Hawks’ Porzingis: No Rush For Contract Extension

Hawks forward/center Kristaps Porzingis is currently eligible for a contract extension after being traded to Atlanta over the summer. However, he tells Fred Katz of The Athletic that he’s in no hurry to get a new deal done.

“I know that’s an option,” Porzingis said of a potential extension. “I wanna see how the year goes. I wanna show that I’m playing at a high level again, that I’m healthy, that I’m everything, and then that kind of stuff will take care of itself, you know? We’ll see. … I don’t wanna rush anything and say this or that, but I wanna take it one day at a time.”

Porzingis is earning roughly $30.7MM in 2025/26, which is the final season of a two-year, $60MM extension he signed with the Celtics in 2023. He completed the deal almost immediately after being traded to Boston, but this time around, he and the Hawks didn’t immediately look to work out a post-trade extension.

While Porzingis’ comments suggest he’s happy to wait on a new contract, it also doesn’t sound as if Atlanta is necessarily pushing hard to get an extension done. Atlanta reportedly hasn’t aggressively looked to extend Trae Young either as he enters a potential contract year (Young holds a player option for 2026/27). The front office, led by new general manager Onsi Saleh may be taking a wait-and-see approach to the current roster in the hopes of evaluating how the new pieces fit together over the course of the season.

For his part, Porzingis is optimistic about the Hawks’ new-look roster and his place on it.

“I was really happy that I could end up in a place like this, playing with these young guys, playing with Trae, who’s one of the best passers in the league,” he told Katz. “It’s an exciting situation for me. … I’m very, very happy.”

Porzingis averaged 19.5 points and 6.8 rebounds in 28.8 minutes per game last season for the Celtics, posting an impressive shooting line of .483/.412/.809. However, he was limited to 42 games due to various health issues, including an illness that limited his availability during the second half and continued to affected him in the postseason. The 30-year-old put up just 7.7 points and 4.6 rebounds in 20.9 minutes per game on .316/.154/.689 shooting during Boston’s playoff run, but tells Katz that illness is no longer an issue.

“I just didn’t have the engine that I usually have,” the big man said. “… As soon as I got some rest and got back in shape with the (Latvian) national team, I’m feeling great. I feel awesome now.”

Players with multiple years left on their contracts who are eligible for veteran extensions have until Monday to finalize agreements. But because he’s on an expiring deal, Porzingis will be eligible to sign an extension with the Hawks until June 30, 2026. The same goes for Young, assuming he declines his ’26/27 player option as part of an agreement.

That means Atlanta will have the ability to weigh its options during the season and even into the spring — the team could try to work out extensions with Porzingis and Young later in the 2025/26 league year to keep them off the free agent market.

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