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Jazz Mailbag: Does Cavaliers 2026 Swap Impact Thunder Pick?

SALT LAKE CITY – Welcome to the Utah Jazz Mailbag! This week, we look at how the Jazz’s swap rights with the Cleveland Cavaliers could impact their top-eight-protected lottery pick with the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Each week, we will send out a prompt on X and BlueSky asking for the questions you have about the Jazz.

Then, we’ll respond to as many as we can in that week’s Jazz mailbag in the Jazz Notes podcast.

Jazz Mailbag: How Do Cavaliers Swap Rights Impact Thunder Protection?

How does the jazz pick swap work with the Cavs with it also protection on it with the thunder? Example if Cavs miss playoff and make a Dallas-like jump in the lottery and Jazz finish 10th. Can we swap to keep our pick ? Long shot I know, just curious.

— Kincade Upstill (@Kincade12) December 29, 2025

Question: How does the Jazz pick swap work with the Cavaliers, with there also being protections for the Thunder? Example if the Cavaliers miss the playoffs and make a Dallas-like jump in the lottery, and the Jazz finish 10th, can we swap to keep our pick?

Answer: This is a good question, and one the Jazz have almost certainly considered since they made the pick‑swap trade in the summer of 2022.

As a quick reminder: the Jazz hold the right to swap their 2026 draft pick with the Cleveland Cavaliers’ pick if Cleveland’s pick lands higher.

That right came as part of the Donovan Mitchell blockbuster, and the Jazz will have swap rights again in 2028.

Jazz fans have understandably focused on their own place in the standings, but they may be surprised by how poorly the Cavaliers have played this season.

After winning an extraordinary 64 games last year, Cleveland sits at just 18–16 and holds the eighth seed in the East.

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If the playoffs started today, they would need to win a play‑in game just to make the postseason and avoid the lottery.

So, to revisit the original question: with their slow start, the Cavaliers are far from guaranteed a playoff spot. If injuries hit them again, they could find themselves in real trouble just one season after finishing with the best record in the East.

In that scenario, the Cavaliers would enter the draft lottery, giving the Jazz a few extra percentage points in their odds of jumping into the top four.

But here’s the complication: the Jazz’s own draft pick goes to the Oklahoma City Thunder if it falls outside the top eight. How does that affect things?

NBA STANDINGS UPDATE ‼️

▪️ Houston rises to 4th in West

▪️ Suns win 4th straight

▪️ Thunder improve to 16-1 at home

▪️ Knicks win third in a row

▪️ Heat rise to 6th in East

Download the NBA App for more: https://t.co/WAQ7n00ju1 pic.twitter.com/srBHbZHqiJ

— NBA (@NBA) December 30, 2025

The answer is straightforward. The Jazz must own their pick in order to swap it. The Cavaliers didn’t send the Jazz their pick outright; they sent only the swap rights. That guarantees Cleveland still owns at least one first‑round pick this summer.

That creates a scenario where the Cavaliers miss the playoffs, jump into the top four, and the Jazz can’t swap because their pick belongs to the Thunder.

It’s unlikely, but recent history shows it’s possible. The Mavericks jumped to the top pick last summer with just a 1.8 percent chance, and the Atlanta Hawks moved to number one in 2024 with only a 3 percent chance.

The good news for the Jazz is that even if their pick falls to nine, and the Cavaliers jump into the top four, the Jazz could probably reacquire their pick from the Thunder to execute the swap.

The bad news is that the Thunder would hold enormous leverage and could demand nearly every valuable future asset Utah has.

An updated look at the @utahjazz‘s future draft assets after today’s three-for-draft draft swap. #TakeNote https://t.co/FCy7v4zvez

— KSL Sports (@kslsports) January 22, 2025

It would still be worth it for the Jazz, because adding a top pick in this summer’s highly regarded draft would be franchise‑changing, while the Thunder could reload their already deep stash of assets and add more young talent.

In this hypothetical scenario, the Thunder would likely ask the Jazz to give up their most valuable draft capital — including the fully unprotected 2031 Phoenix Suns pick, the 2027 Los Angeles Lakers top‑four protected pick, and the remaining 2027 and 2029 picks from the Cavaliers and Minnesota Timberwolves.

They might even demand some of Utah’s own future selections or a group of young players, with no names off limits.

And the higher the Cavaliers pick lands, the more Oklahoma City could ask for.

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With all three top picks in this draft projected to produce All‑Star‑level players, the Jazz would be desperate to regain control of their own selection and preserve the swap rights with Cleveland.

It might seem like an enormous price, but there’s no guarantee that the future Suns, Cavaliers, or Timberwolves picks ever become top‑four selections — let alone land in a draft class this strong. That reality would only increase Utah’s incentive to make a deal.

Ultimately, the best way for the Jazz to avoid this doomsday scenario is to finish with one of the six worst records in the league, giving themselves a better than 96 percent chance of keeping their pick.

But if the worst happens — the Cavaliers jump into the top four while the Thunder own Utah’s selection — you can be certain that Austin Ainge and the front office would empty the coffers to regain control of their swap rights.

Want to ask questions in next week’s Jazz mailbag? Follow us at @benshoops.

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Ben Anderson is the author of the Jazz Mailbag, a Utah Jazz insider for KSL Sports, the author of the Jazz Mailbag, and the co-host of Jake and Ben from 10-12p with Jake Scott on 97.5 The KSL Sports Zone . Find Ben on Twitter at @BensHoops, on Instagram @BensHoops, or on BlueSky.

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