Sunday, February 1, 2026

Cavaliers acquire Keon Ellis, Dennis Schroeder from Kings

   The Cleveland Cavaliers had been a disappointment this season but had improved of late, winning eight of their last ten games, including a five-game winning streak before a loss in Phoenix on the first day of a five-stop West Coast road swing.

Still, with the team tied for fourth with Toronto for fourth place in the Eastern Conference and with a recent calf injury to Evan Mobley (the second this season), Cleveland seemed like a possible player at the NBA trade deadline, even if their status as a "second-apron" team at the salary cap could make a trade harder to make.

Cleveland found a way to make things work as they sent swingman De'Andre Hunter to the Sacramento Kings and a 2027 second-round draft choice to the Chicago Bulls (for their help in making the dollars work) for guards Keon Ellis and Dennis Schroder.

Cleveland released Luke Travers to free up a roster spot for the new arrivals.

Hunter was the Cavaliers' big deadline acquisition last season, and while he was decent after coming to Cleveland, I thought that with training camp and a better understanding of his teammates, Hunter would break out.

I was wrong, as despite Hunter averaging fourteen points last season and this season, Hunter's shooting has been dreadful, dropping in percentage from 48 percent to 42 overall and from 42 percent down to 30 percent from three point range.

Still, Hunter was excellent last season with Atlanta before being traded to Cleveland, and I'd bet he turns it around with the Kings.

Hunter could be one of those players who play better for a lesser team than he does for a contender, because he is better suited to be one of the focal points of the offense than as a supporting cast member.

Sacramento is doing some cleaning of its own, and Hunter could become one of their top options.

Keon Ellis's numbers are down this season ( eight points to five and forty-eight to thirty-nine percent shooting), but he was playing seventeen minutes a game off the bench, and he's not a bad shooter, averaging forty-six percent and forty-one from three for his career.

Ellis is a top-notch defender, and he'll be a big help on that end of the floor. Ellis is eligible for free agency at the end of the season, so it's possible that Ellis could be a rental player.

The well-traveled Dennis Schroder joins the Cavaliers as his eleventh team in his thirteen year career.

I could see Schroder staying as the third guard, especially if the Cavaliers could find a taker for the tremendously disappointing Lonzo Ball, but I could also see Schroder being moved in another trade if the team isn't finished dealing.

Schroder does bring a veteran's attitude and attitude to a team that could use some nastiness.

Schroder is under contract for three more seasons but only 2026-27 is with guaranteed money.

Schroder is averaging just under thirteen points a game for Sacramento and is shooting forty percent on the year.

Cleveland saves some money under this trade, swapping De'Andre Hunter's 23 million for the sixteen million paid to Ellis and Schroder, which doesn't quite move the Cavaliers out of the second apron but does move them closer to the mark and lessens the current season's luxury tax penalty by a significant margin.

This is a key factor for a team with the highest-paid roster in the league and should Cleveland look at Dennis Schroder (or Lonzo Ball) as a disposable asset in an attempt even get out of their cap level, Cleveland may not be finished trading.

On the whole, I understand the move as the Cavaliers were paying De'Andre Hunter a sizable chunk of money to be disappointing on the floor and didn't want to enter the playoffs gambling on Hunter and Lonzo Ball turning their season around.

Still, despite the lack of production from Hunter, I liked him as a player and I'm sad to see him leave.

I have tons of boxing to write about over the next few days, so I'll be working on those posts next.


No comments:

Boxing Challenge

     It's a two-fight weekend for the boxing challenge, but both are important- one for a world title, the other for a minor title that ...