Trae Young’s time with the Atlanta Hawks is over.

The Hawks dealt Young to the Washington Wizards on Wednesday, according to ESPN’s Shams Charania. In exchange, the Hawks will reportedly receive C.J. McCollum and Corey Kispert, with no draft picks in either direction. Young is in his eighth season and had spent his entire career with the Hawks before being moved.

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The deal was executed during a Hawks home game, while Young was on the team’s bench in street clothes. He quickly exited the court after receiving some last-second well wishes from teammates.

The move comes two days after veteran NBA reporter Marc Stein reported the Wizards were looming as a top destination for Young. Young and his agents worked with the Hawks on a potential trade.

After playing in the first five games of the 2025-26 NBA season, Young missed the next 23 games with an MCL sprain. The Hawks went 13–10 without him, though he returned in mid-December. The 27-year-old dropped eight points and had 10 assists in his first game back, but has missed several games this month due to a right quad contusion.

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The change of scenery for Young allows the Hawks to build around the core of Jalen Johnson, Dyson Daniels, Onyeka Okongwu and Nickeil Alexander-Walker, who are all signed through at least the 2027–28 season.

Young was not extended this offseason and is in his fourth year of a five-year, $215 million deal with the Hawks. He was eligible for a four-year extension, but Atlanta didn’t make him a long-term offer. He is making $46 million this season with a player option for $49 million next season.

The Hawks last made the playoffs in 2023, when they lost in the first round to the Boston Celtics.

The Wizards have a new star in Trae Young. Can they succeed where the Hawks didn’t?

Without context, this is an odd deal. Young led the NBA in assists per game last season and was basically salary-dumped. The Hawks got back two players whose main appeal was making the trade work. An actual NBA All-Star in his 20s requested a trade to the Wizards.

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All of that reflects how much the Young era seemed to run its course in Atlanta. Yes, few players in the NBA combine scoring and facilitating like Young, but his limitations have only become more evident with time, and his offensive value never made the Hawks an actual playoff threat outside of a fluky Eastern Conference finals run in 2021.

This season, Atlanta is 2-8 in games with Young and 15-13 in games without him, leaning instead on players like Johnson and Daniels. And with McCollum and Kristaps Porzingis, the Hawks have two large expiring deals that will let them be aggressive in free agency.

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So the Hawks opted to move on with what’s been working and get out of Young’s contract. The Wizards didn’t mind the discount price, but what happens next depends on Young. The 27-year-old guard has the $49 million player option for next season and could theoretically hit free agency this summer, but the fact the Wizards were his preferred destination makes a longer-term deal feel likely.

At 10-26, the Wizards have the second-worst record in the Eastern Conference. They have some interesting talent for Young to work alongside in the short term, and also a significant amount of cap space and draft capital this offseason. The team hasn’t had an All-Star since Bradley Beal in 2021 and will be hoping Young can fill that void.

That will likely happen once Young is healthy. The bigger question is what can they do with him.