imagn Images

Are Jazz finally ready to part ways with All-Star forward?

The Utah Jazz's rebuilding project feels like it’s accelerating, and moving Lauri Markkanen might be the next domino to fall.

Guard Collin Sexton was traded to the Charlotte Hornets in late June, forward John Collins exercised his $26.5M player option and was subsequently flipped to the L.A. Clippers in a three‑team deal and guard Jordan Clarkson was cut. They also drafted Ace Bailey with the fifth overall pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, signaling they are pressing forward with youth and flexibility as cornerstones of their plan.

Just one year ago, Utah eyed moving Markkanen, who was linked to the Golden State Warriors last summer, but ultimately decided to re-sign him to a five-year, $238M extension, making him essentially untradeable for the 2024-25 season. That deal set the stage for where things stand today: a large contract paired with declining production.

His 2024-25 season was underwhelming by his standards. Across 47 games — he missed time due to both a shoulder injury and the team tanking — Markkanen averaged just 19.0 points, 5.9 rebounds and 1.5 assists on 42.3% shooting, including 34.6% from three-point range. Those numbers represent a drop from his previous production, and Utah missed the playoffs entirely with just 17 wins.

Now that Utah is blowing up its roster, with veteran trades clearing room, the 2024 All-Star now looks like a misaligned asset. His salary will account for over $45M against the cap in 2025-26, giving the front office a stark choice: trade him now or risk being stuck when the contract outpaces performance.

Maybe a responsive team would package young assets or a first-rounder for him, but only if Utah sweetens the deal, meaning it would need to take back bad salary or future picks. After all, the Jazz earlier accepted Kevin Love and Kyle Anderson, plus a second-round pick in the Collins deal, clearly prioritizing cap space and draft flexibility over retaining core pieces.

By holding onto him last year, Utah effectively wasted a prime trade window. Now, with Bailey and other young wings pushing for minutes, Markkanen may become the odd man out in both minutes and long-term vision.

If they wait too long again, Utah could face the same mistake they made with Collins — overpaying, then accepting minimal return. This time, shrugging might cost even more, since his contract is fully guaranteed and extends beyond a likely competitive window.

For a franchise chasing youth and control, Markkanen may no longer fit. He’s not an All-Star floor spacer who demands defensive attention anymore — he’s a heavy contract that limits future maneuverability. And after Utah’s signal this offseason, it’s obvious they’re aiming for a clean slate rather than nostalgia.

The answer should be clear: if the Jazz truly want flexibility to move up or revamp around new guard and wing prospects, it’s smarter to deal him now while he still holds some shine. Otherwise, he could turn into a cap anchor they can’t shake.

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