MIAMI/BROOKLYN – The Miami Heat are staying busy, even if their moves lack fireworks. After landing Norman Powell and Simone Fontecchio, and re-signing Davion Mitchell, they Heat now traded Haywood Highsmith to the Brooklyn Nets. The move may not light up highlight reels, but in today’s NBA, efficiency often matters more than spectacle.
Highsmith To The Nets: Trade Grades For The Heat And Nets
Miami Heat ‘Cuts’ Costs

Highsmith’s exit is a cap maneuver more than a basketball one. The 28-year-old forward played a steady role last season, logging 74 games, 42 of them starts. He averaged 6.5 points, 3.4 rebounds, and 1.5 assists, shooting a career-best 38.2 percent from deep.
His contract — an expiring $5.6 million — and recent meniscus surgery made him a logical trade chip. The procedure, performed earlier this month, came with an 8-to-10-week recovery window. That timeline puts him in position to return right around opening night.
For the Heat, the Highsmith trade opens two roster spots and creates a trade exception. It also drops them under the luxury tax by roughly $4 million and keeps them $9.6 million below the hard cap. In a league where cap space is its own kind of currency, this counts as a win. The Heat also collect a 2026 second-round pick from Brooklyn, though it’s protected from 31 to 55. That pick’s real-world value? Almost negligible.
Grade: B
The Rich Nets Keep Getting Richer
The Nets are working from a different playbook. With sizable cap space and no pressure to win now, they’re stockpiling assets. Adding Highsmith — even if he never plays a minute for them — cost them virtually nothing. More important, the Highsmith trade nets (pun intended) them a future second-round pick without touching their young core or draft stash.
Brooklyn already holds an NBA-best 32 future draft picks: 13 first-rounders and 19 second-rounders. These aren’t headline grabbers on their own. But packaged together, they can pry loose quality role players or supplement larger trades. The Lakers, for example, flipped three second-rounders for Dorian Finney-Smith last year. The Nets are positioning themselves for similar deals when the time is right.
Whether Highsmith survives the roster crunch is doubtful. Still, for Brooklyn, this is a low-cost, low-risk play that reinforces their long-term rebuild strategy.
Grade: B
The Bottom Line
For the Heat, the Highsmith trade is about flexibility now. For Brooklyn, it’s about opportunity later. Both teams stayed true to their blueprints: the Heat carving out financial breathing room, the Nets hoarding picks for a future splash. No one wins the day outright, but both leave better positioned for the battles ahead.
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