Giannis named All-Star Starter

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In the midst of the Bucks’ tilt against the Atlanta Hawks, Shams Charania of ESPN reported the full Eastern Conference starting five for the NBA All-Star Game next month in Los Angeles. Giannis was named a starter along with the Knicks’ Jalen Brunson, the Pistons’ Cade Cunningham, the 76ers’ Tyrese Maxey, and the Celtics’ Jaylen Brown. The selection nets Giannis his 10th straight All-Star season dating back to 2016–17. Giannis is currently averaging 28.8 pPPG, 9.5 RPG, 5.5 APG, and is shooting 64.7% from the field.

This also continues Giannis’ All-Star starting streak, as he’s been voted a starter every time he’s been selected. The five starters from each conference were determined by fan voting (50%), NBA coaches (25%), and a media panel (25%). Giannis continued to lead the East in fan voting, earning 2.1 votes as of January 6th when the NBA announced its second round of voting. Luka Doncic of the Lakers led all players with 2.2 million votes.

The All-Star game format is going to look a little different than last year, with the rising stars team cut from the tournament. There will be three teams this go-around: two US teams and an international team (which will obviously include Giannis), known as Team World. There will be a round-robin tournament, with four 12-minute games at the Intuit Dome.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-news...star-starter-2026-los-angeles-milwaukee-bucks
 
Bucks vs. Hawks Player Grades: Kuzma in, KPJ out and the Bucks hold on

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Something had to be done following the embarrassing losses the Milwaukee Bucks have piled up recently and Doc Rivers opted for wholesale changes, starting Kyle Kuzma in favour of Kevin Porter Jr. and handing Gary Trent Jr. a DNP-CD in favour of Pete Nance. The moves proved positive for the most part, the Bucks leading by as much 20 and holding on to win in the waning moments against the Atlanta Hawks. Read our full summary of the game here and catch a six-minute audio recap on the Bucks+ podcast, Bucks In Six Minutes, below.

View Link

Player Grades​

Giannis Antetokounmpo​


30 minutes, 21 points, 17 rebounds, 6 assist, 1 steal, 1 block, 7/12 FG, 0/1 3PT, 7/12 FT, -8

Giannis cleaned up the Hawks’ errant shooting, collecting 17 rebounds, and did plenty of his usual stellar stuff too—finishes at the rim, playmaking, and defensive stops. He also made some baffling decisions—like dribbling into a turnaround-fadeaway with 16 seconds on the shot clock that gave the ball right back to the Hawks when they were up just one with less than two minutes to go in the fourth. He also inexplicably pushed McCollum outside of the three-point line, sending him to the line where he’d make both to give the Hawks the lead. Overall, Giannis looked good and mostly was, but there’s a reason he finished with a plus/minus of -8.

Grade: B

Ryan Rollins​


29 minutes, 14 points, 3 rebounds, 3 assists, 2 steals, 1 block, 6/12 FG, 1/4 3PT, 1/2 FT, -5

After struggling with his shot recently, Rollins was much more efficient tonight and had a solid game overall. He had arguably the most pivotal play of the night too—stealing it from Jalen Johnson late in the fourth that led to a Giannis layup that gave the Bucks a four-point lead. He couldn’t stay out of foul trouble, though, (5 PF) struggling with the crafty CJ McCollum.

Grade: C+

Myles Turner​


28 minutes, 14 points, 8 rebounds, 1 assist, 5/10 FG, 4/6 3PT, -7

Turner had a nice box score night, putting up a near double-double and splashing the three ball. His three threes to start the third quarter were particularly helpful, combatting the Hawks who finally found their groove from beyond the arc. Once again, however, Turner failed to make any impression inside, making just 1/4 shots in the paint and failing to record a block for the fourth game in a row. He really seems to be struggling to get any elevation lately and is playing too much like a shooting guard than a centre for my liking.

Grade: C+

AJ Green​


42 minutes, 18 points, 3 rebounds, 1 assist, 6/12 FG, 6/12 3PT, +14

Green was just phenomenal, leading the team in plus/minus and converting on six triples. But I’m even more excited by the volume—his 12 attempts tied his most for the season and were a reminder of what we thought his shot profile might look like heading into the season. He also looked solid on defence, holding his own throughout. Hey, maybe playing him at his natural shooting guard is a smart idea after all.

Grade: A

Kyle Kuzma​


31 minutes, 10 points, 1 rebounds, 1 assists, 2 blocks, 3/9 FG, 1/4 3PT, 3/4 FT, -16

The box score is not a kind one for Kuzma tonight and, honestly, it does him a disservice. While it would’ve been nice to see him hit the boards a little more, Kuzma was quite solid overall, playing point-forward at times and playing with assertiveness. For some reason, he even controlled the ball down the stretch, running the pick and roll with Giannis, scoring seven points, and blocking a shot in the final 4:25 minutes. While he’s not the ideal starting small forward, you can see the vision—hopefully it’s Michael Porter Jr. in this spot in the near future.

Grade: C

Kevin Porter Jr.​


28 minutes, 9 points, 6 rebounds, 7 assists, 1 steal, 1 block, 2/5 FG, +3

Moving back to the bench, Porter was still a little loose with the rock at times (three turnovers) but gave the Bucks a little bit of everything and was generally positive overall. He again led the team in assists, dishing four of them in the fourth quarter when the game was on the line to go along with a tough and-one. If he can take the hit to his ego—which it looks like he can—Porter could find himself in a very important role as the leader of the Bucks’ bench. Tonight was a sound start.

Grade: C+

Bobby Portis​


24 minutes, 19 points, 3 rebounds, 1 assists, 8/15 FG, 3/7 3PT, +6

Portis continued his strong season offensively, where he’s leading the league in three-point percentage (48% coming into tonight’s game), and his three-pointer with the Bucks down two and just 54.8 seconds on the game clock is a testament to his unwavering confidence from range. On another note, while he battled on the boards, tipping a lot them, it would be great to see him come down with more of these. You know what you’re getting with BP and there’s value in that, despite his defensive limitations.

Grade: B-

Gary Harris​


15 minutes, 2 points, 2 rebounds, 2 assists, 2 steals, 0/1 FG, 0/1 3PT, +10

Following the loss to the Spurs, I wrote that if Harris is “playing this much for the Bucks, then maybe it’s time to start expecting more—or give those minutes to someone who might be able to win you a game rather than just stabilise it.” Tonight, he played stabiliser again, but with the Bucks finding quality minutes from Pete Nance at the expense of Gary Trent Jr., that role was perfect.

Grade: B

Pete Nance​


15 minutes, 5 points, 4 rebounds, 2 assists, 2 steals, 1 block, 2/3 FG, 1/1 3PT, +13

Nance was the surprise beneficiary of Rivers’ rotational adjustments tonight, playing his most minutes of the season. He was fantastic in these too, contributing all over the court and playing the game how it’s supposed to be played—with a combination of energy and smarts. His steal to layup in the fourth was huge to slow the Hawks’ momentum and his three-pointer to put the Bucks back up by 14 should’ve been the sealer. Nance has definitely earned another look and, if he can keep this up, could easily step into the front-court void any substantial Bucks trade would create.

Grade: A

Doc Rivers​


Rivers’ decision to make changes was overdue and he did the obvious, swapping out Porter for Kuzma that enabled Green to move to his natural position, while also giving the Bucks an injection off the bench—Porter and Portis did play well off each other too. Rivers gets more credit for his decision to play Nance over Trent, which was largely unexpected and ended up a real positive for the Bucks—Trent hasn’t had a positive plus-minus in his last eight games (and is -255 on the season), while Nance was, arguably, a game-changer in this one. He still needs to go, but tonight Doc made the right calls.

Grade: B

DNP-CD
: Gary Trent Jr., Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Cole Anthony, Amir Coffey, Andre Jackson Jr., Jericho Sims.

Inactive: Taurean Prince, Alex Antetokounmpo.

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • Pete Nance received first-quarter minutes, checking in with 2:42 left to go. He looked active and had a nice interior assist to Portis.
  • By the end of the first quarter, the Hawks had taken 29 shots compared to just 19 fort the Bucks, thanks largely to their work on the offensive glass—they had plenty of opportunities, though, missing all of their 13 three-point attempts.
  • After missing their 16th three in a row, Green hit a three on the other end to give the Bucks a 12-point lead. On their next possession, he hit 1/2 to make it 15.
  • A 29-6 run, gave the Bucks a 45-25 lead midway through the second. The Hawks immediately followed that by an 8-0 run of their own.
  • With just 26 seconds left in the first half, CJ McCollum buried the Hawks’ first three of the game. You could see it coming too, with Giannis unwisely helping Green who’d already forced Jalen Johnson to pick it up at the free throw line.
  • The Hawks’ 38 first-half points were their lowest since December of 2021.
  • The Bucks received at least two baffling offensive foul calls—one on a KPJ drive in the first half and another on a Giannis one-legged fade in the third quarter.
  • It was a three-point parade to start the third quarter, with the Bucks going 5/6 and the Hawks finding their rhythm going 4/5.
  • Turnovers again proved costly for the Bucks. Their 11th turnover (to just six for the Hawks) helped the Hawks cut it to 11 points with 2:24 left in the third. Another turnover by KPJ enabled the Hawks to cut it to single digits a minute later—part of a 18-4 Hawks run. Then another turnover—this one off an inbounds pass with just 12.5 seconds left—led to three free throws to Nickeil Alexander-Walker, and at the three-quarter siren it was an 8-point game.
  • Alexander-Walker went on a tear in the fourth, his 14th point of the quarter (29th of the game) making it a one-point margin, 101-100. Another three with just 12.6 seconds left again reduced the lead to just one.

Up Next​


The Bucks have a day off before commencing a three-game homestand against the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday. You can find all the action on ESPN and FanDuel Sports Winsconsin—tip off is at 8:30 p.m. Central.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...ayer-grades-stats-kyle-kuzma-starts-bucks-win
 
Milwaukee Bucks Poll: Which “big fish” are you interested in?

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The trade deadline is two weeks from Friday, and if you’ve been following along, the Bucks are kicking the tires on just about everyone rumored to be available. We’ve been covering those rumors as well as analyzing possible trades that could bring said player to Milwaukee, and you can read more about those below. But what we haven’t done yet is take a larger sample of whether or not fans are interested.

So that’s what we’re doing today, focusing on four former All-Stars and one former NBA champ who could get his first selection as a reserve this year. Pieces on Andrew Wiggins and Ja Morant are coming soon, but follow these links to read more about the fits of Michael Porter Jr., Zach LaVine, and Dejounte Murray. Not all of these guys would require the same outgoing package from the Bucks, and MPJ is probably the only one who’d merit trading away a future first-round pick. Recent intel suggests that Jon Horst is unwilling to trade his 2031 first unless it’s for a star, and probably a couple of the guys below at most fit that definition.

In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, tell us whether or not you’re interested in those names, and if so, what you’re willing to give up if you’re Horst. For all of these, assume that the outgoing players that Milwaukee must trade are Kyle Kuzma (for Murray, Wiggins) or both Kuzma and Bobby Portis (Morant, Porter, LaVine) in order to meet salary-matching rules. For Murray, they’d also need to give up two minimum-salaried players, which could include Gary Harris or Gary Trent. For LaVine, just one minimum.



As always, this poll will be open until midnight Central on Friday, and we’ll post the results later that day. Thanks for voting!

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-poll...jr-zach-lavine-dejounte-murray-andrew-wiggins
 
Bucks Trade Candidate: Andrew Wiggins

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We are inching closer and closer to the NBA trade deadline, now just over two weeks away from February 5. The Bucks haven’t pulled the trigger on anything yet, but with all the rumors swirling, it’s definitely possible we see some action before then. In the meantime, we here at Brew Hoop have been presenting our candidates for the Bucks and GM Jon Horst to target. We’ve already identified five players for consideration, but now I’m throwing in a sixth, as we take a look at Andrew Wiggins.


The Player​


Andrew Wiggins, 6’7”, 210 lbs. wing

Season averages: 15.8 PPG, 4.9 RPG, 2.8 APG, 1.2 SPG, 1.0 BPG, .465/.398/.775


This is now the third player from the 2014 NBA draft we’ve presented, as Wiggins was the no. 1 pick that year to the Timberwolves. The Bucks just missed on acquiring Wiggins’ services in that draft, instead selecting Jabari Parker at two. After five and a half seasons in Minnesota with just one playoff appearance, the T-Wolves traded Wiggins to the Warriors. There, he fit in perfectly next to Steph Curry, Draymond Green, and Klay Thompson as a do-it-all small forward. In his second full season with Golden State, he earned his first and only All-Star appearance and helped them win the 2022 title. After their time together in Minneapolis, Wiggins and Jimmy Butler crossed paths again, but this time they were traded for each other, with Wiggins heading to Miami and Butler to the Bay.

With Miami, Wiggins has firmly cemented himself as the same do-it-all player he became in Golden State: a good secondary scorer and perimeter defender. He’s shooting a career best 39.8% from beyond the arc on decent volume (4.8 attempts per game), and is capable of creating a shot in the midrange, shooting 36% from 10 feet to the three-point line. When asked to handle the rock this season, he’s been a decent playmaker, averaging the second-most assists per game of his career (2.8). Per Cleaning The Glass, the Heat’s offense is scoring 1.4 more points per 100 possessions when he’s on the floor.

Wiggins is a strong perimeter defender and could take on opponents’ best wing or bigger guards. He gets into the passing lane and affects shots, averaging 2.2 steals plus blocks per game, also a career high. His advanced numbers don’t look great, though: opposing teams score 4.6 more points per 100 with Wiggins on the court. That number could be inflated by the Heat’s lagging offense, which ranks 20th (113.5 offensive rating). Overall, they sit 10th in the league in defensive rating at 112.8.

Regardless, Wiggins would undoubtedly be a solid improvement for the Bucks, bringing more consistent offense and defense alongside Giannis. So it’s no surprise that the Bucks were linked to Wiggins last year before he was traded to Miami, and in several reports this season. This one was courtesy of ClutchPoints’ Brett Siegel:

“Wiggins, who was drawing interest from the Bucks over the summer, continues to be a name associated with Milwaukee’s trade deadline plans. From the Heat’s perspective, though, they seem to be working on their own plans to upgrade their roster, and it’s unknown whether Miami would surrender Wiggins in a trade that doesn’t land them an All-Star-level player like Giannis or someone else.“

The Trade​


To even get this trade off the ground, the Bucks likely have to invite a third party. Outside of Giannis, the Bucks don’t have the type of player Miami wants. To facilitate the deal, the Nets are added to the equation. The Bucks’ part in this would actually be the second of two separate deals that essentially turn into one big deal, much like how Jericho Sims was attached to last year’s Kyle Kuzma-Khris Middleton swap.

In the first half of the trade, Miami snags the hottest commodity on the trade market in Michael Porter Jr. in exchange for Wiggins, Terry Rozier’s expiring contract, and their unprotected 2029 first-round pick, also getting Tyrese Martin as a salary filler. Then the Nets re-route Wiggins to the Bucks for Kyle Kuzma and Andre Jackson Jr. This puts the Nets over the 15-man roster limit, so they’d have to cut someone—likely the injured Haywood Highsmith—to stay in compliance.

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Now, I know some will question why the Bucks are seemingly helping a team above them in the standings (Miami leads Milwaukee by 3.5 games for the 8th seed). But this isn’t the Bucks coming to Miami and Brooklyn with this trade offer. They swoop in after Miami acquires Porter, offer Kuzma and AJax to Brooklyn, and re-route Wiggins, who has a player option decision this summer, to Milwaukee. The Nets get an easier contract to move off of, and Wiggins gets to finish this season on a team that is gunning for the playoffs. Miami offers Brooklyn a future first and an expiring contract. Every team gets something they want.

But the Bucks themselves have been linked to Porter, so why wouldn’t they get the better player? They have only their 2031 or 2032 first-round picks to offer. The Nets, should they choose to trade Porter, appear to want a first-round pick (or more) in return. That’s the market for a 27-year-old wing who’s averaging 25+ points per game. As good as Porter is, the Bucks don’t have the right kind of pick to deal. If they owned any of their draft picks from 2027–2030, that would make more sense for Porter. Giannis will be 36 going on 37 in 2031; I see it as unlikely that the Bucks even trade that pick anyway, considering they’ve been unwilling to move it dating back to last season.

Wiggins, while a good player, wouldn’t command giving up 2031, even if the trade was strictly between Miami and Milwaukee. But the Bucks have to make some moves to improve this roster. If they’re eyeing the more distant future without Giannis and don’t want to give up that pick, then this is the type of deal to make. I’m not the only one who feels this way, as according to Jamal Collier of ESPN, that’s where much of the league sees how the Bucks are going to improve:

“It’s where rival executives see the biggest chance for opportunity in Milwaukee. The Bucks can accept a larger contract with multiple years beyond this season that an opposing team might be trying to get out from under, such as Miami‘s Andrew Wiggins, who owns a $30 million player option for next season, or Charlotte‘s Miles Bridges, who will make $22.8 million in the 2026-27 season, team and league sources told ESPN.“

This may not be the best offer the Nets get for Porter, but there are things to like about it. Adding a future first-round pick in 2029 would bring their total to four that season: the Nets would have their own first, the Knicks’, and the least favorable of the Rockets, Mavericks, and Suns. Provided that the Nets are a contending team around that time, they could use those picks as ammunition to trade for a star. As for the players, Rozier is an expiring deal that they can wash their hands of this summer. Kuzma can be a decent contributor in the short term, and he will be on an expiring contract next season, which the Nets could flip for more assets. AJax is a young defender that they could take a flyer on.

The Fit​


Wiggins could realistically fit with every team in the league. With his experience and production, he would be a particularly welcome sight in Milwaukee. He’s an above-average three-point shooter and doesn’t need the ball in his hands all the time to create offense. In some ways, he reminds me of a lesser Khris Middleton: a good player who makes winning plays. I’m not trying to say Wiggins is as good on offense as Middleton was, but his qualities make him a good fit for a championship-contending roster.

Teams wouldn’t be able to sag off Wiggins in the half-court like they could with someone like Miles Bridges. As I mentioned earlier, Wiggins is having his most efficient season from distance in his career, and not just on-ball: 3.7 of Wiggins’ 4.8 three-point attempts per game are off the catch, and he’s converting those at 42%. Wiggins is also consistent, which would be a welcome change for the Bucks. Too many players are volatile from game to game to be relied on in big spots. Ryan Rollins and Kevin Porter Jr. have been scuffling in January, and you can’t rely on your backup center to be the second leading scorer.

Wiggins may also help the Bucks’ rebounding, averaging nearly five per game. Compared to some of the other wings we’ve discussed (LaVine, Bridges, Jerami Grant), Wiggins slots in much better as the starting small forward next to Giannis. Finally, he’s a pretty durable player who has played at least 73% of games every year of his career except for one. That was 2022–23, when he missed 22 straight games because his father, former NBA player Mitchell Wiggins, was going through a serious medical issue, and the younger Wiggins stepped away from the team.



Are you okay with jumping into a deal that makes the Heat better if it means the Bucks can still get Wiggins and keep the 2031 first-round pick? Or would you rather the Bucks go for it and outbid the Heat? Let me know in the comments below.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...ma-michael-porter-jr-miami-heat-brooklyn-nets
 
Rapid Recap: Thunder 122, Bucks 102

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After escaping on Monday with a two-point win over the Hawks, the Milwaukee Bucks couldn’t build momentum and lost to the Oklahoma City Thunder. It’s the fourth straight loss for the Bucks against defending NBA champions. Giannis led the way for the Bucks with 19 points and 14 rebounds, while seldom-used guard Cole Anthony had 17 points on 77.8% shooing from the floor. Reigning league MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander led all players with 40 points on a hyper-efficient 16/19 shooting, while also dishing out 11 assists.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


During his pre-game remarks, Doc Rivers mentioned that in order to beat a team like OKC, even shorthanded, they couldn’t turn the ball over. That didn’t translate on the court, as the Bucks committed three turnovers in the first four minutes. That allowed the Thunder to grab a big lead early, and they continued to add onto it. Milwaukee didn’t even hit double-digits on the scoreboard until the 3:09 mark, courtesy of a Pete Nance three-pointer. At one point, Ajay Mitchell outscored the Bucks by himself (12 to 11). By the time the first was over, the Bucks fell behind by 20, 38-18.

Milwaukee seemed to find their footing early in the second from three-point range. They went 3/5 in the first 4:28 of the frame, but the problem was that they couldn’t get a stop on defense. SGA didn’t have to do much to break down Milwaukee’s defense: there were a few stretches where the Bucks tried to hang around, cutting the lead down to 14 points a couple of times, but OKC always had a response. SGA hit a three with 38 seconds left with Kyle Kuzma all over him to put the Thunder back up by 19, and the score at halftime was 69-51 in favor of OKC.

The Bucks tried to mount a comeback, but the Thunder were having none of it. SGA scored or assisted on eight of the first 14 OKC points in the first half of the quarter to keep the Bucks at bay. Milwaukee did try to creep into the game again, cutting the deficit to 16 points with 4:03 to go in the quarter thanks to an Andre Jackson Jr. three-point basket. Yet, as they did throughout the night at Fiserv Forum, the Thunder responded with a 9-0 run to go up by 27 points. The Bucks were able to shave down the deficit a bit heading into the fourth quarter, down 99-77.

The first two possessions of the fourth quarter typified what the game had been all night long. Pete Nance hit a three-pointer to get the deficit under 20. On the Thunder’s first offensive possession, the Bucks forced Kenrich Williams into a fadeaway three at the end of the shot clock, but he drilled it anyway. The two teams traded baskets for much of the quarter, but after two straight dunks from Giannis, Oklahoma City called timeout. But with the Bucks down by 18 points and just under five miuntes to go, Doc Rivers subbed out Giannis for the rest of the game. Then, with 2:28 left, Rivers subbed in end-of-the-bench players, as OKC coasted to an easy victory.

Stat That Stood Out​


One key to this one was not turning the ball over. Milwaukee couldn’t do that at all in the first quarter, as they turned the ball over eight times. The Thunder were able to turn that into 11 points, en route to their 20-point first-quarter lead.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...i-gilegous-alexander-pete-nance-chet-holmgren
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Oklahoma City Thunder Preview & Game Thread: NBA finalists meet again

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The Milwaukee Bucks try to start another of those pesky winning streaks tonight in Fiserv against the Oklahoma City Thunder. As we’ve all been patiently waiting for, it’s NBA Rivals Week, so who better for the Bucks to lock horns with than the Pacers, Celtics, Heat, Suns Thunder! Of course, this extremely bitter rivalry was born out of these teams competing on the highest stage last season in the NBA Finals*. The Bucks reigned supreme, steamrolling the Thunder and cementing their place in league history as one of the few teams to win the trophy!

*NBA Cup

Where We’re At​


Well, Milwaukee did win on MLK Day against Atlanta, but it was anything but convincing—as most of their wins are these days. The Bucks squandered a 23-point lead in the second half, needing big threes from AJ Green and Bobby Portis to get them over the line against a struggling Hawks team. Moreover, Atlanta did them a solid by going 1/22 from three (yes, one for twenty-two)—the worst three-point shooting half in NBA history! Prior to that game, Milwaukee got rinsed by Minnesota (down Anthony Edwards and Rudy Gobert) and San Antonio. So yeah, the Bucks still have a lot of work to do to.

On the other hand, the Thunder—despite having long-term injuries to key players—just keep on keeping on, winning seven of eight. They did go through a rocky patch before that, dropping games to the Hornets and Suns, but have course-corrected since. Over the last eight games, they own the NBA’s fifth-best net rating, but rank atop the league for the season at large. Put simply, this team remains a wagon, and tonight will be a tough one for Milwaukee to win. That said, OKC are beatable on the right night, which Miami showed on Saturday in a 122-120 upset. Godspeed, Bucks.

Injury Report​


For the Bucks, Kevin Porter Jr. (oblique) and Myles Turner (ankle) are both questionable. Taurean Prince (neck) is out.

For the Thunder, Alex Caruso, Isaiah Hartenstein, Thomas Sorber, Nikola Topic, and Jalen Williams (the wing) are all out. Jaylin Williams (the big) is questionable.

Player To Watch​


I’m going with Pete Nance, who, after dominating the G League with the Herd, got his first shot at real minutes with the Bucks against the Hawks, and did not disappoint. Nance made a major impact with five points, four rebounds, two assists, two steals, and one block in 15 minutes; the big man was +13 for the game. I’m looking at what his role develops into going forward. Does he become a regular in the rotation, or was that game more of a flash in the pan?

How To Watch​


8:30 p.m. CST on ESPN and FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin.


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...scussion-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Bucks vs. Thunder Player Grades: Despite blowout loss, Anthony and Nance step up

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For the third time in four games, the Milwaukee Bucks were blown out by a Western Conference team, losing 122-102 to the defending NBA champions, the Oklahoma City Thunder. Things have tumbled quickly for the Bucks; after winning five of their last seven games, they’ve now dropped four of five. Read our full summary of the game here and catch a six-minute audio recap on the Bucks+ podcast, Bucks In Six Minutes, below.

View Link

Player Grades​

Giannis Antetokounmpo​


31 minutes, 19 points, 14 rebounds, 7 assists, 3 turnovers, 8/11 FG, 3/6 FT, -11

Despite missing several big-time defensive pieces in Jalen Williams and Isaiah Hartenstein, the Thunder still made it incredibly difficult for Giannis to get going. To his credit, though, GA was still very efficient, picking up another double-double and having seven assists.

Grade: B-

Ryan Rollins​


29 minutes, 10 points, 7 assists, 3 rebounds, 3 steals, 3 turnovers, 4/11 FG, 2/5 3P, -9

The ball pressure from OKC’s defense really made it a hard day for Rollins as well. He found his spots at times, but between Cason Wallace and Lu Dort, it was tough for him to get consistent opportunities.

Grade: C-

AJ Green​


32 minutes, 15 points, 3 rebounds, 4/9 3P, -14

Green has really found his stroke in January. He’s been shooting 40.7% so far, and added a 44% performance last night. The Bucks have needed these types of performances from him, even in ugly losses.

Grade: B

Kyle Kuzma​


28 minutes, 7 points, 3 rebounds, 3/11 FG, 0/5 3P, -20

Things keep trending downward for Kuzma as the season progresses. He wasn’t able to do much on defence guarding SGA (to be fair, few can), and according to Doc Rivers, he wasn’t in the right spots offensively. According to Rivers, he was supposed to be a screener and roller in the middle, but ended up just spacing and hoisting up five three-pointers.

Grade: D+

Bobby Portis​


37 minutes, 15 points, 6 rebounds, 9 assists, 6/14 FG, 2/7 3P, +0

Bobby continues to be a consistent offensive player off the bench for the Bucks. He added another 15 points and even distributed the ball a little bit, doling out nine assists.

Grade: B-

Pete Nance​


30 minutes, 11 points, 4 rebounds, 3/5 3P, +3

What a revelation Nance has been over the last two games. Last night, he played double the minutes he did on Monday and looked pretty solid on both ends. Of the players who played more than 10 minutes, he was the only Buck to be a positive in the plus/minus.

Grade: B+

Cole Anthony​


29 minutes, 17 points, 3 rebounds, 3 assists, 4 turnovers, 7/9 FG, 3/4 3P, -2

With Kevin Porter Jr. out, Doc Rivers tapped Cole Anthony to return to the rotation and fill in as the backup point guard. He did well and was Bucks’ leading scorer at halftime. While he had his moments of good play, the bad with Anthony reared its ugly head again with some bone-headed turnovers.

Grade: B

Doc Rivers​


If any team has perfected the right approach to NBA basketball in the 2020s, it’s been the Thunder. The difference between them and how Doc runs the Bucks couldn’t be more stark. The way OKC runs offense and stays locked into their principles is impressive to watch. Meanwhile, the Bucks are apparently focused on the more basic elements of basketball, like moving the ball with pace. It’s the clearest example of how the modern NBA has passed Rivers by.

Grade: D-

Limited Minutes:
Gary Harris, Andre Jackson Jr, Gary Trent Jr.

Garbage Time: Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Amir Coffey, Jericho Sims

Inactive: Myles Turner, Kevin Porter Jr, Taurean Prince, Alex Antetokounmpo

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • Giannis wore an All-Star patch on his jersey, commemorating his selection as a starter from the Eastern Conference. With his 10th straight selection, Giannis became the first Bucks player in franchise history to have 10 All-Star appearances with the team.
  • Before the game, Myles Turner (left ankle sprain) and KPJ (oblique strain) were both ruled out. Rivers said that Turner is just day-to-day, but Porter could be out for some time, with no clear timetable for his return.
  • The Bucks are now 10-20 since starting the season 8-5.
  • This is the fourth straight game that Giannis has shot the ball 13 times or less. Giannis was asked postgame how the team could get him more shots:
“I’m not the guy who will yell and cuss a teammate out and demand the ball. I’ve never done that in my career. I feel like I’ve played with teammates who understand the gravity I can cause for our team, how I can create for my teammates or for myself. Maybe because we’re young, maybe it’s because we’re not playing well, maybe guys think it’s their turn. They want to carry the team on their back and try to turn this around, but I don’t get it. It’s not like I’m not trying to be aggressive.”
  • I asked Bobby Portis how he handles these types of loses, especially when they come this close together:
“It’s the NBA, man, in about six or seven games, I’m about to play my 700th NBA game, which is crazy to say. So, I’ve played in a lot of different games, a lot of different moments, can’t get too high or too low. Obviously, you want to have that sense of urgency on a nightly basis; that’s something you have to have, especially where we are in the season. We’re not where we want to be, you’ve just got to have that sense of urgency every night so you can give yourself the best chance to win.”
  • In previous interviews, Giannis has stated that there are times when he feels some of the younger players are trying to do too much. So, I asked Giannis about what type of learning curve it takes for a young player to break out of that and progress:
“Time and experience. I was like 20, 21. I think it was my third year in the league, but then in my fourth year, it (got) better. I had great vets that taught me how to play the game, how to play unselfish basketball, play winning basketball. I felt like I was always on go mode, and they were able to tell me to find my teammates and set the tone, move the ball. There are going to be times during the game it’s going to be your turn to take over the game. I learned to read the plays, I learned to read momentum, I learned to read runs. I remember back in the day when the team went on a run, there would never be a case where I didn’t touch the ball. If you can find a clip of the team going on a run and didn’t throw me the ball in the post, to go to the free throw line, get a wide-open shot, and create this gravity. When I was younger, I didn’t know what I was doing, but they understood for me.”

Up Next​


Milwaukee will have another late tip-off at home this week, welcoming the Nuggets to Fiserv Forum to finish their two-game season series. Tip-off is slated for 8:30 p.m. Central time, with the game available to stream on Prime Video. On cable, it can still be watched on FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...rades-stats-giannis-ryan-rollins-cole-anthony
 
Mixtape: A midseason Milwaukee Bucks playlist

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My family and I spent some 17 hours of our Australian summer holidays road-tripping, nothing but the open road and the music blaring through the car speakers to stimulate our senses. It was during this—somewhere in-between my country shuffle and the kids’ umpteenth play of “Golden” from KPop Demon Hunters—that the idea spawned: when you think of the Bucks’ season so far, what song(s) come to mind? And so it was born—Brew Hoop’s midseason mixtape.


Finn: “man at the garden” by Kendrick Lamar​


Defining lyric: “Tell me why you think you deserve the greatest of all time, m*****f*****.”

Connection: On “man at the garden,” Kendrick powerfully asserts his merit for, as he repeats time and time again, “it all.” The superstar rapper cites the work he’s put in (“wakin’ up at 6 a.m./six miles a day, conditionin’ my wind”) and the commendable morals and approaches he’s moved through life with (“I see you as a human first/even when you didn’t understand your worth”), delivering his bars in a way that’s borderline cockily braggadocios, but also just unabashedly honest, as the premise of the song is a man explaining why he deserves to enter a biblical paradise. Kendrick’s attitude on this track feels like a strong match for Giannis this season, especially after the events from the Timberwolves blowout. “I don’t think anybody has the right to tell me what or how I should act on the basketball court after I’ve been here 13 years and I’m basically the all-time leader in everything,” Antetokounmpo said when asked about his booing exchange with Milwaukee fans. That’s not the humility we’re used to seeing from the MVP and it’s understandable—frustration has followed the big fella wherever he’s gone this year. He’s in a position where he wants “it all” and he’s earned “it all,” as well as the right to let the world know. Now, it’s up to the Bucks to prove why they deserve their greatest of all time.

Zac: “Heads You Win” by Charley Crockett​


Defining lyric: “I should’ve seen it coming/But fools like me never do/Heads, you win/Tails, I lose.”

Connection: I had a long look at Crockett’s “Welcome to Hard Times” before deciding on this one. “Heads You Win” documents a cowboy’s longing for a lost love, one that stays with him like a “living apparition.” Substitute the lost lover for the Bucks of recent years—heck, even the Bucks that have appeared at certain times this season—and the song works just as well. In this reading, we—Bucks fans—are the narrator, coming to the realisation that, despite all the optimism of the off-season, we really “should’ve seen [this season’s struggles] coming”. Yet, just like the cowboy, “fools like [us] never do.” It also reframes the pain of fandom, acknowledging that “if [we] are being honest/It really ain’t [the Bucks’] fault.” And while we’ve been stuck on a “corner/Spilling memories” of recent glory, Jon Horst has kept flipping coins, only for luck to land the wrong way (injuries, perfect fits on paper not materialising etc.). In the end, “you”—other NBA teams, opposing fans, media—invariably win whether it’s heads or tails, as the Bucks just can’t get it together on a consistent basis and we are left with hearts that “can hardly stand it” and minds that are “unglued,” stuck with a team not good enough to contend and without the assets to make a rebuild attractive.

Jack: “Thought It Was” by Iann Dior feat. Machine Gun Kelly and Travis Barker​


Defining lyric: “I lost my mind/Chasing a feeling in the hills at night/City of Angels, but it hurts sometimes/ Finally made it, but it don’t feel right/Don’t feel like I thought it would.”

Connection: OK, I cheated a bit since I couldn’t think of a song that accurately conveyed my feelings about this season. However, I did find the above song, whose chorus could apply to the last five seasons since Milwaukee won the title in 2021. Put simply, the Bucks have been “losing their mind” by “chasing the feeling” of winning a title. They “finally made” the trade that they believed would get them back there (Lillard), but it “didn’t feel right.” It “didn’t feel like they thought it would.”

Morgan: “We Beseech Thee” by the New Broadway Cast of Godspell (feat. Nick Blaemire)​


Defining lyric: “Father, hear thy children’s call/Humbly at thy feet we fall/Prodigals confessing all/We beseech thee, hear us!”

Connection: I’ve been playing this album on repeat after the sibling gifted it to me this Christmas. What does a Stephen Schwartz (of Wicked fame) musical about the gospels have to do with the 2025-26 Milwaukee Bucks, you ask? This instant ear worm is essentially a repeated chorus ending with, “We beseech thee, hear us!”

Van: “Keep The Customer Satisfied” by Simon & Garfunkel​


Defining lyric: “And I’m one step ahead of the shoeshine/Two steps away from the county line/Just trying to keep my customers satisfied/Satisfied!”

Connection: While the title and that lyric might sound a bit on the nose, and not all the lyrics are corollary, this deeper cut by one of my all-time faves immediately popped into my head when thinking about these Bucks. From the iconic duo’s last album, Bridge Over Troubled Water, this was a Paul Simon composition that may allude to his songwriting exhaustion under high expectations and undue criticism. That informed his writing on The Boxer, the album’s lead single, so it probably did here too. Now, this team is certainly facing a lot of just criticism, but the Prohibition-era references feel particularly apt: they’re barely managing to stay above poverty (shining shoes for richer folks/teams) but not quite as close to relative safety (evading mobsters/vultures who want Giannis across the county line/.500 line). They’re in between, trying to keep fans (and Giannis) satisfied. But unlike Simon’s fans, they’re not currently succeeding.

Zac: “Bitin’ List” by Tyler Childers​


Defining lyric: “To put it plain, I just don’t like you/Not a thing about the way you is/And if there ever come a time I got rabies/You’re high on my bitin’ list.”

Connection: I’ll preface this by saying that my connection is solely to the season itself and not any of the Bucks players. You might find it particularly fitting for some though—or even coaching or front office staff. I won’t judge. Promise. A good ol’ sing-along, “Bitin’ List” is one for those of us who need to purge after the frustrations of this season: blowouts to bottom feeders, losing streaks, underwhelming play from our preseason second and third ranked players. So, yeah, if I indeed did have rabies—and the first half of the 2025-26 season was something, you know, tangible—you can bet your bottom dollar that I’d be finding a way to bite it. But only after I’d sharpened my teeth.

Matthew: “Waiting in Vain” by Bob Marley​


Defining lyric: “I don’t wanna wait in vain for your love.”

Connection: The defining lyric could apply to many things for Giannis this season. Specifically, I thought of it first as Giannis not wanting to wait around for this team to be a contender, because he wants to play meaningful basketball now—not to mention the feeling of waiting to come back from injury and waiting to decide if he will be on the team or not. Other lyrics, like “Don’t treat me like a puppet on a strong/Cuz I know how to do my thing,” also help to reinforce the feeling of how this trade process has been stringing us and him along.

Zac: “Sorrow” by The National​


Defining lyric: “Don’t leave my hyper heart alone on the water/Cover me in rag and bone sympathy/‘Cause I don’t wanna get over you/I don’t wanna get over you.”

Connection: One of my favourite songs of all time, “Sorrow” is a portrait of all-consuming lows. Regarding the Bucks’ season, the lyrics stay true but find new meaning, with the opening line—“Sorrow found me when I was young”—a fitting reminder of the losses that found the Bucks following the season’s opening week and a half. And, like the sorrow that finds itself in the speaker’s “honey” and “milk,” sorrow has tainted the pleasures of the Bucks’ season too (see KPJ going down on opening night; the blowout loss to the Nets following what felt like a momentum-building win against the Celtics etc.). But it’s the song’s chorus that’s most poignant: our hearts are still “hyper” and, despite the losses and the injuries and the trade rumours—the season’s sorrows—we “don’t wanna get over” it, and so we keep coming back for more.

Matthew: “Make It Better” by Anderson .Paak​


Defining lyric: “Make it better.”

Connection: For a more positive spin, this entire song works as a metaphor for how Giannis and the Bucks have fallen on hard times with their love, but are trying to mend it and make it work. We have to acknowledge the difficulties of the season, but this option is hopeful!

Bonus: Here’s a whole Giannis playlist!

View Link


There you have it, from hip hop to country, gospel to reggae, this Bucks season has reverberated across the musical spectrum. It shouldn’t be surprising; after all, basketball is music—the bounce of the ball, the flick of the net, the thumping systole and diastole that comes whether you’re catching a body or watching it happen from the stands. And while the first half of 2025-26 might have mustered mostly melancholy, a key trade or coaching change could easily see the second half turn euphonious.

As always, share your thoughts on our selections in the comments—and don’t forget to queue a track or two of your own!

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-feat...nnis-kendrick-lamar-tyler-childers-bob-marley
 
Rapid Recap: Nuggets 102, Bucks 100

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The Bucks couldn’t find a way to beat the Nuggets—even without Nikola Jokic, Jamal Murray, Cameron Johnson, and Christian Braun—for the second time this season, losing 102-100. It’s Milwaukee’s second straight loss and sixth in their last eight games. Giannis had 22 points to lead the Bucks again, going 14/16 from the line, while Rollins added 21 points. Julian Strawther led Denver with 20 points.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


The Bucks’ first-quarter turnover issues hurt them once again tonight. After turning the ball over eight times against OKC, they proceeded to turn it over five times in the first 8:36 of the frame. Those turnovers led to a 6-0 Nuggets run to break a 12-12 tie, forcing a timeout from Doc Rivers. Milwaukee finally stopped turning the ball over and got back into the game. Cole Anthony checked in and sort of looked like he did in the first week of the season, scoring the final seven points for the Bucks to tie the game heading into the second quarter at 21 apiece.

With the Bucks trailing in the early goings of the second quarter, they turned to their veterans, Kyle Kuzma and Bobby Portis, to get them back on track. Kuzma scored a quick three points, and Bobby kept up his hot shooting with a three to put Milwaukee up by two. The Bucks were able to extend their edge to five points, but both teams seemingly had a lid on the basket from there on out. Milwaukee went scoreless for nearly five minutes, allowing the Nuggets to take a five-point lead of their own. Myles Turner and Giannis fought back, helping to tie the game back up for the Bucks, but the offense went cold again after that. Denver went on a 6-0 run to end the quarter, sending Milwaukee to the locker room at the break down 48-42.

The Nuggets have received significant contributions from their bench all season, which they needed because Aaron Gordon would play no further part after the first half. Ergo, it was Julian Strawther who picked up the slack for Denver, scoring 13 of their first 16 points. Milwaukee was able to match Denver’s scoring in the early going, but after they got it within one point, the Nuggets went on a 14-2 run to take the first double-digit lead of the game—Bucks timeout. Things did not improve much for Milwaukee, though, with the Nuggets outscoring them 10-8 to end the quarter. That sent the Bucks into the fourth quarter trailing by double figures for the fourth time in their last five, down 78-63.

Denver kept adding insult to injury to start the fourth, ballooning their lead to 23 points just a minute and a half in. The Bucks did trim it down to 15 points with just over eight minutes to go, but the Nuggets responded with a 7-4 burst to go back up by 18 with just over five minutes left. However, the Bucks showed signs of life from that point, chipping away brick by brick to go on a 20-4 run; they got all the way back within two points with 29 seconds left! Tim Hardaway Jr. broke the drought, though, getting fouled on a mid-range jumper and drilling both free throws with 10.4 seconds on the clock, putting the Nuggets back up by four. Rollins played hero again, drilling a step-back three to bring them back within one. Jalen Pickett went to the line with 4.5 seconds left and hit the first, but then missed the second. With no timeouts, the Bucks had to move; Kuzma got off a half-court heave that narrowly missed.

Stat That Stood Out​


21-8. That was the difference in fast-break points between the Nuggets and the Bucks, despite Milwaukee possessing one of the best fast-break players of all time in Giannis. The Bucks don’t run in transition much, and when they did tonight, they either missed shots or turned the ball over.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...-giannis-ryan-rollins-myles-turner-kyle-kuzma
 
Bucks Trade Candidate: Ja Morant

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We’ve had quite a run of big names in this year’s trade candidate series, including a few former All-Stars like Zach LaVine and Dejounte Murray. And as you may know, the Bucks have been connected to just about everyone who might be available this deadline. So today, we tackle one of the biggest names of them all: Grizzlies star Ja Morant.


The Player​


Ja Morant, 6’2”, 174 lbs. point guard

Season averages: 19.5 PPG, 3.3 RPG, 8.1 APG, 1.0 SPG, 0.3 BPG, .410/.235/.897


This time last year, and certainly this time two or three years ago, there’s no way Morant’s name would be connected to the Bucks. Yes, they had Damian Lillard back then, but until the 2023–24 season, Morant was one of the NBA’s premier young stars. Coming off consecutive All-Star berths and making Second-Team All-NBA in 2021–22, the 2019 no. 2 pick was Memphis’ franchise player. Morant was one of the league’s brightest young stars, a former Rookie of the Year and Most Improved Player, and as such, untouchable in trade discussions.

But in March 2023, he was caught on Instagram Live with a gun at a nightclub, which led to him leaving the team to, in his words, “get help and work on learning better methods of dealing with stress and my overall well-being.” He apparently underwent counselling and then received an eight-game suspension from the league. If that counselling actually happened, it didn’t teach him a lesson: barely two months later, he was again seen on Instagram Live brandishing a firearm. That netted him a 25-game suspension the following season and league-sponsored counselling. He also faced legal proceedings after allegedly punching a high-schooler during a pickup game in 2022 and for threatening mall security in Memphis. Oh, and his dad has been ejected from multiple NBA games for going after officials in recent seasons. Finally, he sparred with Grizzlies coach Tuomas Iisalo earlier this year behind closed doors, culminating in public statements that resulted in a one-game team suspension.

Maybe the second bout of counselling worked—he hasn’t flashed his piece in public since—but then injuries happened. From 2023–2025, he played nine games in one season and 50 the next. In January 2024, he underwent right shoulder surgery, then dealt with myriad back and lower body maladies the following campaign, plus continued shoulder issues. This year, he’s missed 22 of a possible 42 contests. And when he’s played, he’s not been someone befitting of the maximum contract he received in 2022. Yes, he’s never been a good shooter (career 31.1% from deep), nor very efficient despite getting to the line a lot. Still, his efficiency has been truly abysmal this year: his 52.1% true shooting ranks 191st out of 202 qualifying players, and his 44.1% effective field goal percentage is coincidentally 441st out of 477 who’ve appeared in an NBA game this season. Memphis has been better with him off the floor this year than on.

Knowing all this off-court baggage and injury, plus his underperformance this year, why on earth would you want this guy on your team? Despite his relative youth and dynamism, I completely understand why a sizeable chunk of Bucks fans aren’t going to be interested in this deal. This week’s Tuesday Tracker shows 48% of voters against acquiring the 26-year-old Murray State alum. Nevertheless, since it was reported on January 9th that the Grizzlies are considering moving him at the deadline, the Bucks have been speculated as an interested party. Then Jim Owczarski of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported the team was indeed discussing Morant, and HoopsHype’s Michael Scotto said Milwaukee and Memphis engaged in trade talks (more on that below). For what it’s worth, Morant called himself a “loyal guy” last week and prefers to stay in Memphis.

The Trade​

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Here is my best attempt at trading Morant to Milwaukee that both makes sense and doesn’t make me wrinkle my nose. I constructed this as a three-for-three swap: while Memphis’ 15-man roster is full with guaranteed deals, and they’re far enough away from the tax that they could waive players to accommodate the needed salary-matching pieces from Milwaukee, they don’t have any obvious release candidates. Their only expiring players are 30-year-old Australian center Jock Landale and young wings GG Jackson II and Vincent Williams Jr. Anyone else they’d waive would need to be stretched over at least three more years, so while they could do a three-for-one and cut two guys, they could also reroute two players they receive from Milwaukee elsewhere and keep everyone.

Instead, here the Bucks use the minimum salary exception to take on Landale and the remainder of their room mid-level exception (left over after signing Kevin Porter Jr. last summer) to acquire Jackson. That keeps the Grizzlies at 15 while the Bucks don’t take back more salary than would be otherwise permitted. Memphis does still get some value here: Kuzma’s salary is expiring this offseason and could come in handy in a future trade. As disappointing as Gary Trent Jr. has been this year, he has a good track record and is affordable. Should he opt out of $3.8m in 2026–27, Memphis would have his Early Bird rights and can re-sign him for a first-year starting salary of up to $14.6m for four years max.

Porter can also opt out of his $5.4m salary next year, but is eligible for that same contract, as they’d also have his Early Bird rights. I question whether he has a future in Milwaukee: he was benched this week, his shot has fallen off a cliff, and would have the ninth-highest turnover rate in the league if he qualified. I also think he may be who Giannis is talking about when he alludes to teammates being selfish. KPJ is out indefinitely with an oblique strain, but it’s not as if the 18-24 Grizzlies are going anywhere with Morant running point, so they can hand the keys over to Cam Spencer for a while. Moreover, Porter and Trent are veterans who could be retained easily. They would create a solid-enough backcourt post-Morant around building blocks Jaylen Wells, Cedric Coward, and Spencer, plus Scottie Pippen Jr. and Ty Jerome once healthy.

Scotto also reported that “the Grizzlies have desired Milwaukee’s 2031 or 2032 first-round pick and Most Improved Player of the Year candidate Ryan Rollins” in the Morant talks with the Bucks. Any Milwaukee first and/or Ryan Rollins is an unequivocal non-starter. This is not the Ja Morant of three years ago: this is the Ja Morant who shoots terribly, has behaved terribly off-court, and has hardly been healthy. A first-round pick, let alone one when Giannis will be 36 or 37 years old, or a promising two-way combo guard aged 23, is laughable. After Trae Young was dealt to the Wizards without them having to include any draft assets, there’s zero reason the Bucks should include picks for Morant. Young has a higher salary, is a year older, and really not any better.

Furthermore, Young can opt out of his contract this summer, and seems likely to extend in Washington. Meanwhile, Morant has two years and $87.1m remaining on his deal. Frankly, bailing the Grizzlies out of all that money is a favor, so they should be including assets in any Morant trade, especially given his injuries and makeup problems. That’s why Milwaukee should be accepting nothing less than several plus assets, be they players or draft picks, to get Memphis out of the Ja business.

Even if Morant’s entire situation is worse than Young’s, plus an extra year and $38.1m due, I don’t think the Grizzlies will need to include a first to move off him. A couple far-off seconds (note: in 2031, the pick Memphis is sending would actually be the most favorable of theirs, Miami’s, or Indiana’s) seems fair, though. They also give up Landale, who’s having a career-best season, and shouldn’t be playing ahead of Santi Aldama or Zach Edey, when the latter returns from injury. Finally, Jackson has a textbook NBA frame and showed flashes as a rookie, but doesn’t play all that much off their bench, and his three-point shot has regressed. A lottery ticket worth it for Milwaukee.

All told, this trade saves Memphis a minimum of $57.5m over the next two seasons, even if KPJ and GTJ opt in. For those savings, give Milwaukee something for their trouble.

The Fit​


In short, it’s bad. Morant shoots poorly, isn’t a quality defender, has injury concerns, and character issues. Would he be good for the team’s culture? Doubtful. Would he be a positive locker room presence? Not banking on it. Would he improve this disappointing Bucks team? Well… yes. A lot of guys would.

That’s more because of this roster’s lack of talent than anything else, but he’d be the second-best player on many teams right now, not just Milwaukee. He does some things well, to be sure. He’s a gifted passer who’s never averaged fewer than 7.3 APG and gets to the line as well as almost anyone. Milwaukee has been horrendous nearly all season during non-Giannis minutes, and at least with Morant out there, they could break even: he can still take over games.

The issue is playing with Giannis, who already seems a bit displeased that the ball isn’t in his hands enough. Morant is ball-dominant, and while that can work alongside Giannis (he and Lillard were among the league’s top 10 pick-and-roll duos last year by points per possession), his outside shot is bad enough that you can’t even squint to see it work. He certainly won’t help perimeter defense; he’d need to be hidden while Ryan Rollins (since there’s nobody else) deals with the point of attack. I think he and Giannis could be a statistically great combo in the pick-and-roll, but would that equate to team success as it did with Dame? I have my druthers.

My primary question here is: would Giannis like playing with Morant? If Giannis is into the idea and makes him more likely to extend when eligible in October, then I can get down with this deal. You also have an extra couple seconds to use in whichever way, a flyer on a young wing, and a decent big man who could replace some of Bobby Portis’ production, should he be moved. It would also be fine if Milwaukee took a little less value alongside Morant than the seconds, Jackson, and Landale, but they should try to squeeze out what they can. If Giannis doesn’t seem excited about playing with Morant, then better to save your salary-matching pieces for a better fit.



What say you? Is this offer palatable enough for you to say yes to Morant? Would the Bucks need to receive more for you to hold your nose, and if so, what? Or should they just not bother altogether? Let me know.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...lies-kyle-kuzma-kevin-porter-jr-gary-trent-jr
 
Giannis sidelined again with calf injury

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Standing in front of his locker with the assembled media after the Milwaukee Bucks’ comeback attempt fell short in their 102-100 loss to the shorthanded Denver Nuggets, Milwaukee Bucks superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo revealed news that Bucks fans least wanted to hear: he had injured his calf again, and he would likely be out another 4-6 weeks:

So, the next steps will be to go to an MRI tomorrow (Saturday). After the MRI, they will probably tell me I popped something in my calf, in my soleus or something. I’ll probably be out 4-6 weeks. This is from my experience being around in the NBA. After that, I’m going to work my butt off to come back.

Giannis appeared to first show signs of injury in the first quarter and checked out of the game with 3:57 to go. He didn’t quite look the same after that, as he was limited to just 2/5 shooting (eight points) at halftime. Giannis ended up playing 16:37 in the second half, as the Bucks nearly mounted a 23-point comeback. Doc Rivers finally pulled Giannis with 34.2 seconds left after he couldn’t get back down the floor. Doc broke down what happened and how he saw Giannis playing through the injury:

I thought he was favoring it for most of the second half. I asked our team (medical staff) five different times. I didn’t like what my eyes were seeing, personally. Giannis was defiant about staying in. On that one play, seeing him try to run down the floor, to me, I’d had enough. I didn’t ask, I just took him out.

For those who haven’t seen it by now, here is the play in question:

What makes it sting more is that, when asked, Giannis answered in the affirmative that if the Bucks’ record was significantly better, he would’ve sat out the rest of the game. This injury comes at the worst possible time, with 12 days until the NBA trade deadline on Feb. 5 and Bucks GM Jon Horst reportedly looking to add to this current team to get back into the playoff race. This injury could preclude the Bucks from making any significant additions at the deadline, and they could fully embrace the role of being sellers.

As for when he could come back, if this timeline holds up, he would return at the earliest on Feb. 25 against the Cleveland Cavaliers. That would put him out for the next 13 games, which isn’t ideal for this Bucks team, who are 3-11 with Giannis out of the lineup. If the Bucks opt for a more cautious approach this time with Antetokounmpo’s second calf injury of the season, he would miss the next 21 games.

This injury will knock Giannis out of playing in the All-Star tournament in LA, meaning a replacement will have to be selected for his starting spot. Either scenario would put Giannis below the minimum games requirement of 65 to qualify for All-NBA teams, NBA MVP, and several other major awards. The two-time MVP was asked about ending his chances of making an All-NBA team for the 10th straight season:

It’s hard, what is it, 10 years in a row? Always in my mind, I think of the good things that have happened in my life and I think where I am at this moment and what my goals are and what stops me from my goals. The first thing you have to think about it can be worse, could be way worse, I could’ve been out for 12 months, 18 months. Being out for whatever it might be and not making All-NBA for sure it’s gonna be frustrating, but it doesn’t matter, that’s not where we are right now mentally as a team, as a player, I’m not there.

We’ll see what the MRI says and what the official timeline is when we learn the results. As for now, the Bucks will have to find a way to get some wins if they want to sniff a playoff spot. Otherwise, get ready to start scouting some draft prospects and firing up Tankathon, hoping the Bucks end up with a lottery selection. It’s been a long time since Bucks fans have been hoping the ping-pong balls fall their way, but that’s where they sit.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-inju...-calf-milwaukee-bucks-nba-injury-trade-rumors
 
Bucks vs. Mavericks postponed due to winter storm

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The Milwaukee Bucks’ game against the Dallas Mavericks was postponed due to the winter storm blanketing much of the country, preventing the Mavs from taking off for Milwaukee. Brad Townsend of the Dallas Morning News reported the development this afternoon, before the league made an official announcement. Here is their complete statement:

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According to Christian Clark of The Athletic, the Mavericks tried to get out of Dallas last night after their loss to the Lakers, but weren’t cleared for takeoff at the airport. With that option gone, they tried to take off by 11:30 a.m. Central time, but their flight kept getting delayed. According to Townsend, as of 12:30 p.m., they were still de-icing the plane. He later reported that the frigid temperatures in the area prevented the plane from being adequately de-iced, preventing the Mavs from being able to take off.

League officials are still working out when the makeup game will be. According to Townsend, they could play either on Feb. 19 after the NBA All-Star break or as soon as tomorrow (if they can get out of Dallas). Regardless, the postponement will create a back-to-back for the Bucks. We’ll keep you updated once we know the official makeup date.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-news...s-mavericks-postponment-nba-news-winter-storm
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Dallas Mavericks Preview & Game Thread: Immaculately bad vibes

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The Milwaukee Bucks will play a game of basketball against the Dallas Mavericks. At least it’s a reasonable start time! They won the other game this season oh so barely, 116-114, nearly giving our own Jack Trehearne a conniption.

Where We’re At​


Bad coach, still here. Badly behaving star, now out. Bad rest of the team, playing less than the sum of their parts. Bad recent stretch of play. Nothing more to say.

The Mavericks—the Mavericks—have won four out of five after dropping a FIGABABA last night to the Lakers. The first two were against the Jazz, but still. Our colleagues over at Mavs Moneyball recently captured Dallas’ paradox, describing the team as the “hardest playing” in the Association, while also asking questions like, “What is fandom when your team can’t compete?” All the while, they’re keeping tabs on the top of the draft. They might not be the only ones…

Injury Report​


Giannis Antetokounmpo is out with a right calf strain because he and Doc needed to make the loss to Denver respectable. There seems to be something goin’ ‘round, because AJ Green is questionable and Gary Trent Jr. is probable due to illness. Kevin Porter Jr. is out with a right oblique muscle strain, and Taurean Prince remains out due to neck surgery.

The Mavs played last night against the Lakers, so we await their injury report with bated breath.

Player To Watch​


I’m looking forward to watch Cooper Flagg.

How To Watch​


FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin at 6:00 p.m. CST.


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...scussion-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Momentum Moments: Vol. 6

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Volume 5 showcased resurgence, offering hope for the rest of the season. Volume 6 rips that hope out of your chest. Ineptitude, poor leadership, and crushing injury defined the past fortnight, leaving the Bucks—and their fans—reevaluating everything.

@ Nuggets​


The. Bucks. Are. In. Denver. And. Struggling. With. The. Altitude. They have to be—it’s the only possible reason they’re down double digits to a Nuggets team without Nikola Jokic, Jamal Murray, Cam Johnson, and Christian Braun. And. Time. Is. Running. Out. Giannis senses it too, inhales like he’s about to go free diving, and gets to work. He follows up one pirouette-to-dunk with another. Then, after both sides fail to score for nearly two minutes—in which Giannis somehow doesn’t even get an attempt—he walks into a 19-foot pull-up. Cash; lead down to six.

Four minutes later, after a flurry of baskets that don’t change the deficit, Giannis makes another middy to cut it to four. And, not long after—following a pair of split free throws by Peyton Watson—Giannis gets a steal and looks up to vacant hardwood. Forget penciling this one in, you could carve it in stone; see the finish before it happens—a windmill that rocks the rim so hard it reverberates right back to Wisconsin. But Tim Hardaway Jr. comes out of nowhere to steal it right back and, with it, the last breath of oxygen in the Bucks’ lungs.

Win probability after Giannis’ midrange jumper: 17.9%

Win probability after Hardaway’s steal: 8.9%

vs. Wolves​


Early enough in the game for fans to still care—before this was a 30-point blowout and the Bucks still had a chance—Giannis, the greatest player in franchise history and leader of this team, sits down and complains to the officials on the offensive end of the floor after a non-call and then can’t be bothered contesting a Julius Randle three-point attempt on the other end. Randle splashes three but that’s not what’s important here. What is, is the tone the Giannis just set, especially considering he had Ryan Rollins and Kevin Porter Jr. wide-open in either corner with their hands in the air. It’s no wonder everything goes south from here and the Wolves have an 18-point lead by the end of the quarter, 33 by the final siren. As Big Ju says in Remember the Titans, “Attitude reflects leadership.”

Win probability before the game: 41.4%

Win probability after Randle’s three: 23.3%

@ Spurs​


Giannis is a freak to begin, getting to the line at will, dunking, even splashing a three—scoring 14 of the Bucks’ first 17 points and sending Victor Wembanyama to the bench with zero points, two personal fouls, and one very sore knee. It feels like the start of a statement game. But the Spurs machine is starting to run like the one of yesteryear and they hold a close lead halfway into the second. Then it begins. The alien invasion. First, Wemby blocks a Rollins driving layup attempt, then he makes a three on the other end. A possession later, he grabs the carom off a Giannis miss and dribbles full-court into a pull-up three—and suddenly it feels like Independence Day, the White House blowing into smithereens. By the time he’s done in the third quarter—after splashing a turnaround, fadeaway three instead of taking the foot-shorter AJ Green down low—it’s a 25-point Spurs lead. And these Bucks don’t have Russell Casse to save them from the brink of extinction.

Win probability prior to Wemby’s block on Rollins: 25.4%

Win probability after Wemby’s pull-up three: 13.4%

@ Hawks​


According to Henry Ford, “If you always do what you’ve always done, you’ll always get what you’ve always got.” With the Bucks on an embarrassing three-game skid, this wasn’t going to work. Thankfully, Doc Rivers gets the message and opts to utilise Pete Nance, ostensibly giving him Gary Trent Jr.’s minutes, (who ends with a DNP-CD). It’s a move that pays off—the Bucks are down one, 16-17, when Nance first enters the game, but up 12, 90-78, when he last checks out. More specifically, Nance is active from the get-go, reminding the Bucks that to win you’ve got to do the little things—run hard in transition, pass up a good look for a great one, give the second and third efforts—and, if you do these consistently, good things will happen. In the fourth quarter, good things indeed happen for Nance. Amidst a Hawks run that started in the third quarter and got them as close as six after being down by 20, Nance pounces on an errant pass and turns it into a transition layup to give the Bucks breathing room, back up 10. A minute and a half later, he calmly knocks down a catch-and-shoot three-pointer that makes it 14. It should be enough to knock out the Hawks, and although it isn’t, the Bucks hold on. Bigger picture, it should be enough to change Nance’s season—and possibly even his career. Now that’s momentum.

Win probability when Nance enters the game in the first quarter: 44.1%

Win probability after Nance’s three in the fourth: 97.2%

vs. Thunder​


The Bucks win a (seemingly) rare tip and get the first possession of their sure-to-be fiery NBA Rivals Week matchup against the… Oklahoma City Thunder? Yeah, the matchup must have confused the Bucks too, as they come out stunned—unable to even get the ball inside the three-point line on the first possession—and starting centre Kyle Kuzma is forced to hoist a closely-guarded three-pointer that predictably clanks off front rim. The second possession is better—the Bucks actually get it inside 23 feet—but the result is the same, another Kuzma bricked three, and then Chet Holmgren shows him how it’s done on the other end. In the blink of an eye, it’s a 21-6 lead for the Thunder, then 26-8—and Ajay Mitchell has more points (12) than the Bucks. By the end of the quarter it’s 38-18 and, somewhere, Kenny Smith is screaming: “It’s over! It’s over, ladies and gentlemen!”

Win probability prior to the game: 22.3%

Win probability after Holmgren’s three: 18.1% (and by the end of the first it’s just 3.4%)

vs. Nuggets​


There’s no altitude this time; the Bucks are at home; still no Jokic, Murray, Johnson, Braun. No Watson too, and Aaron Gordon only plays 16 minutes. Oh, and the Nuggets are cold from three, finishing just 12/41 on the night. Myles Turner is actually on one too—17 points, seven boards, and six blocks. Still, the Bucks go down 23. How could this game possibly get any worse? That’s right, overplay Giannis attempting an all-but-futile comeback only for him to get injured. Then somehow get close enough to actually win—101-100—only for Kuzma to take and miss the game-winner. Franchise burying momentum right there.

Win probability when the Bucks go down by 23: 0.2%

Win probability after Giannis exits with injury: 6.1% (but who cares?)



With Giannis out for the foreseeable future, the focus shifts from Playoffs (well, Play-In) to planning and playing for tomorrow. Who will step up and seize their moment?

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-feat...antetokounmpo-victor-wembanyama-chet-holmgren
 
Milwaukee Bucks Poll: Lukewarm interest in Morant, LaVine

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In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, we ran down a series of Bucks trade candidates, all of whom we’ve recently profiled. You can read more about what an offer for each guy may look like on our story stream, but in general, these polls tell us how you all feel about each guy. Here are the highlights:

  • Only 52% of respondents are interested in Ja Morant, but of those, only 28% would part with a first-round pick to get him. 31% of them would like additional assets from Memphis in the trade. Morant has two years remaining on his contract after this one.
  • Slightly more (54%) would like Zach LaVine, but only 4% of them would include a future first. 54% think Sacramento should include picks or young players to take on his contract.
  • Michael Porter Jr. is definitely the most popular name here, with 85% of voters in favor of acquiring him. Recognizing that it would require surrendering a future first, only 24% of those interested would leave it unprotected (recall that the Nets already received an unprotected Nuggets 2032 first to acquire him last summer), and the remainder are almost evenly split between top-eight or lottery protections.
  • Andrew Wiggins is also well-regarded with 69% interest, but 88% of those voters wouldn’t send out any draft assets for him. 31% of them think Milwaukee should get picks or players alongside Wiggins.
  • Dejounte Murray only holds 60% interest, and only 8% would give up a future first in a trade. Everyone else is split as to whether the Bucks could get him for only salary matching or should receive more in return. Unlike the prior three names, Murray has a year remaining on his contract plus a player option for 2027–28.


Thanks again for voting! Check back on Tuesday for another slate of questions.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-poll...-zach-lavine-michael-porter-jr-andrew-wiggins
 
OH MAN where do I even start with this dumpster fire of a situation in Milwaukee right now??

Look, I feel for Bucks fans, I really do. Watching Giannis play through that calf injury against Denver was PAINFUL to watch. Doc Rivers asking the medical staff FIVE TIMES if something was wrong and still letting him play?? That's some questionable decision making right there. And then Giannis basically admitting he would've sat out if their record was better?? Ouch. That tells you everything you need to know about where this team is mentally.

The timing couldn't be worse with the trade deadline coming up. You got a guy who's supposed to be your franchise cornerstone playing hurt because the team is so desperate for wins, and now he's gonna miss 4-6 weeks MINIMUM. The 65-game requirement for All-NBA is basically out the window now. Ten straight years making All-NBA and it ends like this? That's brutal.

And can we talk about how they're 3-11 without Giannis?? That's absolutely PATHETIC for a team that's supposed to be a contender. Doc Rivers has got to go, man. The vibes are completely rotten.

The poll results are interesting though - only 52% interested in Ja Morant makes sense given all his off-court stuff, but 85% wanting MPJ?? I get it, the guy can shoot, but that contract is ROUGH and Denver's already got picks tied up from that deal.

Honestly at this point they might as well fire up Tankathon and start scouting Cooper Flagg like the preview joked about. Sometimes you gotta tear it down to build it back up. Just ask us Bills fans about the drought years before Josh Allen showed up!

Anyone think Horst actually makes a move before the deadline or do they just ride this out??
 
Milwaukee Bucks Poll: Time to tank?

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As you may know, we’ve spent the last few weeks going over trade candidates the Bucks could pursue at the deadline, operating under their reported desire to be buyers before next Thursday’s trade deadline. While there’s been no public indication they’ve changed that stance, Giannis strained his calf again on Friday. a game which capped off five losses in six games (three of which came at home), moving Milwaukee back to the East’s 11th spot and three games back of Atlanta for the 10th seed.

There’s no timetable for Giannis’ return right now, and this being his second calf strain of the season (he missed eight games with one in December too), that margin looks more insurmountable than it would otherwise. So it’s possible, probably even likely, that GM Jon Horst holds onto his trade chips right now. If he traded both Bobby Portis and Kyle Kuzma, he could take on up to $45.1 in return for them, a figure which drops to $43.8 come summer. He also has a future first-round pick and a first-round pick swap, which he’ll also have this summer, which will be joined by a second future first. Adding salary, however, isn’t a bad idea, especially if it nets them an asset, even if it’s marginal.

In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, weigh in on the Bucks’ approach from here out, including regarding playing for a higher pick in the 2026 draft. Also, as speculation (not rumors—there is a difference) rebuilds around Giannis’ future in the last week or so, tell us if your prediction has changed from a couple weeks ago when he stated he wanted to remain a Buck long-term.



As always, this poll will be open until midnight Central on Friday, and we’ll post the results later that day. Thanks for voting!

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-poll...po-nba-trade-deadline-kyle-kuzma-bobby-portis
 
Bucks Trade Candidate: Malik Monk

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While we have looked at some of the biggest names in the trade market, including Ja Morant and Michael Porter Jr., there are other avenues Bucks GM Jon Horst could pursue to improve the Bucks this season and beyond. They could look for role players instead of stars, or several players, rather than bringing in one big piece. In this article, I have the Bucks targeting Malik Monk from the Sacramento Kings.


The Player​


Malik Monk, 6’3”, 200lbs. combo guard

Season averages: 12.2 PPG, 2.1 RPG, 2.4 APG, 0.6 SPG, 0.4 BPG, .446/.421/.859


Monk was a highly sought-after guard coming out of the University of Kentucky, selected no. 11 overall by the Hornets in the loaded 2017 NBA draft. His time there didn’t go as planned, averaging just 9.1 PPG over four seasons, shooting 40.3% from the field. With those numbers, Charlotte opted not to tender him a qualifying offer, making him an unrestricted free agent, so he signed a vet minimum deal with the Lakers in the 2021 offseason. Monk had a breakout season, playing in 76 games (starting 37) and averaging 13.8 PPG. That led him to sign a two-year deal with the Kings, where he’s been ever since. In four seasons, he’s finished top five in Sixth Man of the Year voting twice and had a career year in scoring last season at 17.2 PPG.

Despite the transformation Monk has undergone since arriving in Sacramento in 2022, this season has been a mixed bag. On one hand, his shooting numbers have gone up to 45% from the field (43.9% in ‘24–25) and 42.7% from three-point range (32.5%). On the other, his minutes and shot attempts have shrunk under head coach Doug Christie. He’s down to just 22 minutes (31.6 in ‘24–25), 9.8 field goal attempts (14.5), and 4.6 three-point attempts per game (6.6).
There was even a stretch where Monk was getting DNP coaches’ decisions, including three of the first four games in January. Monk has been more of a fixture in the rotation since then, averaging 24.8 MPG, 15.5 PPG, 3.4 APG, and 2.1 RPG over his last 10 games. His assist percentage is down to 16.1% (34th percentile per Cleaning the Glass), but Monk finished at 24.7% last season (95th percentile).

Before Monk even set foot on the court this season, there were reports that Sacramento was shopping him, floating him in a potential deal for the Warriors’ Jonathan Kuminga. Those talks didn’t go anywhere, as the Warriors had no interest in him. It’s clear, though, that the Kings are willing to move off of Monk’s deal, which only has a guaranteed year left after this season and then a team option in 2027–28. The Bucks have been linked to Monk several times, including reports from ESPN and, most recently, Michael Scotto of HoopsHype back on January 16:

“Portis and another unidentified minimum-salary player have also come up in talks with the Sacramento Kings in exploratory conversations involving Keon Ellis and Malik Monk, league sources told HoopsHype. Milwaukee has eyed scoring help, which Monk could theoretically provide, and Ellis has been on their radar as well.“

The Trade​

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I did toy with the idea of making it a two-for-two deal by trading for both Monk and Keon Ellis for Bobby and Andre Jackson Jr., based on Scotto’s reporting, but I opted for this one instead. Sam Amick of The Athletic has said that the Kings are looking for a late first-round pick from teams for Ellis, even though they haven’t played him in three of their last four games.

Regardless, if that is genuinely the Kings’ asking price, the Bucks shouldn’t pay it, not with a re-swap of their 2026 first-round pick, nor their 2031 or 2032 first-round selections. In the deal, the Bucks ship out Bobby Portis and Amir Coffey for Monk, backup big man Precious Achiuwa, and the Kings’ 2032 unprotected second-round pick. As with the Zach LaVine trade I suggested a couple of weeks ago, this trade couldn’t be completed until deadline day, since Achiuwa was signed on November 4 and can’t be traded for 90 days.

The Bucks are taking on the more expensive contract; they add a much-needed second-round pick. They have plenty of space beneath the tax line to take on Monk’s contract, with $11.5m available. The Kings would cut $5.4m from their books next year and then look to trade Portis to free up more money.

Now that Giannis has sustained his second calf injury this season, the Bucks should look at the rest of this season as a gap year. Milwaukee is 3-11 without Giannis, and with a tough three-game road trip coming up, I don’t expect that record to improve. Their focus should be on emulating what the 76ers and Raptors did last season. Milwaukee should do what they can to keep their lottery pick in a deep draft.

Monk’s contract next season ($20.1m), combined with Kyle Kuzma’s ($20.3m), would allow the Bucks to take $50.7m rather than $43.7m if it were Kuzma and Portis. Here are a few examples of players who will make under that amount next season:

  • Donovan Mitchell ($50.1m)
  • Kawhi Leonard ($50.3m)
  • Lauri Markkanen ($46.1m)

The Bucks should look to the 2026–27 season, not this one. Even if they opt to keep Monk next season, he could be a valuable bench player. Provided the roster looks similar next year, I’d much rather have Monk as the lead ball handler off the bench than Cole Anthony or Kevin Porter Jr.

The Fit​


Just like LaVine, Monk won’t help the Bucks’ defensive issues, but that’s not why they’re acquiring him. Monk would provide scoring and can handle high usage as the lead ball handler off the bench. The Bucks’ reserve guards (Gary Trent Jr., Gary Harris, and Anthony) haven’t been productive, averaging a combined 18 points per game. Monk is averaging 12.2 PPG.

He’s also developed into a competent passer during his time in Sacramento and looked good in the pick-and-roll. As the ball handler last season, he averaged five possessions per game and scored 0.90 points per possession, ranking him 56th out of 116. This season, he’s down to three P&R possessions per game and is scoring 0.99 PPP, tied for 19th among 85 qualified players. While the volume has dropped, Monk has remained a productive player running P&Rs. I imagine that with a player like Giannis, Monk could run the P&R better than KPJ and even Rollins have to this point.

Depending on how long Giannis is out with his calf injury, Monk would provide scoring in non-Giannis minutes as well. He’s not someone who can necessarily carry an offense, but he’d be a heck of a lot better than what the Bucks have. Monk can also be a reliable catch-and-shoot player, averaging 2.8 3PA per game and draining 45.3% of them this season. Any way you slice it, Monk would be a solid offensive contributor who not only scores but also distributes the ball.



Do you buy on the potential offensive upside of adding Monk, or would you save Bobby for another trade? Let me know in the comments below.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...ngs-precious-achiuwa-bobby-portis-amir-coffey
 
Rapid Recap: 76ers 139, Bucks 122

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The Milwaukee Bucks put up a good fight against the Philadelphia 76ers with Giannis out, executing at a pretty high level for most of the game, but eventually falling 139-122. Myles Turner had his best game as a Buck, ending the night with 31 points on 62.5% shooting. Paul George led the Sixers with 32 points, five assists, five rebounds, and two steals.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap


After getting down 9-2 in the opening minutes, the Bucks battled back to tie the game due to Ryan Rollins and Myles Turner. Turner, in particular, was excellent in the first, dropping 12 points on 4/7 shooting. The Bucks stayed within arm’s length of the 76ers for most of the period, but about two-thirds of the way through the quarter was when Philly made their move, with Joel Embiid being the catalyst. Embiid looked surprisingly spry considering his injury history, manoeuvring his way to 18 first-quarter points (including a bunch of free throws, as per usual). The Bucks were down 42-34 after one.

Milwaukee opened the second with a lineup consisting of Anthony, Trent, Harris, Portis, and Sims (with Rollins entering a few minutes in). To my surprise, this crew got the deficit back to just three about four minutes in, with GT nailing two huge transition bombs. The Sixers would immediately answer with a 5-0 run after that, though, up 53-45—Bucks timeout. Unfortunately, the Sixers’ run extended to 10-0 out of the timeout, with AJ Green halting the run with a three off Kyle Kuzma’s penetration to cut the deficit from 13 to 10. Both teams traded buckets for the rest of the quarter, with nothing truly notable to report other than a funny sequence in which Embiid and Portis—both known high flyers—traded monster jams on consecutive possessions, later laughing about it in a stoppage. Philly led 62-71 at half.

The third quarter featured an offensive explosion from both teams in the opening four minutes. Paul George came out on fire for Philly, dropping 10 quick points in that span. For the Bucks, it was the trio of Turner, Portis, and Rollins that combined to have the Bucks tie the game at 81 about halfway through the frame. A key piece of the comeback was Doc electing to go to the zone, which slowed the 76ers’ offense down in a major way—credit where it’s due. By the same token, the Sixers figured the zone out somewhat in the minutes that followed, opening a 90-84 edge following an Edgecombe corner three and a Maxey drive. Turner kept the Bucks close, though, making it rain off a kick-out three for a season-high 26th point with minutes to play in the third, Milwaukee down 94-91. Much to the Bucks’ dismay, a late flurry from Paul George had Philly up 106-95 after three.

Sixers second-year man Jared McCain—who had struggled in the early season after returning from injury—opened the fourth with a triple to put the 76ers’ lead at 14, threatening to blow the game open, but Kuzma and Anthony scored consecutively to get it back down to 10. Unfortunately, the Bucks could only hold the Sixers off for so long, with George and McCain combining to hit four threes over the next two minutes, actually blowing the game open—Milwaukee down 123-104 with eight minutes to play. The Bucks got it back to 12 with four minutes to play, but the hill was just too steep to climb in the end.

Stat That Stood Out


The Bucks lost the possession battle tonight, with Philly besting Milwaukee 101-86 in attempts. This was largely because the 76ers had 15 offensive rebounds to the Bucks’ eight, and Milwaukee also turned it over 11 times to Philly’s six.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...rollins-myles-turner-bobby-portis-paul-george
 
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