
While it’s hard to look at the Bulls’ trade from last summer as anything less than a win-win, it’s worth wondering whether their most recent deal has similar potential.
Caruso wound up being an integral part of the Thunder’s 2024-2025 championship run, while Giddey established himself as a dynamic jumbo-sized playmaker during a career year. Are those fair expectations to set upon Ball and Okoro with their new teams?
In short: of course not. Ball, even when healthy — he’s played in a grand total of 35 games over the past three seasons — is most likely not the same level of impact player as Caruso, and Okoro, while a decent three-and-D wing, is not a player harboring nearly as much potential as Giddey was when the Bulls acquired him.
With all that being said, Ball and Okoro still have a good shot at impacting their new ball clubs in a positive manner in 2025-2026.
Firstly, the Cavaliers could very well be in line to lose guard Ty Jerome in free agency, and while Ball doesn’t quite offer up the same level of off-the-bench scoring pop as Jerome, Ball has a lot of other intriguing traits going for him. If Cleveland is ultimately unable to retain Jerome, it should take solace in knowing that Ball is a two-way playmaker with elite positional size at 6-foot-6 and 190 pounds. He’s also someone who’s capable of injecting any bench unit with a free-flowing, up-tempo style of play.
Okoro’s fit with the Bulls is admittedly less exciting. The Bulls have made strides in recent years, shifting towards younger players and deploying a more modern offensive play style, but they’re still not a franchise that inspires a ton of confidence. They once again appear to be a team heading towards the play-in tournament.
It’s a good sign that the Bulls have mostly moved past the DeMar DeRozan-Zach LaVine-Nikola Vucevic era, but the fact that the ceiling of their current roster, led by the likes of guard Coby White, Giddey and forward Matas Buzelis, is relatively the same can’t be the most encouraging thing for their fan base.
The addition of Okoro to this whole equation changes very little. Given Okoro’s age (24) and play style, a breakout of any kind would be shocking, to say the least.
All told, don’t expect Ball or Okoro to make an impact comparable to that of Caruso or Giddey for their new teams. Ball does have a chance, albeit a slim one, to play a non-insignificant role for a team that should be viewed as the early favorite in the wide-open 2025-2026 Eastern Conference, but don’t expect the former 2017 second-overall pick to be leaned on in any way mirroring that of Caruso with the Thunder.