Milwaukee Bucks vs. Detroit Pistons Preview: A quick trip to Motown

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The Milwaukee Bucks will look to salvage the week by going 2-2, heading out to Detroit to take on the Pistons for the second time this week and third time this season. The Pistons won the first meeting back in November, but it was the Bucks who won on Wednesday, 113-109.

Where We’re At​


The Bucks continue to be a roller-coaster team. After getting what seemed to be a statement win on Wednesday against the Pistons, they fell flat in the final minutes of the first quarter yesterday against the Philadelphia 76ers and could never make up the ground. They fell behind by 26 points before cutting it to nine near the midpoint of the fourth quarter. Yet without Giannis and AJ Green (left shoulder contusion in the second quarter), they couldn’t get over the hump. They fell back to 10-14 and still haven’t won two games in a row since the second week of the season, when they beat the New York Knicks and Golden State Warriors. They’ve never even had a winning streak longer than that. They also have to find a way to win without Giannis, as they’re now 1-6 in games he doesn’t play and have lost the last 6 of those. We’ll see if the Bucks can repeat some magic they had on Wednesday, but they can’t fall behind by 18 points and expect to come back again.

The Pistons got a bounce-back win yesterday over the Portland Trail Blazers, 122-116, on their home floor. Cade Cunningham continued to add to his All-NBA campaign with a stellar performance of 29 points, nine assists, four rebounds, and three steals, while Ron Holland had 17 points off the bench. They were trailing by three with 2:43 to go, but eight straight points between Cunningham and Duncan Robinson were the difference to propel the Pistons to the win. The win gave them their 18th of the season, as they sit atop the Eastern Conference by 2.5 games over the Knicks.

Injury Report​


This will be the second game that Giannis will miss as he nurses his right calf strain, while Taurean Prince is still out for the foreseeable future. The status of AJ Green is currently unknown after suffering a left shoulder contusion in yesterday’s game. Doc Rivers confirmed during his postgame press conference that they will take an MRI of Green’s shoulder in Detroit.

Since the Pistons will also be on SEGABABA, we don’t have their full injury report yet. Bobi Klintman and Marcus Sasser were out for yesterday’s game against the Trail Blazers, but we’ll have to wait and see if there were any new additions before tonight’s game.

Player To Watch​


Jaden Ivey is slowly but surely getting back into playing shape. He scored 15 points off the bench against the Bucks on Wednesday. In 10 career games against the Bucks, Ivey is averaging 15 points per game, 4.4 rebounds per game, and 4.3 assists per game. If he gets going, he could be a major problem for the Bucks to contend with.

How To Watch​


FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin at 6:30 p.m. CST.


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...-preview-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Bucks vs. Pistons Player Grades: Kevin Porter Jr.’s heroic effort not enough as Ryan Rollins struggles

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The Milwaukee Bucks lost to the Detroit Pistons, 112-124, as both teams played on the second night of a back-to-back. Unfortunately, the Bucks were unable to replicate the stunning performance that upset the Pistons on Wednesday; they suffered their third loss in four games (and the 10th in 12 games). The season series now sits at 2-1, Detroit’s way. 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​

Kevin Porter Jr.​


36 minutes, 32 points, 6 assists, 4 rebounds, 11/16 FG, 7/9 3P, –30

KPJ was spectacular last night. I can’t begin to describe how hard it seemed for him to have to do so much creating—especially with Rollins in foul trouble in the first half—and still post that stat line on that efficiency. Oh, and he was also guarded by Ausar Thompson all night. No biggie.

Grade: A+

Myles Turner​


25 minutes, 12 points, 4/8 FG, 3/7 3P, -22

Myles had 12 points within the first six minutes, and then… never really got involved again? I know that may be circumstantial, but it feels like he should have been prioritised more than he seemingly was.

Grade: C+

Ryan Rollins​


23 minutes, 10 points, 6 assists, 6 rebounds, 2 turnovers, 4/14 FG, 1/7 3P, -9

It was an off night from the start for Rollins, only playing 7:48 in the first half as he dealt with foul trouble. From there, he never really found a rhythm.

Grade: C-

Kyle Kuzma​


28 minutes, 15 points, 4 rebounds, 3 turnovers, 5/12 FG, 1/2 3P,-11

Kuz started well, but tailed off as the night progressed. I don’t necessarily think he played poorly, though. His defence was solid, and he made some nice passes that weren’t converted.

Grade: C

Gary Harris​


13 minutes, 2 points, 1/2 FG, -8

Some good defence from Gary; thought he was solid in his minutes.

Grade: C+

Andre Jackson Jr.​


11 minutes, 4 points, 3 rebounds, 2 assists, 1/1 FG, +9

AJax gave the team a boost in his minutes with his ability to pick up Cunningham full-court. Also, Andre had one heck of an alley-oop in the closing minutes.

Grade: B

Gary Trent Jr.​


28 minutes, 11 points, 4/11 FG, 1/5 3P, -19

Gary missed some makeable shots. His stat line looks worse than he played.

Grade: C+

Bobby Portis​


20 minutes, 7 points, 4 assists, 7 rebounds, 2/11 FG, 1/3 3P, -4

Bobby was just off all night after playing really well the night before against Philly. What I will say is that I can’t stand when he gets lippy with fans, the refs, and opposing players while the team is struggling; play the game.

Grade: C-

Jericho Sims​


30 minutes, 2 points, 3 rebounds, 1/1 FG, –21

Jericho’s one-on-one defence was excellent. Doc is clearly willing to switch him onto just about anyone; he asked Sims to guard Paul George, and now Cade Cunningham.

Grade: B+

Doc Rivers​


I don’t understand why Doc didn’t look to get Turner more involved after his hot start, but that’s honestly a season-long trend at this point. Other than that, a much more talented team beat the Bucks, and I’m not sure how much a coach could have altered the outcome. Yes, Milwaukee beat this team a few days back, but on average, they aren’t fighting in the same weight division.

Grade: C

Garbage time:
Cole Anthony, Pete Nance, Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Amir Coffey

Inactive: Taurean Prince, Alex Antetokounmpo, Mark Sears, Giannis Antetokounmpo, AJ Green

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • Doc said KPJ is “the one guy who can get his own shot whenever he wants,” but that he commends him for “doing it the right way.”
  • Doc said he thinks Ryan Rollins has been forcing it too much of late, but that he wants to “keep him free” and not “clog his brain,” so he’s living with some of the mistakes.
  • Unlike their usual style, the Bucks actually did well forcing turnovers and generating points off them, scoring 25 points off turnovers in this game.
  • Detroit grabbed 16 O boards to Milwaukee’s 11.

Up Next​


The Bucks now get a huge four-day break and will be back at home on Thursday night against Boston. Catch the game at 7:00 p.m. Central on FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...yer-grades-stats-kevin-porter-jr-myles-turner
 
Rapid Recap: Pistons 124, Bucks 112

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With both teams on the second night of a back-to-back, the Milwaukee Bucks were unable to replicate Wednesday’s win over the Detroit Pistons, going down 112-124. Kevin Porter Jr. gave everything for the Bucks, racking up 32 points, six assists, and four rebounds. For Detroit, it was Cade Cunningham who starred, dropping 23 points, 12 assists, and six boards.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap


It was a much better start for the Bucks in this game than it was on Wednesday. Myles Turner was the story early, with 12 points on 4/4 shooting. Some of those opportunities came in transition off Pistons turnovers; the home team gave the ball away six times in the opening stanza. Kyle Kuzma was also a beneficiary of the giveaways, scoring multiple times at the rim as the Bucks attacked with an advantage. At the same time, Milwaukee struggled to slow down Cade Cunningham, and even contributions from Duncan Robinson, Caris LeVert, and Javonte Green had the home team up 22-29 after one.

The Bucks opened the second in their 2-3 zone—which worked wonders in limiting Detroit’s offence a few days ago—and immediately forced two straight turnovers, scoring more transition points. Kuzma had the Bucks’ first seven points of the period, evening the tally at 29 and looking as dangerous as he had all season. I must say, the Bucks’ defence was just spectacular in this period. Cunnigham was simply unable to shake Jericho Sims; plus, AJax even gave solid minutes. The Pistons did manage to extend their lead to double digits, but Kevin Porter Jr. kept the visitors in it. With Ryan Rollins in foul trouble, Porter had 19 points on 7/8 shooting at half (plus four steals), all while being hounded by Ausar Thompson. A late Gary Trent Jr. triple had the Bucks down just five, 56-61, going into the locker rooms.

The Bucks just kept sticking around throughout the third. KPJ continued his ridiculous shot-making, nailing two tough corner threes in the early going. Also, Rollins finally got off his donut with a bomb of his own, which he parlayed into a few floaters off the glass later in the period. Alas, the Pistons began to win the possession battle; they relentlessly attacked the O-boards, a category they beat the Bucks in 5-2 in the third, while also forcing a couple of Bucks turnovers. This allowed the home team to lead 91-81 after three.

Jaden Ivey hit a quick set of three pointers to open the final frame, as Doc called a quick timeout with Milwaukee’s deficit ballooning to the high teens. KPJ came out of the timeout with his sixth three of the night, most of which felt like self-created shots. Javonte Green then responded with a quick five points, which felt like the final knockout punch as the Pistons’ lead swelled close to 20. From there, it was all academic as Doc subbed the deep bench lads on and accepted the L.

Stat That Stood Out


Ryan Rollins was plagued by foul trouble and never really found a rhythm, going 4/14 and 1/7 from three in 22 minutes. The Bucks rely on Rollins as a key cog, and so even with KPJ’s mastery, they had little chance to win.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...l-score-recap-kevin-porter-jr-cade-cunningham
 
Bucks vs. 76ers Player Grades: Strong games from Ryan Rollins and Myles Turner nullified by poor first quarter

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The Milwaukee Bucks couldn’t string together a second straight win, losing to the Philadelphia 76ers for the second time this season, 116-101. The season series now sits at 0-2 for Milwaukee after they fell to Philly in overtime, 123-114, back in November. 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​

Kevin Porter Jr.​


37 minutes, 20 points, 9 assists, 7 rebounds, 2 steals, 4 turnovers, 5/13 FG, 9/9 FT, -20

Much like the rest of the Bucks, it was a rough first quarter for KPJ, with three of his four turnovers coming in the period. That said, KPJ settled in and, at times, was the Bucks’ only reliable offense in the game.

Grade: B-

Ryan Rollins​


35 minutes, 16 points, 7 assists, 6 rebounds, 4 steals, 6/13 FG, 2/2 3PT, -10

Rylo had a good all-around game, and he did a fantastic job defensively guarding Tyrese Maxey. The former Kentucky guard came in averaging 32.6 points per game, and Rollins played a significant role in limiting Maxey to his season-low 12 points on 5/14 shooting.

Grade: A-

Myles Turner​


23 minutes, 19 points, 2 rebounds, 2 assists, 3/7 3PT, 8/12 FT, -7

Turner played one of his better offensive games of the season; he was more decisive on that end. For a team that has struggled to get to the free throw line, Turner getting 12 is a good sign that he’s being more aggressive in the paint.

Grade: B

Jericho Sims​


30 minutes, 2 points, 10 rebounds, 1 block, -7

After a career day on Wednesday, Sims fell back down to earth in this one. That said, he deserves credit for once again posting double-digit rebounds, and I do think he has cemented himself as part of this rotation moving forward. Would like more offense from him, but he’s so reliant on being set up that I really can’t blame him.

Grade: C+

Kyle Kuzma​


29 minutes, 14 points, 5 rebounds, 4 fouls, 7/12 FG, 0/3 FT, -8

I know 14 points isn’t a lot, but last night felt like the quietest 14-point game I’ve ever seen. That’s probably because eight of his points came while the Bucks were trailing by 20 or more, and they didn’t feel very impactful.

Grade: C+

Bobby Portis​


23 minutes, 22 points, 4 rebounds, 3 turnovers, 9/16 FG, 4/10 3PT, -5

Doc praised Bobby in the postgame presser for playing with the most energy he had played with all season, and I agree; Portis has looked more confident, and it’s showing. I would like to see him put a tad more energy into defense and rebounding, but scoring 22 off the bench was the big boost the Bucks needed with Green out injured for the entire second half.

Grade: B+

Gary Trent Jr.​


24 minutes, 6 points, 3 assists, 2/5 FG, 1/4 3PT, -3

Trent hasn’t really looked like himself all season. He’s shooting the third-worst from three-point range in his career, and the second-worst since he became a regular rotation player (he shot 23.8% as a rookie, but only played in 15 games). The four days in between today’s game against Detroit and next Thursday’s against Boston are going to be a much-needed reset for Trent.

Grade: C-

Gary Harris​


21 minutes, 0 points, 3 rebounds, 1 assist, 3 fouls, 2 turnovers, -8

It was a rough day at the office for Harris. He only got one shot up, and his defense was not all that notable. Just a bad performance start to finish for GH.

Grade: D+

Doc Rivers​


Doc continues to perplex with his rotation decisions at center. He subs Turner out with over three and a half minutes to go in the third and doesn’t put him back in until 2:24 left in the fourth, with the Bucks down by 12 points. These are the games that make the crowd who want Rivers gone speak even louder, and I can’t say they’re wrong.

Grade: D

Incomplete:
AJ Green

Garbage Time: Cole Anthony, Andre Jackson Jr., Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Pete Nance, Amir Coffey

Inactive: Giannis Antetokounmpo, Taurean Prince, Alex Antetokounmpo

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • Doc gave an update on the status of AJ Green, who left he game with a left shoulder contunsion in the second quarter. As of the writing of this, they don’t know the severity of the injury and will conduct an MRI tomorrow in Detroit.
  • When asked for his reasoning to play Bobby Portis and Jericho Sims together down the stretch and keep Turner on the bench until the 2:24 mark of the fourth quarter, this is what Rivers had to say:
“Bobby was playing well, we wanted a roller (Sims). We could’ve easily played Bobby and Myles together, which we’ll do at times. We just felt like we needed one roller to create shots, and Bobby was playing well.”
  • The Bucks had a chance to win their second game in a row for the first time since the opening week of the season, when they beat the Knicks and Warriors. I asked Kevin Porter Jr. what were some of the biggest issues preventing them from stringing any wins together:
“I think one reason is we haven’t had a full team; secondly, we’re trying to find our way, and still figure things out with the absences. AJ went down, so we lost another big piece to start the second half. We’ve got to start off with the right energy; we always finish with the right energy, but we’ve got to start with the right energy.”
  • Bobby Portis was asked how he’s been trying to help the Bucks’ young point guards in Rollins and KPJ in the two-man game with him:
“After practice me, Ryan and Cole, we always just get together and shoot shots and then work some pick and roll things. I think over the last couple of months, we’ve been doing that since training camp. With Ryan, he comes to my house a lot, and we watch games, so that’s like my dog, for real; been doing that for a year now. So we have a great rapport and chemistry.”
  • The Bucks are now 1-6 when Giannis doesn’t play this season.

Up Next​


The Milwaukee Bucks will play their third game of the season against the Detroit Pistons tonight. They’ll head on the road to play in Little Caesars Arena at 6:30 p.m. Central; the game will be televised on FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...-stats-ryan-rollins-bobby-portis-myles-turner
 
Bucks player grades through the first quarter

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Last Monday, we averaged out our game-by-game player grade for each Buck over the season’s first 21 contests, which is roughly 25% of the year. Within that, we also gave readers a chance to give their own grades. Below are the results of that polling, with the Brew Hoop grade listed in parentheses.

Giannis Antetokounmpo (A-)​


A+ 25%, A 44%, A- 19%, B+ 9%, B 0%, B- 3%

Myles Turner (B-)​


A- 3%, B+ 9%, B 21%, B- 26%, C+ 21%, C 15%, C- 3%, D 3%

Ryan Rollins (B+)​


A+ 12%, A 6%, A- 48%, B+ 24%, B 9%

AJ Green (B-)​


A- 3%, B+ 21%, B 36%, B- 24%, C+ 12% C- 3%

Gary Trent Jr. (C+)​


A- 3%, B+ 3%, B 3%, B- 3%, C+ 21%, C 30%, C- 30%, D+ 9%

Bobby Portis (C+)​


B 3%, B- 9%, C+ 27%, C 36%, C- 18%, D+ 3%

Kyle Kuzma (B)​


A- 12%, B+ 30%, B 27%, B- 15%, C+ 9%, C 3%, C- 3%

Cole Anthony (C)​


A- 3%, B+ 3%, B- 3%, C+ 15%, C 21%, C- 21%, D+ 15%, D 12%, D- 3%, F 3%

Jericho Sims (C+)​


B 6%, B- 21%, C+ 21%, C 33%, C- 12%, D+ 3%, D 3%

Taurean Prince (B-)​


B 21%, B- 24%, C+ 24%, C 15%, C- 9%, D+ 3%

Gary Harris (B-)​


B+ 3%, B 21%, B- 15%, C+ 21%, C 21%, C- 15%

Amir Coffey (C+)​


B- 6%, C+ 3%, C 28%, C- 16%, D+ 19%, D 19%, D- 3%, F 6%

Doc Rivers (B-)​


B+ 3%, B 12%, B- 15%, C+ 12%, C 21%, C- 12%, D+ 3%, D 9%, D- 3%, F 12%

We’ll repeat this exercise again at the season’s halfway mark, which comes in mid-January. Thanks for your votes.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-polls/55583/milwaukee-bucks-first-quarter-player-grades
 
Milwaukee Bucks Poll: Your thoughts on the Giannis rumors

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There’s little reason to rehash the latest round of rumors reported by ESPN’s Shams Charania and some of the contradicting claims made by Brian Windhorst last week regarding Giannis Antetokounmpo’s future in Milwaukee. The most disappointing thing to me, though, is not the usual slop they feed us (I expect it from the “worldwide leader”). It’s how Bucks fans’ opinions have been shaped by the national media, which has long been suspected of a bias toward Giannis leaving for a larger market.

Set aside what Giannis wants—the most critical thing here—for a moment. If he wants to be a Buck, you don’t trade him. Full stop. He is still one of the best two or three players in the game, and you can absolutely build a title contender around him. It’s clear that this team isn’t that at the moment, and while opinions differ on how they could return to that status, the cupboard is not as bare in Milwaukee as many think, given the small pool of young, controllable talent they’ve amassed plus two tradeable firsts. As long as Giannis is in his prime and on the roster, the likelihood of a title team exists, no matter how small. If he leaves, that likelihood is gone in the short term, with no guarantee it will reemerge. Trading him represents a rebuild, and smart franchises don’t rebuild when they have a player of Giannis’ caliber unless the player asks out. Given the choice, keep the sure thing rather than risk the unknown.

In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, vote based on what your personal feelings on Giannis’ future vis-a-vis the Bucks should unfold. Forget about what you might have read/heard—what do you want for the team as a fan? Also, weigh in on ESPN’s coverage of the whole affair plus Bobby Portis’ upcoming trade eligibility.

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-polls/55591/milwaukee-bucks-poll-giannis-antetokounmpo-trade-rumors
 
Momentum Moments: Vol. 3

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Sugar. Cigarettes. Alcohol. Take your pick. None of them have been enough to ease the wounds of the past fortnight. Still, there were moments—and we can learn from them. Come for a walk; see what you can find.

@ Cavs​


Giannis prophesies that good teams don’t lose two games in a row, and he’s on a self-fulfilling mission, scoring or assisting on the Bucks’ first 23 points. Milwaukee fires on all cylinders early, but Donavon Mitchell’s wizardry—windmill gathers into contested finishes, stop-on-a-dime pull-up threes, hang-time layups—brings the Cavs right back into it. Then, every Bucks fan’s worst nightmare: Giannis exits the game with an injury. And he doesn’t return after the half. The Bucks put in a gutsy third, sticking with the Cavs right down to the final seconds behind strong play from Myles Turner and Ryan Rollins. Then, score tied, shot clock off, Mitchell slices through several defenders and finishes with the left, giving The Land a two-point lead.

With just 5.2 ticks left, AJ Green inbounds to a charging Cole Anthony—head down, trying to conjure a final basket. But the spacing is terrible, and he ventures straight into the hot gates of a congested sideline: Gary Trent Jr., Jericho Sims, three Cavaliers, and the sideline referee. Bodies everywhere. Like he’s been dropped into 300. Lonzo Ball plays magician, teleports in front of and then beside Anthony, who loses his handle in the confusion, and Ball hunts the loose ball, taps it to Craig Porter Jr. for the lay-in at the buzzer. This is madness, you think. “This is Cleveland!” the crowd roars. And they’ve just cut the Bucks’ throat.

Win probability prior to Mitchell’s layup: 42.7%

Win probability after Ball’s steal and Porter’s layup: 26.1%

vs. 76ers​


The 76ers are in town, and Allen Iv—err, Tyrese Maxey is cooking. He moves like a hummingbird, slipping past defenders and finishing over and over at the rim, stepping back for deep threes that hit nothing but net. The Bucks are without their superstar, but they put up a fight, with Rollins, Kuzma, and Portis stepping up. And if it isn’t for a questionable offensive foul call on Trent—and subsequent challenge that is somehow upheld—the game ends in regulation.

In overtime, the 76ers win the tip, and this fan wonders if the Bucks have won any this season? Both sides trade misses to start, and when Quentin Grimes gets a defensive board and finds Justin Edwards behind the line in the corner, the Bucks breathe a sigh of relief—he’s 0-6 from that range on the night. Of course, he splashes it, and then doubles down with a pull-up middy to beat the shot clock just 45 seconds later; 76ers by five, the sting all but gone. Yet, the Bucks stay resilient, a Portis hook and Rollins basket off a Trent steal cutting it to one, and the crowd comes back to life.

It seems Grimes ends things once and for all when he nails an end-of-shut-clock three, but Rollins will not be denied, and it remains a two-point game with just a minute to go. Determined, Grimes tries again, this time getting to the free-throw line. He sinks the first, but it’s on the second shot—a miss—that the game is finally over. Edwards snags the offensive board—Philly’s 11th of the night to just three for the Bucks—and Grimes finds his way back to the line where he won’t miss again.

Win probability after Grimes’ missed free throw: 21.4%

Win probability after Edwards’ offensive rebound: 13%

vs. Pistons​


The scores might be 0-0 to start, but the Bucks are already hanging off the edge of the cliff—the Eastern Conference-leading Detroit Pistons have arrived at Fiserv, winners of 11 straight. The Bucks do surprisingly well for much of the first half, mostly behind the shot-making of one Bobby Buckets, and it’s a still-within-reach nine-point game when Rolllins makes a contested driving finish with 1:35 left on the clock. Get a stop and a score and it’s game on in the second half. But Rollins is frustrated at the non-call on his finish and lashes out at the ref. Gets T’d up. The frustration is understandable—the Bucks are bottom three in the league in free throw attempts, and Rollins will get the call next year when he’s an established up-and-coming star—but right now it’s costly. Cade Cunningham hits the technical free throw, and the Pistons go on a 7-0 run to end the half, capped off by an Ausar Thompson transition dunk following a swipe from a still-very-frustrated Rollins. Giannis and Kevin Porter Jr. can’t return soon enough.

Win probability after Rollins’ layup: 13.9%

Win probability after Thompson’s dunk: 4.4%

vs. Trail Blazers​


In an alternate reality, Kyle Kuzma’s drawn charge with 18.5 seconds left in the first quarter results in a Bucks’ score on the other end that makes it a one-possession game. More than that, it shifts the Bucks’ defensive focus, and they open the second with a renewed ferocity and attention to detail that spurs a run based on stops and scores. Turner gets in on the action, finding his defensive mojo, and the team moves like marionettes under the control of a master puppeteer. Ends the half with a double-digit lead. In our reality, Kuzma’s effort is in vain, and the Bucks go down by 12 at the half. 19 at three-quarter time. 31 at the 8:41 mark of the fourth. They cut it back to 12 to end, making the history books appear more respectable, but this was all garbahj time, and this game—this collective effort—was just that. Trash.

Win probability after Kuzma draws the charge in an alternate reality: 92%

Win probability after Kuzma draws the charge in our reality: 41%

@ Heat​


NBA Cup, the Bucks live for this. “Undefeated. Never lost!” they scream as if LaVar. Fast forward to the fourth, it’s winning time. The scene is set and the reflectional symmetry is the stuff of gods (or at least screenwriters): the Heat have won five straight, the Bucks have lost five straight. Trent, back in the starting lineup after six games off the pine, hits a three to reduce the Miami lead to six. No Giannis, no Porter, no Taurean Prince, fans turning on them, but they’re in this, stifling the best offence in the league. A minute goes by, and the scores remain the same until Tyler Herro decides to do something about it, making a decelerating floater from nine feet. In the blink of an eye, Rollins slithers baseline to get it right back, and a Heat turnover gives the Bucks the ball.

Trent misses a tough look from the left corner, and the possession gets chaotic—the rebound turns into a pinball, Kuzma becomes the flipper, and tries to fire the ball through Green’s chest. Somehow, it gets to Trent, who’s relocated from the left to the right corner, and he splashes it home. The bench rises, the stakes too. So does your pulse. You don’t know why, but the moment feels perfect. And then it hits you—left corner miss, right corner make. Reflectional symmetry.

Bam Adebayo and Rollins trade big buckets, and soon enough, the Bucks have possession, down three, shot clock turned off, Trent already back in the right corner. Watching. Waiting. Hands ready. The action is high—Rollins finds Green finds Turner—and he’s as decisive as he’s been all night, fires away from three, six ticks on the clock. But it’s iron, and after Davion Mitchell comes down with the rebound, Trent—still all alone in the corner, hands still ready—eventually concedes he’s not getting the shot. And the Bucks aren’t getting that elusive win.

Win probability after Trent’s relocation three: 15.1%

Win probability after Turner’s miss: 6.5%

@ Knicks​


Bucks, Knicks. It’s Friday night at MSG, NBA Cup dreams on the line. Giannis returns—praise the gods—and the Bucks get off to a hot start, with string music in the first so good it’d make Hans Zimmer proud. The scoreboard reads like a game of tag: 37-33 after one, 62-61 at the half, 92-88 after three. It’s a game of runs, but neither side can break away. In the fourth, the home crowd is relentless, the pressure building, but the Bucks’ dam holds. Then a crack—Miles McBride hits a 27-footer. He follows it up with a defensive rebound and splashes another from deep. The water starts gushing through. A possession later, Josh Hart gets the board and finds Marquette alum Tyler Kolek, who hits another triple, and the geyser is too much, the dam collapsing. Time out, Bucks; Knicks up 13.

Somehow, the Bucks stay the course, do their best Phil Swift, and spam the dam with Flex Tape. It almost holds too. But a costly foul by Giannis sends Jalen Brunson to the line for three free throws, and the Bucks run out of tape. Game, Knicks. The Bucks head to the locker room losers of seven straight—their longest losing streak since the franchise-worst 15-win season of 2013–14. Yikes.

Win probability to start the third: 26%

Win probability after the Kolek’s three: 4.1%

vs. Nets​


Once more into the fray. Into the last good fight they’ll ever know… Kevin Porter Jr. is back, and the Bucks look like a different team from the jump; the rotation is just so much more balanced. Porter goes to brush the dust off, but there is none, and he connects on his first triple, goes on to finish the half a perfect 4/4 from the field (including three from downtown). Brooklyn is without its, um, stars? But their rookies step up, Danny Wolf showing he’s got some teeth—four threes, an off-the-bounce flush, a notice-me 17 points by the major break. The Bucks have had enough, though. Giannis turns into Liam Neeson, gets the and-one to go on Wolf, pulls out a tooth. Bucks up 18. Then, sick of hearing about Noah Clowney’s shooting against the Bucks—KABOOM!—Turner detonates one on his head. And the Bucks never look back… live and die on fly from this day.

Win probability after Wolf’s fourth three: 79.9%

Win probability after Giannis’ and-one: 96.9%

@ Wizards​


Directions for viewing:

  1. Check the schedule. See they’re playing the lowly Wizards, who have won just 2 games all season long and are without Alex Sarr—their leading scorer and arguably best player.
  2. Note that the Bucks are finally healthy, fresh off a tune-up game against the Danny Wolf-led Nets.
  3. Convince yourself they’re ready to remind the world of the optimism of the season’s opening week and a half.
  4. Relax as KPJ lives up to your expectations and the hype. Revel in his dominance. Enjoy the swag of his back-to-back threes that force a timeout, Bucks up 16. Think that this is done—game over. Know it’s probably not.
  5. Furrow your brows at all the Marvin Bagley III second-chance points, the CJ McCollum layups going right, the Cam Whitmore dunks.
  6. Shake your head at Portis, at how he’s blind to the Justin Champagnie layup to beat the third-quarter horn.
  7. Feel it when KPJ grabs his back, heads to the sidelines.
  8. Curse when Giannis falls victim to his ego again, chucks a fall-away middy with the game on the line, then flops on the miss and doesn’t get back on defence.
  9. Hold your breath as it leads to a clutch Khris Middleton three. Wince at the poetic irony.
  10. Expect Giannis to split the free throws and McCollum to hit the running, contested three against the pressure of the shot-clock. Hand him the heart that’s been ripped out of your chest.
  11. Stare, numb—the rage festering away inside—when the final siren blows. When you’re at a loss for words. When you bleed green and cream, but can’t take much more of this.
  12. Bang your head on the bricks. Then get ready to do it all again.

Win probability after KPJ’s back-to-back threes: 95.9%

Win probability after Portis concedes the layup to Champagnie: 71.6%

vs. Pistons​


The Bucks are down, and big media is up and about, Giannis trade request rumours riding wavelengths across the globe. And just when it seems things can’t get any worse, Giannis leaves the game in the first three minutes with an ominous lower leg injury. Lillard, Tatum, Halliburton. The images flash through the forefront of Bucks fans’ minds, uninvited. Somewhere in the back, Durant and Kobe do too.

But there’s a game to be played and the Bucks are hanging in it—somehow, after being down 18—against the Eastern Conference leading Detroit Pistons. It’s 7:18 in the fourth, Pistons up four, and Porter has just tracked down a defensive board. He lopes the ball across half-court on the right side, eyes up like any good guard does. Then he spots Green on the opposite wing and skips the ball ahead. Somewhere, Andre Miller smiles. Green catches it in stride and rises for three. Bucket. 19 seconds later, Kuzma finds Green again and it’s never in doubt. Same spot, same result. Bucks up two.

The game ebbs and flows for the next five or so minutes, looking for a hero. Enter Jericho Sims. Down two, Rollins misses on a tough drive, but in a twist of poetic justice, it’s the Bucks who get the offensive rebound, Sims laying in the put-back. He converts the and-one, nabs himself a career high 15 points—to go along with a career high 14 boards—and the bi-polar Bucks pull it out. What in the world is going on?

Win probability prior to Green’s back-to-back threes: 27.3%

Win probability after Sims’ and-one: 55.4%



Volume 3 speaks to the Bucks’ volatility. When things click, they can hang with the best of them, but they’ve got absolutely zero margin for error, and compound this with a lack of self-awareness, carrying themselves like an All-Star squad, too cool to do the dirty stuff. The lessons are there, the moments highlighted. But is anyone listening?

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-feat...um-moments-giannis-ryan-rollins-gary-trent-jr
 
The future is now, Doc: Why Milwaukee needs a fresh head coach

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“I’m tired of f-ing doing this every game. F-ing play harder!”

That’s a quote from a Will Hardy rant during a timeout this week. Hardy, who coaches the tanking Jazz, doesn’t have to be saying that. His team isn’t good, and they’re not trying to be. Absolutely nobody was expecting them to beat the unstoppable Thunder in the game where his crashout occurred. Yet, Hardy is still going above and beyond for his club, even if it’s in a somewhat controversial fashion. The young coach holds his guys accountable, trying to instill winning habits in the young minds that are hopefully going to grow into cornerstones for the franchise.

Meanwhile, in Milwaukee, Doc Rivers is twiddling his thumbs while everything falls apart around him.

On December 2nd, Giannis Antetokounmpo delivered an embarrassing effort for a player of his caliber as the Bucks fell short to the inexperienced (and flat-out bad) Wizards. He scored 26 points in 31 minutes, yes, but his lapses in defensive attention and shot selection were inexcusable. The Greek Freak even picked up a 10-second violation at the free-throw line, which is unacceptable. As the head of the snake, he’s gotta do better. This team goes where he goes. Someone needs to be in his ear, reminding him that, and in theory, that would be Rivers. Yet, all Doc had to say about Giannis’ performance was this:

“The five turnovers [are] probably what he would like back, but other than that, he played pretty well.”

Throughout the season, Doc has been deflecting blame for shortcomings onto himself and the coaching staff, rather than the players. While it’s probably a good call to avoid publicly scapegoating players, it’s evident in the on-court product that he isn’t doing enough behind closed doors to hold his guys accountable. With a couple exceptions (sans-Giannis wins against Golden State and Detroit, for example), the Bucks have looked like less than the sum of their parts this year. Doc failing to maximize his rosters is far from a new problem. It happened time and time again with the Clippers and 76ers, and even the Damian Lillard version of Milwaukee didn’t meet expectations. Rivers just sits back and lets his stars do whatever they want, which isn’t a winning formula.

In contrast, coaches like Hardy, Brooklyn’s Jordi Fernandez, and Phoenix’s Jordan Ott are building scrappy competitors out of subpar squads. They turn rag-tag groups of role players and fringe guys into unselfish hives of hustle and fearlessness. The Jazz and Nets are bottom-feeders, but their tanking efforts have been actively harmed by Hardy and Fernandez making their teams walking trap games. These first-time coaches are establishing identities in franchises that need them, and it’s tough to imagine them not achieving serious success whenever they finally have competent rosters to work with. Seeing what Hardy, Fernandez, Ott, and more are accomplishing makes it obvious that the Bucks need a fresh face behind the clipboard.

Milwaukee is 10-15 right now, and with Giannis out, they’re only going to fall further below .500. They’re awfully far away from winning a playoff series or two, which is always the goal with Antetokounmpo at the helm. It’s going to take more than just one trade or a crazy hot streak to get this team back in contention. That’s why Doc has to go. He’s stale. Young guns are running the league right now—even Oklahoma City’s Mark Daigneault is only 40 years old.

Now, bringing in another first-time head coach probably isn’t the move, unless the unspeakable trade happens. We saw what happened with Adrian Griffin. There are a lot of great minds out there waiting on their first opportunity, but a rookie coach needs the same grace and time that young players get in order to truly flourish. Still, just hiring literally anyone else to coach this team would give things a much-needed shake-up. Find a veteran. Cleveland got better when they swapped J.B. Bickerstaff for Kenny Atkinson. The Knicks look fresher after bringing in Mike Brown. It doesn’t matter who the alternative is; it’s just time for Doc Rivers to go, because he’s made it clear he can’t help this team reach its desired heights.

Sorry Doc, you’re a Hall of Famer, but the future is now, old man.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...s-doc-rivers-will-hardy-giannis-antetokounmpo
 
Bucks show interest in trading for Chris Paul

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Marc Stein of The Stein Line has reported that the Bucks are among the teams that have shown interest in trading for LA Clippers guard Chris Paul, who was recently sent home by the franchise. I guess the idea would be that the Bucks need more primary initiators. For what it’s worth, I think the chances CP3 ends up a Buck are slim for several reasons. First and most obvious, I’m not so sure a 40-year-old point guard, who is clearly on a significant decline, is fixing much of anything. Second, he has in the past prioritised being close to his family, who live on the West Coast.

But most important of all, Giannis doesn’t exactly seem to love the future Hall of Fame PG. There was the beef last season after Antetokounmpo felt like Paul fouled him in an unsportsmanlike manner late in the Bucks’ February 1 loss to the Spurs. The foul ended up being ruled as a common one upon review, but both players remained on the court after the game, exchanging barbs; Giannis did not mince words in his postgame remarks:

“People that know me, they don’t try me. If you try me, it’s a different side. If you try me, you’re gonna get that different side of me. At the end of the day, I think we’re all men. We all respect one another.”

“If words cross the line, then there’s got to be consequences. I really don’t say much. I don’t say much to start with, try to play the game the right way. If I feel like you’re putting my livelihood, my career and my body in jeopardy, in danger, enough is enough, brother. I have a family to feed, and what makes you laugh can also make you cry sometimes.”

Of course, your mileage may vary on whether Paul’s shove of Antetokounmpo in Game 5 of the 2021 NBA Finals, as GA threw down the iconic “valley-oop,” was untoward. Regardless, there aren’t many indicators that Giannis likes CP3, while there are plenty that suggest he does not. In a moment where the Bucks superstar’s future seemingly remains up in the air, bringing in a player he has had gripes with seems like a bad idea.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-rumors/55683/milwaukee-bucks-nba-trade-chris-paul-giannis-la-clippers
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Boston Celtics Preview: A silver linings playbook

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Coming off an extended break due to the NBA Cup quarterfinals, the Milwaukee Bucks and Boston Celtics are back in action tonight at Fiserv Forum. Trending in opposite directions—the Bucks are 2-8 over their last ten games while the Celtics are 8-2—tonight’s grapple of the greens will be a difficult one for the Bucks, but offers the chance of righting the ship (or at least grabbing the compass).

Where We’re At​


In literature, pathetic fallacy refers to the attribution of human emotions to naturally occurring things—such as the weather—and is often symbolic, representing the internal states of characters. It’s fitting then that the National Weather Service issued a winter weather advisory for Wisconsin for the days prior to tonight’s game, indicating conditions that were expected to cause inconveniences. After all, nearly everything about this season has been an inconvenience for the Bucks (and their fans). An Opening Night injury to Kevin Porter Jr. Taurean Prince being ruled out indefinitely. Giannis succumbing to injury on two occasions. Key players performing worse than expectations (see Trent Jr., Gary). Losing streaks. Trade rumours. In fact, it’s surprising that a winter storm warning wasn’t issued instead. Of course, this means that things could get worse. So, as the Bucks meander in a darkened present, they absolutely must heed its lessons; find the silver linings. So far, there’s been at least two. Amidst the storm, Porter has returned like greased lightning and looks to be one half of a foundational backcourt alongside Ryan Rollins, who’s oozed comfort and star potential in a bigger role. Will there be others? Who knows—that’s why they play the games. But what better way to start finding out than a battle against old foes in green?

Winners of five straight, the Boston Celtics sit third in the Eastern Conference after many pegged them as a play-in team following Jayson Tatum’s Achilles tear and the team’s subsequent offseason moves. Boston currently has the fourth best point differential (+6.7) in the entire league and has shown similar ability to win on the road (7-5) as it has at home (8-4). Unsurprisingly, Jaylen Brown has led the way, averaging 29.1 PPG, 6.2 RPG, and 4.9 APG, and has recently been awarded Eastern Conference Player of the Week for his efforts. But perhaps the biggest factor in the Celtics’ run has been the play of Derrick White, who is surging after an early season funk adjusting to an enhanced role. Outside of Brown and White—and Payton Pritchard, who has also stepped up, averaging career-highs in the three major counting stats—the Celtics have thrived by shooting the long ball (a league-leading 16.0 makes per game) and protecting the rock (just 11.8 turnovers per game, best in the league). Consequently, the Celtics rank second in the league in offensive rating (122.0). Needless to say, this bodes ominously for a Bucks team that has struggled on the defensive end of the court.

Injury Report​


For the Bucks, Taurean Prince (neck) and Giannis (calf) remain out. AJ Green (shoulder) is questionable after missing Saturday’s game against the Detroit Pistons.

For the Celtics, Jayson Tatum remains out, rehabilitating from his Achilles tear last season.

Player Position To Watch​


If you were told that a Bucks’ offseason signee was leading the (non-Giannis) frontcourt in minutes per game at this point of the season, you probably wouldn’t be surprised. After all, they’d just waived and stretched Damian Lillard to acquire Myles Turner in free agency. They’d also just re-signed Bobby Portis to a three-year deal, so it wouldn’t be that surprising if it was him. But no one would’ve thought it would be Jericho Sims. Yet, here we are. Over the last five games, Sims has led the Bucks’ bigs in minutes, averaging 26.4 MPG to Turner’s 23.2 MPG and Portis’ 22.4 MPG. To his credit, Sims has played quite well—he’s easily the best rebounder of the three, the best on-ball defender, and nearly never misses from the field. He even hit a game-winning go-ahead and-one against the Detroit Pistons.

But Sims playing “quite well” is more about him exceeding expectations than it is about him actually contributing to the Bucks’ success. And why Doc Rivers is favouring Sims recently after the team invested so much in Turner is baffling. At 27 years of age, it’s not as if he’s a blue-chip, up-and-coming talent that screams foundational piece moving forward if he’s just given the opportunity. There’s really nothing in the advanced numbers that point to Sims being better now either. So, is this a ploy to find another silver lining and showcase Sims in the hope of a future trade? Is it a knee-jerk reaction to the team’s struggles on the boards and, more generally, the defensive end? Or is it about sending a message to Turner to improve his play? We all want that, and granted, Turner has been underwhelming, but it’s not as if Rivers is putting Turner in positions to excel either—he’s largely been relegated to standing on the three-point line on offence and poorly utilised on defence too (bring back the drop!). Tonight then, pay close attention to which of Milwaukee’s bigs gets the most of the minutes and, just as importantly, if there are any signs that Rivers looks to better utilise his $109m man in the middle.

How To Watch​


FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin at 7:00 p.m. CST.


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...-preview-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Rapid Recap: Bucks 116, Celtics 101

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The Milwaukee Bucks picked up their second win in the month of December, taking down the third-seeded Boston Celtics, 116-101, after overcoming a rough opening six minutes of the game. Kyle Kuzma set a new season-high with 31 points, while Bobby Portis added another 27 off the bench. Jaylen Brown led the Celtics with 30 points on 10/17 shooting.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


The Bucks fell behind big in the first quarter for the third straight game at Fiserv Forum. After the Celtics made it a six-point game and Doc Rivers called a timeout, they outscored the Bucks 9-2 to take a 21-8 lead midway through the first quarter. Boston’s three-point prowess was on display, starting the game 5/7 from beyond the arc. Despite that, Milwaukee found a way to chip into Boston’s lead, thanks to Gary Trent Jr. and Bobby Portis. They helped spark a 19-7 run to bring the game within one point with 1:30 left in the frame. The former All-Star Jaylen Brown took over on the Celtics’ final two possessions, hitting a three and then a step-back mid-range jumper to put Boston up by six, 35-29, heading into the second.

Even with the positives at the end of the first quarter, the Bucks quickly fell behind by double digits in the second quarter. After Jordan Walsh finished an and-one opportunity to put Boston up by 10, they went on an 8-4 run to get up to their largest lead of the night at 14 points, 52-38, with 6:16 left in the quarter. Milwaukee would swing back again, though, with a 16-6 run, thanks in part to eight straight points from Kyle Kuzma. A Ryan Rollins three would polish off the run, getting Boston’s lead down to just four with 2:49 left in the first half. The Bucks stayed in contact and had it within four points with 16 seconds left. Yet, after Cole Anthony helped double Derrick White, he found Walsh open in the corner for a three, and he buried it with just seconds on the clock; the three put the C’s up by seven going into the locker room, 67-60.

Kuzma continued his impressive play from the second quarter into the third. After falling behind by double-digits again, Kuzma scored seven of the Bucks’ nine points to get the game back within two. The Bucks were then finally able to take the lead, thanks to some Kevin Porter Jr. free throws. They expanded that lead when BP hit three straight buckets, including a mid-range fadeaway over Brown; of course, Portis taunted him right after, resulting in a technical foul. After the technical free throw, the Celtics’ offense went cold, scoring just two points in the final 3:34 of the quarter—and the Bucks took advantage. Milwaukee outscored Beantown 5-2 over that stretch, with a couple of makes from the rarely used Cole Anthony. The run sent the Bucks to the fourth quarter with a seven-point lead, 87-80.

Portis caught fire right at the start of the fourth, nailing back-to-back shots on the first two possessions. It was part of an opening 11-4 run by Milwaukee to get their largest lead of the night at 14 points. The home team continued to ride Portis’ hot hand, hitting two more threes to put the Bucks up by 17. With the Celtics unable to get out of their shooting slump, the Bucks kept pushing the issue, going up by 20 points with just over three minutes left. That was more than enough for the Bucks to put the cue in the rack, as they cruised to the 15-point win.

Stat That Stood Out​


The Boston Celtics in the 2020s have been defined by taking and making many shots from the three-point line. Coming into this season, even without Jayson Tatum, they sat at 11th in the league in three-point percentage (36.9) and third in attempts (43.3). After going 11-21 (52.4%) in the first half from deep, the Celtics started the second half with 16 straight misses from three-point range. They didn’t make their first three of the half until the 7:38 mark of the fourth quarter. Altogether in the second half, the Celtics shot 3/28 (10.7%) from three.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...re-recap-bobby-portis-kyle-kuzma-jaylen-brown
 
Milwaukee Bucks Poll: Majority of fans don’t want Giannis trade

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In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, we asked you for your opinions on the Giannis trade rumors, especially for what it means in the short term. We also asked about Bobby Portis, who becomes trade-eligible on Monday. Here are the highlights:

  • I know that headline might sound obvious, but there is a sizeable chunk of the fanbase that wants to move on from Giannis regardless of how the superstar feels about Milwaukee. Nevertheless, 55% of our respondents think the Bucks shouldn’t trade him.
  • 61% of voters think Giannis will remain on the roster after the February 8th trade deadline, but only 41% think he’ll stick through the summer to next season.
  • Unsurprisingly, trust in ESPN is very low among the fanbase, with 75% of fans polled not believing the continued rumors put forth by their personalities like Shams Charania.
  • A decisive 88% want the Bucks to explore trading Bobby Portis beginning next week, and 75% of them want that deal to include Kyle Kuzma. That would allow the Bucks to take back up to $45.1m in returning salary.
  • Doc Rivers’ approval rating rose from 2% to 7% this week, but 80% still disapprove, which is essentially the same as last week. So some people shifted to undecided. Jon Horst’s is split at 39%.


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

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-poll...ounmpo-trade-rumors-shams-charania-doc-rivers
 
Bucks vs. Celtics Player Grades: Kyle Kuzma and Bobby Portis combine for 58 in improbable win

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The Milwaukee Bucks got a much-needed win after four days off, taking down their Eastern Conference rival, the Boston Celtics, 116-101. It’s the first win for the Bucks over the Celtics since the 2023-24 season, the same game Giannis went down with his left soleus injury. 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​

Kevin Porter Jr.​


32 minutes, 18 points, 13 assists, 10 rebounds, 6/10 FG, 5/5 FT, -6

With Kuzma and Portis going off, someone needed to set them up, and that guy ended up being KPJ. When it was all said and done, he picked up his fourth career triple-double en route to the Bucks’ big win.

Grade: A-

Ryan Rollins​


26 minutes, 10 points, 7 assists, 2 steals, 5 fouls, 4/10 FG, +10

Give a lot of credit to the Celtics’ defensive duo of Jordan Walsh and Payton Pritchard; they made life tough for both Rollins and KPJ in spots. Credit to Rollins for sticking with it and finding his spots to make some big plays as the Bucks were mounting their comeback.

Grade: B-

Myles Turner​


28 minutes, 4 points, 3 rebounds, 2 blocks, 1/6 FG, 2/4 FT, +15

While it was one of his worst offensive games in a while, Turner really brought it defensively. He was able to take advantage of the Celtics’ overall lack of size and wall off the paint. Boston finished with just 28 points in the paint, and a huge credit has to go to MT.

Grade: C-

Kyle Kuzma​


31 minutes, 31 points, 6 rebounds, 13/17 FG, 4/5 FT, +12

What a game it was for Kuz. He scored 12 points in the second quarter, and then followed that up by scoring nine of the 11 points in an 11-0 run that allowed the Bucks to tie it in the third. He was aggressive inside, going 11/13 in the paint, and even knocked down a corner three. Heck of a game for Kuz on both ends.

Grade: A

Bobby Portis​


26 minutes, 27 points, 10 rebounds, 11/13 FG, 5/6 3PT, +12

This was, bar none, the best Bobby has been defensively all season. His passion was evident, and he put forth great effort all night long. His offense was just as good, if not better. Also, seeing him get in Jaylen Brown’s face was a beautiful sight.

Grade: A

Gary Trent Jr.​


28 minutes, 13 points, 2 rebounds, 5/9 FG, 3/6 3PT, +12

Trent got the start with AJ Green still out with that left shoulder contusion, and I thought it was a solid game from GT. He got the Bucks going offensively early and helped stem the tide after a rough opening six minutes.

Grade: B+

Gary Harris​


33 minutes, 0 points, 2 rebounds, 2 assists, 1 block, 0/3 FG, +26

This is one of the oddest stat lines you will ever see. +26 with not a single basket on the stat sheet is very uncommon; that said, Harris was solid in his role. The grade drags down due to the lack of offense, but he was a good matchup for the Celtics’ guards and played good perimeter defense.

Grade: C

Cole Anthony​


19 minutes, 9 points, 5 assists, 4 rebounds, 1 steal, 1 block, 4/6 FG, +9

The player who seemed forever glued to the bench had his best game in 4-6 weeks. He was locked nearly from the moment he got on the floor with Rollins and KPJ in foul trouble. He was good on both ends and took the right shots instead of just chucking bad looks.

Grade: B

Doc Rivers​


Doc said in the postgame presser that the last two days they worked on second-effort drills in practice, and it seemed to pay off. The Bucks were flying around the court and were executing well on the floor, and some of that credit definitely goes Doc’s way. Great work to get the message across that the team had been playing soft.

Grade: A-

Limited Minutes:
Jericho Sims

Garbage Time: Andre Jackson Jr., Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Amir Coffey, Pete Nance

Inactive: Giannis Antetokounmpo, AJ Green, Taurean Prince, Mark Sears, Alex Antetokounmpo

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • Doc Rivers talked pre-game about how much Taurean Prince has been involved with the team during his injury, as he’s basically become another assistant coach. Here are Doc’s full comments on what Prince has been able to do since he’s been out:
“I call him coach every day now because right now that’s what he is to our team. We are giving him responsibilities in that way, to check in on players and do different things like that. He wants to be around the team, which I think is important for him as well. We don’t know if you’re gonna play or not this year or even your future or any of that stuff; you’ve got a lot going on. So, we’re trying to take the burden off of him, as much as we can.”
  • Bobby Portis picked up his first double-double of the season last night. It was the 81st double-double of his career as a reserve, tying him with Ray Tarpley for third all-time in that stat. He trails just Enes Freedom (86) and Detlef Schrempf (106) for No. 2 and No. 1 all-time.
  • Speaking of Bobby, he picked up a technical foul after getting in the face of Jaylen Brown. This came after he hit a fadeaway jumper over Brown during the Bucks’ third-quarter run. Bobby talked about that moment and about the type of player he is:
“I’m an emotional player, I wear my heart on my sleeve, especially in big games like this. I just like to ball, I like to hoop. The gym is one of the places you can scream and be yourself. It’s not like a classroom where you have to be quiet. I’ve always been taught to play with swagger, play with emotion, and have fun.”
  • Bobby also talked about the second-effort practices the Bucks went through over the last couple of days, joking that they practiced so long it was dark when they left.
“Practice starts at two on Tuesdays, but we were in there until five, and it was dark outside; it was dark when we came out. When we came in, guys did a lot of stretching, lifting weights, or got on the court for individual workouts, and then practice started at two, and once practice was over, I was lifting, and it was dark out there.”
  • Kyle Kuzma had his first 30-point game as a Buck in this one.

Up Next​


The Bucks will take on another team from the Atlantic division, as they will head on the road for a one-game stop to take on the Brooklyn Nets. The game is this Sunday, with tip-off scheduled for 5:00 p.m. Central time, and you can catch it all on FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...stats-bobby-portis-kyle-kuzma-kevin-porter-jr
 
Rapid Recap: Nets 127, Bucks 82

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Whatever good vibes came from the Milwaukee Bucks’ upset win on Thursday were summarily executed by the six-win Brooklyn Nets in embarrassing, ugly, and unforgivable fashion. Even without Giannis, a blowout to one of the East’s worst teams by record—not leading at any point—that’s missing Cam Thomas is inexcusable. No one Net had more than Egor Demin’s 17, while Gary Trent Jr. was the Bucks’ high man with 20.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


Several minutes of basket-trading fueled by pretty awful interior defense from both squads began this one. Each side also had trouble maintaining possession at such a quick pace, making for a sloppy start. Doc Rivers called his first timeout after a transition layup by Demin had Milwaukee down 17-12 just over four minutes in. The Bucks’ D tightened up for a moment, and Kevin Porter Jr. took the Michael Porter Jr. assignment, but they struggled to generate quality looks during the next shift. Then more turnovers and defensive miscues helped put the Nets up by double digits in the quarter’s closing minutes. Things stood at 37-25 in favor of the home team after one.

The Bucks still couldn’t control the ball in the second, turning it over on four of their first five possessions, and were quickly down 18 thanks to an 8-2 Nets run. In fact, Brooklyn constructed a 26-10 extended run over the break. Unfocused defense, poor shot creation, and undisciplined ballhandling kept Milwaukee from getting within 17 during the ensuing action. But Kuzma took command of the offense as Brooklyn went cold, igniting a 7-0 Milwaukee run to cut the deficit to 11. That was as close as the Bucks got, however. Putting the Nets at the line, bad shot selection, no rim protection, and general sloppiness had the Bucks trailing 65-48 at half.

Despite a promising couple possessions for Milwaukee early, Brooklyn built their advantage to as much as 22 in the third’s first several minutes. Trent and Ryan Rollins tried to shoot the Bucks back into it after not taking anywhere near enough threes in the first half, but the Nets’ shooters were just hotter: they were 7/14 from deep in the period. This was actually less about bad interior defense and turnovers as compared to the second quarter, but the results were worse. Brooklyn was ahead 29 at one point, and led 99-71 entering the fourth.

Brooklyn didn’t cool off from downtown as they ticked away the final 12 minutes. After they increased their lead to 32 with 9:24 remaining, Doc had seen enough and emptied his bench, and the Nets pushed it to as high as 45, where it finished. Forty. Five.

Stat That Stood Out​


Milwaukee stunk at everything tonight, but whatever chances they had to get back into the game in the second quarter were undone by turnovers. In that frame, the Nets scored eight from the Bucks coughing it up six times, and their total edge in points off turnovers ended at 30-12.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...ets-final-score-recap-doc-rivers-blowout-loss
 
Bucks may be looking to add talent next to Giannis

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The Bucks’ 2025–26 season has not gone the way they wanted, especially in a year where they are trying to convince Giannis Antetokounmpo—eligible for an extension next fall—to stay around long term. They sit in the Eastern Conference’s 10th seed, Giannis himself is weeks away from returning as he recovers from a calf strain, and they just suffered a 45-point loss to the now 7-18 Brooklyn Nets where they scored just 82 points. Amid speculation and rumors about whether Giannis wants to stay, the Bucks appear to be looking to make another move to convince him. Per both Marc Stein and Eric Nehm, Milwaukee is keeping itself in the market to make another significant move to add around Giannis and contend this season. Stein had this to say on his Substack, The Stein Line, yesterday:

“Interested teams continue to wait for the Bucks to signal that they’ve made Giannis Antetokounmpo available. To date Milwaukee has not and has even countered with whispered messaging that it remains in the market for roster upgrades to help Antetokounmpo

Nehm backed up that reporting from Stein on The Athletic today, saying the following about the type of player the Bucks are looking to add next to Giannis:

“Five months after the Bucks’ stunning decision to waive Damian Lillard en route to adding big man Myles Turner on a four-year, $107 million deal, it appears they aren’t waving the white flag on Antetokounmpo’s future in Milwaukee just yet. Instead, league sources said they’re considering making yet another significant addition that might aid their chances of convincing him to stay.”

Both reporters made it clear that the Bucks are not currently looking to trade the two-time MVP anytime soon. According to Stein, while other teams believe that the Bucks will be fielding offers for Giannis before the trade deadline, he believes that it won’t happen until Giannis himself requests a trade:

I have spoken to some teams who continue to express the belief that the Bucks will indeed ultimately opt to field pitches for Antetokounmpo at some point in January ahead of the Feb. 5 trade deadline. The belief here at Stein Line HQ remains that it won’t happen until Giannis himself clearly directs the Bucks to do so.“

Looking at who the Bucks could potentially add, they seemingly already have a list of players they’ve been looking at well before today. As we’ve written about before, the Bucks have done background work on Sacramento Kings wing Zach LaVine and have kept tabs on Boston Celtics guard Anfernee Simons since the offseason. Sam Amick of The Athletic confirmed Milwaukee’s due diligence on LaVine on Friday.

This also isn’t the first time the Bucks were interested in adding LaVine via trade. At last season’s trade deadline, the Bucks were looking to add him in a potential three-team trade between them, the Bulls, and the Phoenix Suns as part of a potential Jimmy Butler trade. The deal was effectively killed by Bradley Beal, who refused to waive his no-trade clause to be sent to Chicago, making the money work.

They were also named as suitors for Chris Paul amid his feud with the Clippers, leading to him being sent home by the team. A deal for Paul seems unlikely, considering the long-standing beef between Giannis and CP3 and the 40-year-old point guard’s unwillingness to leave the West Coast during his final season in the NBA.

Several Bucks became trade-eligible today, including Bobby Portis, Gary Trent Jr., Cole Anthony, and Amir Coffey, among others. If the Bucks were to add LaVine at his high-priced $47.5m salary, they would need to not only include Kyle Kuzma’s $22.4m, but Portis’ $13.4m, and a minimum contract player like Anthony or Taurean Prince. The Bucks also have their 2031 and 2032 first-round picks available to trade, but considering the financial cost of a player like LaVine, under contract through summer 2027 at $49m, they would likely only have to part with one of those picks with heavy protections.

Let us know what you think of a talent upgrade via trade below. Also, make sure to head over to The Feed to submit your trade ideas for a chance to be featured in a future article.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-rumors/55925/milwaukee-bucks-nba-trade-rumors-convince-giannis-stay
 
10 Bucks become trade eligible

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As we’ve discussed here at BH, December 15th is a key date for the Bucks’ ability to make roster moves. Per the CBA, any player signed this offseason as a free agent can’t be traded for the later date of three months after their signing or today unless they meet certain criteria, which I’ll get into in a bit. So it marks the unofficial beginning of trade season in advance of the February 5th deadline. But for now, here is every current Buck who, as of today, became eligible to be traded without their consent, since they all signed before September 15th:

  • Cole Anthony
  • Amir Coffey
  • Gary Harris
  • Kevin Porter Jr.
  • Bobby Portis
  • Taurean Prince
  • Gary Trent Jr.
  • Myles Turner

It bears mentioning that the four holdovers from last year on this list signed as free agents, not on extensions. That means Porter, Portis, Prince, and Trent all technically hit the market before deciding to remain in Milwaukee on brand new deals. Had they extended pre-free agency, their trade eligibility date could have been up to a year after they signed that extension.

You might notice that two names signed this offseason aren’t on the above list: Thanasis Antetokounmpo and Jericho Sims. While yes, they are indeed trade-eligible today for the same reason as those eight other guys, they gain an implicit no-trade clause because they signed for either a single season or two with a player option in the second. In this instance, players can waive their right to veto a trade, which Porter, Prince, and Trent did upon re-signing. Sims and Thanasis did not, so if the Bucks wanted to move them, they’d need to ask.

You might also notice that Ryan Rollins, who signed a new deal this offseason, isn’t on the list. That’s because his contract meets the criteria I mentioned above: re-signing with his previous team, a raise of over 20%, not a minimum contract, and the team using Early Bird rights to re-sign him. This gives him a different eligibility date than everyone else: January 15th.

Finally, by virtue of signing an extension in October, AJ Green is ineligible to be dealt for six months. That would fall in April, and since the trade deadline is February, he must remain a Buck through the remainder of the season. He actually is the only Buck who can’t be traded this year; all 17 other rostered players (including two-way guys, who count for $0 in outgoing/incoming salary) can, at some point.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-rumors/55921/milwaukee-bucks-trade-eligible-players-2025-2026
 
Bucks vs. Nets Player Grades: KPJ cools down in blowout

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A 127-82 disembowelment by the hapless Nets should cost at least one of the Bucks below their jobs, regardless of Giannis being out. And I’m not talking about any player. Read our full summary of the game here and catch a six-minute audio recap on the Bucks+ podcast Bucks In Six Minutes below. Fire Doc.

View Link

Player Grades​

Myles Turner​


24 minutes, 9 points, 3 rebounds, 0 blocks, 2/4 FG, 0/2 3P, 5/6 FT, -21

Another pretty invisible game because of a coaching staff not putting Turner in position to succeed. Often nowhere near the rim on defense since his job is apparently to switch onto smaller guys while rollers beat Buck guards inside. Fire Doc.

Grade: C-

Kevin Porter Jr.​


30 minutes, 5 points, 7 assists, 6 turnovers, 4 steals, 2/13 FG, 0/5 3P, -21

After three steals in the first six minutes, KPJ’s positive contributions to this game were over. I know he’s been on a tear recently and they need his offense, but I felt he devolved into a chucker last night. Just bad shot selection and plenty of careless turnovers too, though he wasn’t alone in that regard. On the other end, he overhelped often and lost his man a few times. Fire Doc.

Grade: D

Ryan Rollins​


22 minutes, 11 points, 5 assists, 2 turnovers, 5/11 FG, 1/5 3P, -28

Had a few nice drives to the rim when the game was still within reach, but that’s about it. He gambled for steals too often, which just resulted in easy Nets buckets. Fire Doc.

Grade: C

Kyle Kuzma​


28 minutes, 13 points, 7 rebounds, 6/11 FG, -18

Kuzma began a perfect 4/4 from the field, so you can see how he faded a bit. He did his level best to will Milwaukee back into it during the second quarter alongside Trent. Fire Doc.

Grade: C+

Gary Trent Jr.​


29 minutes, 20 points, 2 steals, 7/14 FG, 4/8 3P, -17

Leading all scorers, it was in large part due to GTJ’s shotmaking that the Bucks were briefly within 11 in the second quarter. This and the Boston game are easily the best he’s looked since the season’s opening week. Fire Doc.

Grade: B

Bobby Portis​


16 minutes, 10 points, 3 rebounds, 4/7 FG, 2/3 3P, -16

I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised at Portis going from heavily engaged on defense against the Celtics back to his lackadaisical ways. His entry in the first quarter was when the floodgates started to open, as Brooklyn kept getting to the rim with ease. Fire Doc.

Grade: C-

Cole Anthony​


20 minutes, 2 points, 4 rebounds, 1 assists, 4 turnovers, 4 fouls, 0/4 FG, 3/4 3P, -27

A couple of his ugly turnovers late in the first quarter were big reasons the Nets built an early 12-point lead. When Anthony is bad, he’s bad. He’s only getting minutes because AJ Green is out—he can’t be logging DNP-CDs soon enough. Fire Doc.

Grade: F

Jericho Sims​


30 minutes, 7 points, 7 rebounds, 3/4 FG, -29

Having supplanted Trent as the plus/minus scapegoat of this team, I don’t know what the Bucks need to be doing to play better when he’s on the floor. Because despite his rebounding and athleticism, he’s not helping them at all. Even with Giannis out, he should play fewer minutes. Fire Doc.

Grade: D+

Andre Jackson Jr.​


15 minutes, 2 points, 2 rebounds, 1/6 FG, 0/5 3P, -16

Pre-garbage time entrant in the third, though the game was out of reach then too. Got some shots up but didn’t distinguish himself. I get wanting to try him out over Anthony, but it’s not as if Ajax had any more success defensively than other Bucks. Fire Doc.

Grade: C-

Doc Rivers​


How much worse does it have to get? How many losses do they have to compile before Jon Horst finally stops the bleeding here? How many times do fans need to tweet Fire Doc? This man is one of the five highest-paid coaches in the NBA and has no answers. His players are undisciplined, he doesn’t have them ready, his staff’s schemes don’t work at all without Giannis, and they obviously need something when he’s not on the floor. He hasn’t been a good coach since before the Clippers acquired Kawhi Leonard. The Boston win was an aberration thanks to outlier shooting in the second half. The Pistons game looks flukier and flukier by the day. Rivers needed to be canned two weeks ago, and the longer he stays, the more this franchise’s future slips away. He is not helping keep the big fella with these results.

Grade: F

Limited Minutes:
Gary Harris, Fire Doc

Garbage Time: Amir Coffey, Pete Nance, Fire Doc

DNP-CD: Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Fire Doc

Inactive: Alex Antetokounmpo, Giannis Antetokounmpo, AJ Green, Mark Sears, Fire Doc

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • Fire Doc.
  • Nets head coach Jordi Fernandez came down with the flu earlier in the day and wasn’t on the sidelines for this one. Assistant Steve Hetzel took his place.
  • Fire Doc.
  • This is the fewest points the Bucks have scored since losing to the Heat 97-79 on January 14, 2018.
  • Fire Doc.
  • While Brooklyn shot the ball predictably well, it’s not as if they tore the cover off it (52.9% FG%, 44.2% 3P%). The disparity, though, is a major story: the Bucks shot just 39.2% and 22.9% from three. Both are season lows by 0.8% and 6%, respectively.
  • Fire Doc.
  • Brooklyn’s offense ranks 24th per Cleaning The Glass with a 112.8 offensive rating. Milwaukee matadored them to 129.6, while posting 82.8 for themselves.
  • Fire Doc.
  • Only the Clippers’ loss 98-79 loss to the Warriors in late October has a lower losing team point total this year.
  • Fire Doc.
  • Gary Harris played only six minutes, all in the first half. He looked fine and even hit a three while the game wasn’t out of hand, but I guess Doc decided to go bigger? Didn’t work.
  • Fire Doc.
  • Rim defense was a major issue in the first half, with 36 points in the paint for the Nets and 28 for the Bucks. In the third, Brooklyn really fell off inside… because they shot 7/14 from deep and outscored Milwaukee 34-23, all but putting the nail in this one.
  • Fire Doc.
  • Like I said in the rapid, the Bucks did everything poorly as a team. I could go on about the 20-13 turnover differential, the 24-13 fast break differential, but this is nothing new. Doc hasn’t fixed it, and won’t. Time to find someone new, even if it’s just Darvin Ham.
  • Fire Doc.

Up Next​


Thanks to the NBA Cup, the Bucks will have another three-day break between games before hosting the Raptors for the first time this season after splitting the first two matchups in Toronto. Tip is at 7:00 p.m. CST and viewable on FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin.

Fire Doc.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...rades-kevin-porter-jr-doc-rivers-blowout-loss
 
Taurean Prince likely done for the year, Bucks apply for disabled player exception

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The Milwaukee Bucks have now officially lost one of their key reserves for the rest of the season. Per Eric Nehm of The Athletic, the Bucks have applied for a disabled player exception for Taurean Prince, effectively ruling him out for the rest of the season. Prince played in just eight games this season before suffering a herniated disk in his neck that required surgery. Prince spoke to the media last Thursday for the first time since the injury, and had this to say about the decision to have surgery in the first place on November 13:

“It was definitely a tough process, definitely tough getting the news,” he said. “The only way to hoop again would be to get the surgery. So, that was my mindset from the jump. And really just taking everything in and knowing how serious of a situation it was, so just being thankful that I’m still here to speak and be able to have an opportunity to hoop again.

I’m gonna play again, for sure.”

The disabled player exception, if approved by the league, allows a team to either sign a player to a one-year deal or trade for a player on a one-year deal who is making the same money (or less) than 50% of the disabled player’s salary. In this case, the Bucks could sign or trade for someone on a contract of just under $1.7m, since Prince is making $3.3m. Milwaukee is well below the first apron with about $16.8m in space, so no worries about being right up against the first or second apron if they choose to add a player, and they have $11.5m in room beneath the luxury tax.

We’ve seen other teams apply for this exception in recent years, including this year. The Chicago Bulls applied for it after rookie Noa Essengue was ruled out, and they also did it back in July of 2023 when Lonzo Ball was still recovering from multiple knee surgeries. We’ve also seen it denied in the past, with the New York Knicks being denied by the league for Mitchell Robinson in the 2023–24 season because there was optimism at the time that he could play, according to Woj.

In the games that Prince was able to suit up for, he averaged 6.1 points and 1.6 rebounds, shooting 44.7% from the field and 42.9% from the three-point line. In July, Prince signed a one-year veteran minimum deal with a player option in the second year, which seems to loom large after this news. We’ll see if the Bucks decide to add a player if granted by the league, but if they do so, it will most likely be via free agency.

Some notable free agents, including multiple Old Friends, include:

  • Alec Burks
  • Talen Horton-Tucker
  • Torrey Craig
  • Jae Crowder
  • Markieff Morris
  • Trey Lyles
  • Bol Bol
  • P.J. Tucker

We’ll see if the Bucks opt to use the exception, but until then, we hope that Prince recovers fully and is back on an NBA court in 2026.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-news...lwaukee-bucks-apply-disabled-player-exception
 
Bucks might be going ‘big game hunting’ in the trade market

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A couple of days ago, Eric Nehm and Marc Stein reported that the Bucks were looking to add a player next to Giannis in the trade market. Today, Jake Fischer of the Stein Line has more news about what the Bucks are looking to do this season. Fischer reiterated that the Bucks rebuff that Giannis had in any way requested a trade or that they were fielding offers for the two-time MVP, and that the Bucks are looking to add a piece next to him to turn their season around. According to a rival GM whom Fischer spoke to, the Bucks have their sights set high on whom they want to add:

“Now Milwaukee is messaging that it wants to be buyers at this deadline to try to get Giannis more help. Even with no clear return-from-injury timetable yet in place for Antetokounmpo, Jon Horst’s front office continues to hold onto hope that assembling a puncher’s chance contender remains viable in the wide-open Eastern Conference. One rival general manager I spoke to went so far as to say that the Bucks had convinced him that “they’re going big-game hunting.”

There have been plenty of names floated around. I mentioned yesterday that, based on other reports, the Bucks have done background checks on Zach LaVine, kept tabs on Anfernee Simons, and have been named as a potential suitor for Chris Paul. Yet, Fischer dropped another name that the Bucks have been and are interested in pursuing:

“Another player who has been on Milwaukee’s radar under the same premise both this season and in previous years is Trail Blazers swingman Jerami Grant.”

Grant makes sense as a big wing who can score and defend, and would be a good fit next to Giannis. Grant does have a hefty price tag this season and in the future, earning $32 million this season, $34.2 million next season, and a player option for $36.4 million for the 2027-28 season, when he turns 33. The only potential problem with getting a deal for Grant going is that, according to Fischer, he has become a favorite of Blazers GM Joe Cronin. As for the financials of the deal, it would have to start with Kyle Kuzma’s $22.4 million and either adding Bobby Portis to the deal or two minimum contract players, like Amir Coffey and Cole Anthony, plus some draft capital tied to it.

Fischer did go on to name Andrew Wiggins, Dejounte Murray, and Marcus Smart as three other players the Bucks could go after in a speculative sense, since they’re players whom they’ve targeted in the past. He reports that the Bucks regularly called the Golden State Warriors about Wiggins’ availability before the deal that sent Jimmy Butler to the West Coast and Wiggins to Miami. The same was true of Murray during his time with the Atlanta Hawks before his trade to the New Orleans Pelicans. Murray hasn’t played at all this season after suffering an Achilles tear in January of this year. There is some hope within the Pelicans organization that he could make his debut in January, according to Fischer. A deal for Smart is unlikely given the Lakers’ need for a point-of-attack defender and the fact that they already got him on a favorable deal in the buyout market.

A surprise name that popped up in Fischer’s report was that the Bucks tried to trade for the Dallas Mavericks’ P.J. Washington while he was still with the Charlotte Hornets. However, a deal won’t materialize this season for Washington, as he signed a contract extension before the season, making him ineligible for a trade until next off-season.

Regardless of who they decide to pursue, the Bucks are seemingly going to be aggressive in adding an impact player to convince Giannis to stay and sign an extension this upcoming offseason.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-rumo...ng-trade-market-nba-trade-market-jerami-grant
 
Milwaukee Bucks Poll: Should the Bucks tank or trade for reinforcements to help Giannis?

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Never say “things can’t get worse.” I heard this after the Wizards loss two weeks ago. We quote and maybe even take as truth this inherently incorrect statement for whatever reason, perhaps because we don’t fear extinction (truly the worst outcome for humanity). In terms of NBA basketball, well… we’re seeing it now after perhaps the most damning defeat of Bucks basketball in a decade.

I won’t even say this in regard to Doc Rivers (Fire Doc). There are doubtlessly many coaches who would do a better job with this roster; to think otherwise is a disservice to the dozens of talented coaches around and outside the league who deserve a chance. Please do not construe this as a grass-is-always-greener statement in Doc’s favor: it could always be worse. It could be Jim Boylen (not the former Bucks assistant and interim coach in 2013, but the Bulls’ sideline boss from 2018–20) or something.

In this week’s Tuesday tracker, we begin by focusing on the near-term future of this team vis-à-vis their direction and what might convince Giannis to stay in Milwaukee. Then we look back on the last two-plus years of decision-making and see who or what you think might be responsible for all this.



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...k-or-trade-for-reinforcements-to-help-giannis
 
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