NBA Player Tiers: Tyrese Haliburton, Tyrese Maxey and Tier 3’s All-Star level of play

NBA Player Tiers: Tyrese Haliburton, Tyrese Maxey and Tier 3’s All-Star level of play

Seth Partnow
Jun 19, 2024

This is the fifth annual NBA Player Tiers project, in which Seth Partnow names the top 125 players in the league after each season and then separates them into five distinct categories of value, each with their sub-categories to further delineate them. These are not meant to be read as firm 1-125 player rankings. Rather, they’re meant to separate solid starters from the very best superstars, and every level in between. This is how NBA front offices assess player value across the league when building their teams.


NBA Player Tiers: ’20 | ’21 | ’22 | ‘23 | ’24 pre-playoffs | ’24: Tier 5 | Tier 4


Tier 3 is the town with the “All-Stars Live Here” sign next to the highway exit. They might not all have technically been named to an All-Star team, but they all have at least approached All-Star level of play in the regular season while also being at least somewhat durable against the different environment and demands of the NBA playoffs.

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Part of that distinction is that, other than a few elite interior defenders, each of them has shown the ability to be a driver of high-level offense. The line between “top role player” and “star” is a hard one to draw, but the ability to create advantages consistently on top of being able to finish off opportunities created by others is key.

In addition to the range of skills prevalent in this group, it is also something of a way station either for young players on the way up or veteran stars on the way down.

Tier 3C (38-42)

Speaking of old warhorses, DeMar DeRozan has aged remarkably well, and it’s a little bit sad to see him spend what has been a very good twilight of his career — during which he has added significant playmaking to his high-volume self-creation — happen in obscurity for a going-nowhere-fast Chicago Bulls franchise.

OG Anunoby and Lauri Markkanen are a bit in between aging vets and ascending youngsters in that both have been in the league longer (entering their eighth seasons) and are older (27 by opening night this fall) than you might think, but each has emerged relatively recently once given the opportunity to shine, Markkanen in Utah and Anunoby fully emerging as a two-way force following his midseason arrival to the Knicks. Though they do it in somewhat different manners, both present the kind of positional versatility and easy-to-fit offensive skill sets that prove so valuable for second-to-third options on top teams.

Meanwhile, two second-year players in Paolo Banchero (last year’s Rookie of the Year) and Jalen Williams (my hipster pick for 2023 ROY) showed great growth, each a big part of their respective teams’ return to the playoffs. While each discovered areas for possible future improvement in that postseason, both possess the combo of bully-ball strength and on-ball skill that tends to translate.

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Tier 3B (30-37)

One last ride

The Milwaukee Bucks “enjoyed” something of a snakebit season in 2023-24. After the big splash of adding Damian Lillard, coaching turmoil, injuries, more coaching turmoil and yet more injuries gave their season a stop-start quality that continued into the first-round playoff loss — which Giannis Antetokounmpo missed the entirety of — to Indiana. While this season was the first time Lillard failed to make an All-NBA team since 2016-17, aside from his injury-abbreviated 2021-22 campaign, the general chaos in Milwaukee makes me want to give him something of a mulligan rather than completely attributing this apparent decline to age.

Meanwhile, Khris Middleton appeared in only 12 of Milwaukee’s last 31 regular-season games before putting in an excellent series against the Pacers. Heading into 2024-25, there is an “end-of-the-road” element for the Antetokounmpo-Middleton core that has seen the Bucks perform at such a high level, especially in the regular season over the last half-dozen seasons. But with a little bit of luck, this last ride should see them have a chance to make it a good one.

Next-gen creators

In Tier 4, I expressed worry about the playoff survivability of smaller, defensively vulnerable guards. The group of combo guards I was specifically discussing didn’t quite have the ability to playmake or otherwise drive efficient offense in the same way as do Trae Young, Tyrese Haliburton — who is taller than most of the players discussed there and here but also slight and terrible defensively by pretty much any metric — or Tyrese Maxey. But I do worry about having such a key offensive player also existing as such an obvious target for opponents. With Haliburton and Young each having made the Eastern Conference finals as their respective team’s best player and Maxey performing admirably in each of his last two playoff runs, they are playoff-viable.

But whether they can thrive at a championship level without some combination of defensive improvement, adding or in the case of Maxey playing alongside a teammate of higher ability or progressing offensively to play at the level of a Luka Dončić is very much an open question.

Winning-play machines

With Boston finishing off a dominant playoff run Monday night, much of the attention was, rightfully, focused on the long path taken by the Jaylen Brown/Jayson Tatum pairing to reach that crescendo. But it doesn’t happen if the C’s didn’t surround them with just about the best complimentary talent in recent memory, right up there with Draymond Green and Andre Iguodala for the late-teens Golden State Warriors. Kristaps Porziņģis showed that his excellent 2022-23 season wasn’t simply a product of the anonymity of playing for a middling Washington Wizards team, as his deep shooting, rim protection and newly developed ability to punish switching unlocked a new level of two-way dominance for an already extremely good team. Though his unusual injury limited his effectiveness in the NBA Finals itself, in some ways the series turned with his first appearance in Game 1, during which Boston took control in a way it never relinquished.

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Just as important to the Celtics were the “whatever we need” contributions of Jrue Holiday and Derrick White. Both often give the lie-to-the-commentator tick of rhapsodizing about “plays that don’t show up in the stat sheet” as White’s blocks and 3s or Holiday’s steals and rim finishes show up in the box score! The spirit of the comment is spot on, though. Loose-ball recoveries, tipped passes, heady defensive switches and recoveries, guarding one through four as needed, secondary playmaking — whatever it is, these two do it and do it well.

Tier 3A (24-29)

Not for the first time, James Harden’s disappointing playoff exit served to obscure some excellent regular season play. But with age having dulled some of the first-step and rim-finishing ability, his playmaking nous keeps him from falling further than the top of Tier 3 when he was a Tier 1 performer only three years ago.

I may have gotten a little ahead of myself with Jamal Murray in Tier 2 a year ago. Still an absolute nightmare to deal with on his day, the combination of slightly underwhelming regular season play alongside continued worries about availability and durability that surfaced again this postseason forced me to move him down a notch or two.

Speaking of questions about reliability and durability, Zion Williamson. But, man, is he dynamic when he is available and locked in. If he can somehow get his body right, his historic ability to get to the rim combined with significant improvement defensively could see him bounce up to Tier 2 and perhaps even higher. But at this point, that’s far more hope than expectation.

I’m done debating Rudy Gobert. He’s a walking top-10 defense, and while he won’t be confused with an offensive hub or engine any time soon, he is a perfectly fine cog in a functioning machine. Sure he’s awkward at times, but to quote Billy Beane in “Moneyball,” we aren’t selling jeans here. His teams consistently move the scoreboard in the right direction with him on the floor, a trend that largely holds true in the playoffs just as much as in the regular season.

In most normal years, Chet Holmgren would have waltzed to Rookie of the Year. He just happened to play his first games in the First Year of Our Wemby. But we shouldn’t let that detract from the degree to which Holmgren already looks like a star. I have to imagine that how good Holmgren was straight out of the gate, especially his toughness despite being at a strength disadvantage nightly, was a surprise even to the Thunder. Much of the criticism of OKC’s braintrust for not making a “win-now move” in the offseason comes off as revisionist because we weren’t even sure of Chet could survive at the five. By exceeding even the highest expectations the way that he did has unlocked an entirely new ceiling for the Thunder, with the combination of Holmgren, Williams and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander likely placing them amongst the favorites in the West next season.

One might think the rumored extension worth just under $190 million over four years for Pascal Siakam is a bit much, but that seems a dangerous argument to make while Jaylen Brown is still hugging the Finals MVP trophy after Brown’s own even larger extension drew the same reaction a year ago. While Siakam is unlikely to get the same platform to justify his deal, you wouldn’t rule out him doing so. He was comfortably Indiana’s best player from the time he arrived, though that had much to do with Haliburton’s imperfect recovery from a hamstring strain. While a healthy Haliburton remains the Pacers best player, Siakam’s ability to score in a variety of ways on one end while defending multiple front court spots on the other likely fits better into a contention level team.

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Tier 3
3A

James Harden


CLIPPERS
Tiers over time
CLIPPERS
PG
Tier 3
3A

Jamal Murray


NUGGETS
Tiers over time
NUGGETS
PG
Tier 3
3A

Zion Williamson


PELICANS
Tiers over time
PELICANS
PF
Tier 3
3A

Rudy Gobert


WOLVES
Tiers over time
WOLVES
C
Tier 3
3A

Chet Holmgren


THUNDER
Tiers over time
THUNDER
C
Tier 3
3A

Pascal Siakam


PACERS
Tiers over time
PACERS
PF
Tier 3
3B

Damian Lillard


BUCKS
Tiers over time
BUCKS
PG
Tier 3
3B

Trae Young


HAWKS
Tiers over time
HAWKS
PG
Tier 3
3B

Tyrese Haliburton


PACERS
Tiers over time
PACERS
PG
Tier 3
3B

Jrue Holiday


CELTICS
Tiers over time
CELTICS
PG
Tier 3
3B

Kristaps Porziņģis


CELTICS
Tiers over time
CELTICS
C
Tier 3
3B

Derrick White


CELTICS
Tiers over time
CELTICS
SG
Tier 3
3B

Tyrese Maxey


76ERS
Tiers over time
76ERS
PG
Tier 3
3B

Khris Middleton


BUCKS
Tiers over time
BUCKS
SF
Tier 3
3C

Lauri Markkanen


JAZZ
Tiers over time
JAZZ
PF
Tier 3
3C

DeMar DeRozan


BULLS
Tiers over time
BULLS
SG
Tier 3
3C

Paolo Banchero


MAGIC
Tiers over time
MAGIC
PF
Tier 3
3C

Jalen Williams


THUNDER
Tiers over time
THUNDER
SF
Tier 3
3C

OG Anunoby


KNICKS
Tiers over time
KNICKS
PF
Tier 3
Tier 4
4A

Bradley Beal


SUNS
Tiers over time
SUNS
SG
Tier 4
4A

Jaren Jackson Jr.


GRIZZLIES
Tiers over time
GRIZZLIES
C
Tier 4
4A

Mikal Bridges


NETS
Tiers over time
NETS
SF
Tier 4
4A

Evan Mobley


CAVALIERS
Tiers over time
CAVALIERS
PF
Tier 4
4A

Desmond Bane


GRIZZLIES
Tiers over time
GRIZZLIES
SG
Tier 4
4A

Domantas Sabonis


KINGS
Tiers over time
KINGS
C
Tier 4
4A

Aaron Gordon


NUGGETS
Tiers over time
NUGGETS
PF
Tier 4
4A

Julius Randle


KNICKS
Tiers over time
KNICKS
PF
Tier 4
4A

Scottie Barnes


RAPTORS
Tiers over time
RAPTORS
PF
Tier 4
4A

Karl-Anthony Towns


WOLVES
Tiers over time
WOLVES
C
Tier 4
4A

Myles Turner


PACERS
Tiers over time
PACERS
C
Tier 4
4A

Josh Hart


KNICKS
Tiers over time
KNICKS
SG
Tier 4
4A

Dereck Lively


MAVERICKS
Tiers over time
MAVERICKS
C
Tier 4
4B

Brandon Ingram


PELICANS
Tiers over time
PELICANS
SF
Tier 4
4B

Draymond Green


WARRIORS
Tiers over time
WARRIORS
PF
Tier 4
4B

Brook Lopez


BUCKS
Tiers over time
BUCKS
C
Tier 4
4B

Fred VanVleet


ROCKETS
Tiers over time
ROCKETS
PG
Tier 4
4B

Franz Wagner


MAGIC
Tiers over time
MAGIC
SF
Tier 4
4B

Alperen Şengün


ROCKETS
Tiers over time
ROCKETS
C
Tier 4
4B

Brandon Miller


HORNETS
Tiers over time
HORNETS
SF
Tier 4
4B

Jarrett Allen


CAVALIERS
Tiers over time
CAVALIERS
C
Tier 4
4B

Dejounte Murray


HAWKS
Tiers over time
HAWKS
PG
Tier 4
4B

Herbert Jones


PELICANS
Tiers over time
PELICANS
SF
Tier 4
4B

Trey Murphy


PELICANS
Tiers over time
PELICANS
SF
Tier 4
4B

Nic Claxton


NETS
Tiers over time
NETS
C
Tier 4
4B

Donte DiVincenzo


KNICKS
Tiers over time
KNICKS
SG
Tier 4
4B

Isaiah Hartenstein


KNICKS
Tiers over time
KNICKS
C
Tier 4
4C

CJ McCollum


PELICANS
Tiers over time
PELICANS
SG
Tier 4
4C

Darius Garland


CAVALIERS
Tiers over time
CAVALIERS
PG
Tier 4
4C

Michael Porter Jr.


NUGGETS
Tiers over time
NUGGETS
SF
Tier 4
4C

LaMelo Ball


HORNETS
Tiers over time
HORNETS
PG
Tier 4
4C

Tyler Herro


HEAT
Tiers over time
HEAT
SG
Tier 4
4C

Zach LaVine


BULLS
Tiers over time
BULLS
SG
Tier 4
4C

Jerami Grant


BLAZERS
Tiers over time
BLAZERS
PF
Tier 4
4C

Cade Cunningham


PISTONS
Tiers over time
PISTONS
PG
Tier 4
4C

Alex Caruso


BULLS
Tiers over time
BULLS
SG
Tier 4
4C

Immanuel Quickley


RAPTORS
Tiers over time
RAPTORS
PG
Tier 4
4C

RJ Barrett


RAPTORS
Tiers over time
RAPTORS
SF
Tier 4
4C

Mike Conley


WOLVES
Tiers over time
WOLVES
PG
Tier 4
4C

Malik Monk


KINGS
Tiers over time
KINGS
SG
Tier 4
4C

P.J. Washington


MAVERICKS
Tiers over time
MAVERICKS
PF
Tier 4
4C

Jalen Suggs


MAGIC
Tiers over time
MAGIC
SG
Tier 4
4C

Daniel Gafford


MAVERICKS
Tiers over time
MAVERICKS
C
Tier 4
4C

Aaron Nesmith


PACERS
Tiers over time
PACERS
SF
Tier 4
4C

Andrew Nembhard


PACERS
Tiers over time
PACERS
PG
Tier 4
Tier 5
5A

Kentavious Caldwell-Pope


NUGGETS
Tiers over time
NUGGETS
SG
Tier 5
5A

Miles Bridges


HORNETS
Tiers over time
HORNETS
PF
Tier 5
5A

Austin Reaves


LAKERS
Tiers over time
LAKERS
PG
Tier 5
5A

Deandre Ayton


BLAZERS
Tiers over time
BLAZERS
C
Tier 5
5A

Bojan Bogdanović


KNICKS
Tiers over time
KNICKS
SF
Tier 5
5A

Keegan Murray


KINGS
Tiers over time
KINGS
SF
Tier 5
5A

Bruce Brown


RAPTORS
Tiers over time
RAPTORS
SG
Tier 5
5A

Malcolm Brogdon


BLAZERS
Tiers over time
BLAZERS
SG
Tier 5
5A

Al Horford


CELTICS
Tiers over time
CELTICS
C
Tier 5
5A

Dillon Brooks


ROCKETS
Tiers over time
ROCKETS
SF
Tier 5
5A

Anfernee Simons


BLAZERS
Tiers over time
BLAZERS
SG
Tier 5
5A

Nikola Vučević


BULLS
Tiers over time
BULLS
C
Tier 5
5A

Norman Powell


CLIPPERS
Tiers over time
CLIPPERS
SG
Tier 5
5A

Russell Westbrook


CLIPPERS
Tiers over time
CLIPPERS
PG
Tier 5
5A

Bogdan Bogdanović


HAWKS
Tiers over time
HAWKS
SG
Tier 5
5A

Terry Rozier


HEAT
Tiers over time
HEAT
SG
Tier 5
5A

D'Angelo Russell


LAKERS
Tiers over time
LAKERS
PG
Tier 5
5A

Keldon Johnson


SPURS
Tiers over time
SPURS
SF
Tier 5
5A

Luguentz Dort


THUNDER
Tiers over time
THUNDER
SG
Tier 5
5A

De'Anthony Melton


76ERS
Tiers over time
76ERS
SG
Tier 5
5A

Walker Kessler


JAZZ
Tiers over time
JAZZ
C
Tier 5
5A

Ivica Zubac


CLIPPERS
Tiers over time
CLIPPERS
C
Tier 5
5A

Jalen Green


ROCKETS
Tiers over time
ROCKETS
SG
Tier 5
5A

Jaden McDaniels


WOLVES
Tiers over time
WOLVES
SF
Tier 5
5A

Jalen Johnson


HAWKS
Tiers over time
HAWKS
PF
Tier 5
5A

Jaime Jaquez


HEAT
Tiers over time
HEAT
SF
Tier 5
5A

Amen Thompson


ROCKETS
Tiers over time
ROCKETS
SF
Tier 5
5A

Jabari Smith


ROCKETS
Tiers over time
ROCKETS
PF
Tier 5
5A

Devin Vassell


SPURS
Tiers over time
SPURS
SF
Tier 5
5A

Kyle Kuzma


WIZARDS
Tiers over time
WIZARDS
PF
Tier 5
5A

Clint Capela


HAWKS
Tiers over time
HAWKS
C
Tier 5
5A

Brandin Podziemski


WARRIORS
Tiers over time
WARRIORS
SG
Tier 5
5A

Naz Reid


WOLVES
Tiers over time
WOLVES
C
Tier 5
5B

Jonathan Isaac


MAGIC
Tiers over time
MAGIC
PF
Tier 5
5B

Ausar Thompson


PISTONS
Tiers over time
PISTONS
SF
Tier 5
5B

Jusuf Nurkic


SUNS
Tiers over time
SUNS
C
Tier 5
5B

Derrick Jones Jr.


MAVERICKS
Tiers over time
MAVERICKS
PF
Tier 5
5B

T.J. McConnell


PACERS
Tiers over time
PACERS
PG
Tier 5

(Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; Photos: Patrick McDermott, Mitchell Leff, Alex Bierens de Haan / Getty Images)

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Seth Partnow

Seth Partnow provides NBA and basketball analytics for The Athletic. He resides in Milwaukee and was formerly the Director of Basketball Research for the Milwaukee Bucks. Follow Seth on Twitter @sethpartnow