Milwaukee Bucks vs. Philadelphia 76ers Preview & Game Thread: Free falling

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The Milwaukee Bucks head east for a road trip that will hopefully end the bad vibes. The first stop is Philadelphia to face the 76ers. Milwaukee lost the previous matchup 116-101 on December 5th; the Bucks didn’t have Giannis then, and won’t have him now.

Where We’re At​


My colleague Morgan said it best in the preview for the Dallas game before it was postponed. Bad coach is somehow still here, an upset star is injured for who knows how long, the team is in shambles, and just when you think the team has hit rock bottom, they find a way to beat that feat. This leaves Milwaukee in a tough place, as their first-round pick could be swapped. You can’t fully head into tanking, but does anyone really believe this team can play their way to the play-in?

The Sixers have been better than expected and look dangerous for the playoffs. Which means they got blown out by the Charlotte Hornets yesterday in their makeup game, which was cancelled by the winter storm that swept across the nation. Philly didn’t have Paul George or Joel Embiid in that game, but it was still a strong enough roster that they shouldn’t have lost the game from the tip-off.

Injury Report​


The Bucks will be without Taurean Prince (neck surgery), Giannis (calf), and Kevin Porter Jr. (oblique). The Sixers played last night so we will have to wait and see about their injury report.

Player To Watch​


VJ Edgecombe has had a solid rookie season so far, putting himself in contention for Rookie of the Year. Yesterday, he was announced as a participant in the Rising Stars competition during All-Star weekend. With the Bucks putting their attention on Maxey, this feels like a game where, if Edgecombe gets hot, he can make the Bucks suffer.

How To Watch​


7:00 p.m. CST on NBC and Peacock.


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...scussion-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Bucks vs. Mavericks game rescheduled to March 31 due to winter storms

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DALLAS, TX - NOVEMBER 10: Ryan Rollins #13 of the Milwaukee Bucks dribbles the ball during the game against the Dallas Mavericks on November 10, 2025 at American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Tim Heitman/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Milwaukee Bucks have announced they are rescheduling their home game against the Dallas Mavericks to Tuesday, March 31, at 7:00 p.m. Central Time. Their game was scheduled for last Sunday, but it was postponed due to winter storms that prevented the Mavericks from flying out of Dallas. The NBA also moved the Mavericks’ game against the Memphis Grizzlies, scheduled for Wednesday, April 1, to prevent Dallas from playing three straight games. Tickets for the original Mavs game are valid for the new date.

This will create a home-road back-to-back for the Bucks, who have a game on April 1 in Houston against the Rockets at 7:00 p.m. It will be a busy time for them at the end of March, as they will have four games in five days after returning from a four-game West Coast trip. In March, Milwaukee will now have five sets of back-to-back games, with no more than two days off between contests. If Giannis’ self-diagnosed timeline is correct, the Bucks will have to do most of this heavy stretch of basketball without him. Things have gotten rough as it is, but they could get a whole lot worse by the time the dust settles on March 31.

Editor’s note: If the Bucks are rescheduling this game in the naive hope that it would not be played because March 31st doesn’t exist, they are mistaken.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-sche...le-change-milwaukee-dallas-mavericks-march-31
 
Rapid Recap: Wizards 109, Bucks 99

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WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 29: Bobby Portis #9 of the Milwaukee Bucks drives to the basket during the game against the Washington Wizards on January 29, 2026 at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Milwaukee Bucks endured their third loss to the Washington Wizards this season, going down 109-99 in the nation’s capital. Hmmm. Yep. Myles Turner was the Bucks’ best with 21 points, 14 rebounds, and six blocks. And of course, the Wizards were led by the one that got away, Kyshawn George, who dropped 23 points, five assists, five rebounds, and two steals.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap


The Bucks got off to a slow start, beginning 1/8 from the field and getting down 9-2 at the eight-minute mark. But it was Bobby Portis who brought them back into it with a pair of threes. Kyshawn George, selected one spot behind AJ Johnson, was scoring early for the Wizards. Frankly, Milwaukee was lucky only to be down six at the five-minute mark; they were giving Washington a heap of good looks from deep, and most just rimmed out. The Bucks responded, though, with an 8-0 run featuring an and-one from Myles Turner and a triple from Pete Nance. Unfortunately for the visitors, a reckless closeouts on a three-point shooter caused them to be down 25-23 after one.

The Wizards got out of the blocks early in the second with a Tre Johnson step-back two (which was also ruled a flagrant on Ryan Rollins) and another jumper from Carrington. Crucially, the foul on Rollins was his third, meaning he’d sit for the rest of the period. Before long, the Wiz were up 33-23. The Bucks then made a 4-0 run, which prompted a Brian Keefe timeout. Out of the timeout, the Wizards had their own 4-0 run (including a pick-six by Justin Champagnie), which prompted a Doc Rivers timeout! The Bucks could not find a consistent source of offence for the next few minutes, which allowed the Wizards to fly in transition and go on an 11-0 run, taking a 49-33 lead with four minutes left. The Wiz took a 57-43 edge into the locker rooms.

Rollins wasted no time troubling the scorebook early in the third, notching a quick five points after sitting much of the first half. Milwaukee got the deficit down close to single digits a few times, but the Wizards always had an answer, up 68-55 at the seven-minute mark. Once again, the Bucks got it down to 10 following a Nance hook, but threes from Alex Sarr and Bub Carrington erased all that momentum; Wiz up 76-60 with 3:36 on the clock. That said, the Bucks respond again—this time with an 8-2 run spearheaded by Kyle Kuzma finishing in transition—and they were on the single-digit precipice once more but could not get over it. Washington up 82-72 heading into the final frame.

Will Riley, another Wizards rookie, nailed an and-one three to begin the fourth (also ruled a flagrant—somehow the third of the game for the Bucks). Kuzma responded with a three-point play of his own on the next possession, followed by a whip to Turner, and the deficit was finally in single digits. At one point, the Wizards’ lead was down to six, but a tough Kyshawn George jumper and a Jamir Watkins pick-six had it back at 10 with eight minutes to play. For the next few minutes, both teams missed a bunch of shots, but a terrific hustle play by Rollins put the Bucks down six, 95-89, with just over four minutes on the clock. Then, a Rollins step-beck three and a Kuz spinning floater had it down to a single-possession game. Unfortunately, Rollins then had to leave the game with an apparent leg injury, leaving the Bucks without a true creator and losing the game. When it rains, it pours, apparently.

Stat That Stood Out


The Bucks actually shot it better than the Wizards and even took more shots, but they got beasted at the charity stripe. Washington shot 28 free throws to Milwaukee’s nine—an indication of the lack of downhill creators they had.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...s-final-score-recap-bobby-portis-myles-turner
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Washington Wizards Game Preview and Game Thread: Does the Buck stop here?

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The Milwaukee Bucks continue their three-game road trip, making their second appearance of the season in the nation’s capital, taking on the Washington Wizards. The Wizards have given the Bucks trouble all season, securing two of their 11 wins against them. C.J. McCollum (now with the Hawks) sent Bucks fans into 2026 with a sour note, scoring four points in 30 seconds to beat Milwaukee on New Year’s Eve, 114-113.

Where We’re At


Things couldn’t be worse for the Bucks right now. They’ve lost six of their last seven games (do the kids still find that funny?) and seven of their last nine. In their first game without Giannis since his second calf injury of the season, they fell 139-122 to the 76ers. Myles Turner attempted 16 shots, the most he’s had in a Bucks uniform. Turner turned that into a season-high 31 points on 10/16 shooting and 4/8 from beyond the arc. The offense looked good in spurts, but Milwaukee couldn’t slow down Philadelphia, with Paul George and Joel Embiid combining for 61 points. The Bucks are now sitting in 12th in the Eastern Conference; they’re running out of time to salvage this season, if they even should.

Thanks to the Pacers beating the Bulls, the Wizards remain last in the Eastern Conference, despite their 115-111 win over the Trail Blazers. The win broke up a nine-game losing streak Washington had coming into that game. Alex Sarr had 29 points while former Buck Khris Middleton added in an efficient 19 points (7/14 shooting). The Wizards are fully in tank mode, with their pick just top-eight protected, and who knows when we’ll see new addition Trae Young play for them this season. Despite the loss, it finally seems like Washington has a direction by fully embracing the young talent they have.

Injury Report


Giannis (right calf strain), Kevin Porter Jr. (oblique), and Taurean Prince (neck) are still out for the Bucks tonight with their respective ailments.

As for the Wizards, Young (right MCL sprain) won’t suit up for Washington just yet. Joining him in street clothes are Marvin Bagley (thoracic strain), Tristan Vukcevic (left hamstring strain), and Cam Whitmore (deep vein thrombosis). Starting big man Alex Sarr is questionable with an illness.

Player To Watch


Since assuming the starting point guard spot, rookie Tre Johnson has seemingly taken a step up. In the nine games since McCollum was traded to Atlanta, Johnson has been the Wizards’ third-leading scorer at 15.7 points per game, while shooting 42.5% from the field and 40% from the three-point line.

How To Watch


6:00 p.m. CST on Prime Video.


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...scussion-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Milwaukee Bucks Poll: Fans embrace the tank, still want to keep Giannis

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WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 29: Kyle Kuzma #18 of the Milwaukee Bucks reacts after being called for a foul against the Washington Wizards during the second half at Capital One Arena on January 29, 2026 in Washington, DC. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, we pick up the pieces from last Friday’s Giannis injury amid more reporting from the usual national sources that Giannis’ time in Milwaukee may be ending by the deadline. Here are the highlights:

  • 85% of fans surveyed now want the Bucks to forget about making the playoffs completely, even via the play-in (they’re currently two spots behind the 10th seed).
  • Perhaps relatedly, 66% want the Bucks to shut down Giannis for the rest of the season to heal his calf.
  • 65% believe Giannis will still not request a trade before the deadline, despite the injury and the aforementioned reporting.
  • 33% of our respondents think the Bucks should just trade him anyway, but 58% oppose a team-initiated trade. That’s consistent with a poll we ran on X, where “no” got 62% of the vote.
  • The majority of fans polled want Milwaukee to trade one or both of Kyle Kuzma and Bobby Portis. 26% want to sell high on Portis for whatever they can, and 25% want to do the same with Kuzma. The most popular option at 31% is to trade both of them together for someone who makes more than their $34.9m combined next season.


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

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-poll...s-embrace-the-tank-still-want-to-keep-giannis
 
NBA Rumors: Milwaukee Bucks targeting Cam Thomas, D’Angelo Russell

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MILWAUKEE, WI - JANUARY 2: Cam Thomas #24 of the Brooklyn Nets shoots the ball during the game against the Milwaukee Bucks on January 2, 2025 at Fiserv Forum Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images). | NBAE via Getty Images

In trade rumors that don’t involve a certain someone, the Milwaukee Bucks have the Brooklyn Nets’ Cam Thomas and the Dallas Mavericks’ D’Angelo Russell on their radar, per Michael Scotto.

Are these folks good at basketball? Your mileage may vary on that question. Thomas can at least score, which doesn’t hurt. But when the baseline is the end of Milwaukee’s current bench squad, they look a little better. And the Bucks have the financial situation to do these teams a solid and take them on, which could pay off in draft capital that would help restock their barren cupboard.

At 24, Thomas obviously has more upside. It’s been a bit of a rough year for him though, out for half the year due to injury and with downticks in most of his key counting stats. More offense than defense, and hey, maybe a change in scenery from the Nets would do him good.

Our own Finley Kuehl argued for targeting Russell just last June. Some of his bars go hard: “In terms of name value, D’Angelo Russell is one of the top free agents available;” “Russell is among the most advanced passers/playmakers in the NBA when he wants to be;” “It may sound crazy, but he’s truly not far off from Dame as a playmaker.” TL;DR: Again, more offense than defense.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-rumo...ee-targeting-cam-thomas-dangelo-russell-trade
 
Bucks Trade Candidate: De’Andre Hunter

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CLEVELAND, OHIO - NOVEMBER 17: De'Andre Hunter #12 of the Cleveland Cavaliers drives to the basket during the first half against the Milwaukee Bucks at Rocket Arena on November 17, 2025 in Cleveland, Ohio. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome back to our trade candidate series! After analyzing a couple of guards the Bucks could pursue in Ja Morant and Malik Monk, we turn our attention back to a wing. Milwaukee won’t have to look far, as Cleveland has a wing who would fit: De’Andre Hunter.


The Player​


De’Andre Hunter, 6’7”, 221 lbs. wing

Season averages: 13.8 PPG, 4.3 RPG, 2.1 APG, 0.6 SPG, 0.1 BPG, .420/.306/.879


The former no. 4 overall pick has had a rocky seven seasons. Traded on draft night to the Hawks as part of the deal that sent Anthony Davis to the Lakers, Hunter spent five and a half seasons in the ATL. Constant injuries limited him to playing in 61% of the possible games, including a torn meniscus in his sophomore season. Former GM Landry Fields opted to trade Hunter, who had two additional seasons at $48m remaining, to the Cavaliers at the trade deadline last season. In the deal, they received Caris LeVert, Georges Niang, and five draft picks (three second-round picks and two first-round pick swaps). Hunter played in 27 games for Cleveland, becoming a highly productive player. He averaged 14.3 PPG, 4.2 RPG, and 1.3 APG, shooting 48.5% from the field and 42.6% from beyond the arc. The Cavaliers went 20-7 in those contests, helping secure the no. 1 seed in the East. Even in that limited time, it helped propel Hunter to a fourth-place finish in Sixth Man of the Year voting.

2025–26 has been a much different barrel of fish, as our colleagues at Fear The Sword can attest. His shooting stats have fallen off a cliff: 49.8% effective field goal percentage (59.7% last season), 42% from the field, and 30.6% from three. His defense hasn’t been effective either, with a -5.6 net rating (22nd percentile among wings per Cleaning The Glass). The few bright spots for Hunter on either side of the ball have been his mid-range shooting and his playmaking. 36% of his shots have come in that area (89th), and he’s drilling them at a 49% rate (80th). His assist percentage (11.5 percent, 62nd) and APG (2.1) are at a career high.

Hunter is yet another player the Bucks have been connected to in rumors. Brett Siegel of ClutchPoints reported on Wednesday that Milwaukee had called Cleveland about Hunter, even offering up Kyle Kuzma as the centerpiece:

“Much of the same can be said about Hunter and the Cleveland Cavaliers. The Bucks have attempted to center their offer to Cleveland on Kyle Kuzma, sources said. Kuzma is not a player the Cavs hold interest in, nor would they be able to make anything work salary-wise since they are a second-apron team.”

The Trade​

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The Cavs only make this deal if they’re saving a substantial amount of money without breaking up the core. To make it happen, I’m wrangling in the Nets to make it a three-team deal. In this shuffling of wings, Milwaukee acquires Hunter and Larry Nance Jr., Kuzma heads to Brooklyn and a 2027 second-round pick, and Cleveland gets Cam Thomas, Ziaire Williams, and Andre Jackson Jr.

As part of that same report from Siegel, the Cavs also don’t want to get less back than they sent out for Hunter in the first place:

“The Cavs have received plenty of interest from teams in both conferences regarding Hunter and have been hesitant to trade the 28-year-old wing. While it is believed that Cleveland’s front office is closely monitoring their cap situation and has explored ways to move out of the second apron, the Cavs have signaled that they don’t want to take back less value than they gave up for Hunter last season, especially with the need many teams have for a player of his skills.”

Thomas, while not a good fit with Donovan Mitchell or Darius Garland, would thrive in a bench role alongside Lonzo Ball. Williams offers Cleveland a less expensive wing option whose numbers are similar to Hunter’s. The former no. 10 overall pick is averaging 9.4 PPG, 2.4 RPG, shooting 40.5% from the field, 30% from three-point range, and 87.7% at the charity stripe. The Cavaliers have to send out Larry Nance Jr. to get back down to 15 players. Nance is expiring, so the Bucks don’t add any long-term money from him. Kuzma becomes an expiring contract next season for Brooklyn, who could either trade him or let his deal expire to create cap space. They add another second-round pick from the Cavs via the Nuggets, giving them 31 draft selections from 2026 to 2032.

Hunter is the best player in this deal, but the Cavs are saving $11.1m this season and $16.2m in 2026–27 by getting rid of him. Cleveland’s luxury tax bill is the league’s largest at $163.7m, a high price to pay for a team that hasn’t made a conference finals appearance in the Donovan Mitchell era. In this trade, the Cavs would save $55.6m on their projected tax bill this season. As for the tax aprons, they would still be over the second apron by $10.9m and would still be over it in 2026-27, but by $1.7m, less than their projected $17.9m. They could dip below it should they trade the expiring deals of Ball ($10m) or Max Strus ($16.6m), who have been injured or ineffective.

The Fit​


Despite the latest reporting about Giannis from Milwaukee’s favorite insider, I’m proceeding as if Giannis will be here long term. Hunter has a proven track record as an efficient shooter and would slide in nicely as the starting small forward. In non-Giannis minutes, the Bucks could play Hunter as a small-ball four next to Bobby Portis or Myles Turner at center. He could also be the secondary perimeter creator Milwaukee has been missing since they traded Khris Middleton away. Hunter’s usage is up to 21% this season (85th), the second-highest of his career. That’s in the same range as rookie Kon Knueppel (21.1%) and Zach LaVine (21.9%). Having another player who is often used to handling the ball can help relieve pressure on Giannis, who has the third-highest usage rate in the league (36.2%). Between the two calf injuries he’s had already, I’m not sure Giannis could sustain his level of play unless part of the load were taken off his shoulders.

Much like some of the other players, Hunter takes a high volume of catch-and-shoot three-pointers. This season, Hunter is averaging 4.0 attempts per game, which ranks 48th out of 208 qualified players. The percentage is down to 32.7% (156th), but he shot 40.7% last season (57th out of 217 qualified players). In this regard, he would be the Bucks’ replacement for what Taurean Prince did for them last year. I’m not saying that Prince is at the same level or better than Hunter, but Prince was a reliable shooter off the catch, hoisting up 3.3 3PA and shooting 49.8%.

Another area he could help the Bucks is in mid-range scoring. Milwaukee sits below league average in mid-range frequency at 29.1%. Bobby Portis has been the lead marksman from the mid-range area, hitting it at a 46% clip and averaging five attempts per game. Behind him are Kevin Porter Jr. (43%, 4.9 FGA), Ryan Rollins (40%, 3.9 FGA), and Kuzma (40%, 3.0 FGA). Giannis’ mid-range shooting has dropped off a cliff since last season. On 7.7 FGA, he was shooting 47%, and now he’s down to 4.0 FGA, converting a measly 28%. Hunter would be a more efficient mid-range shooter than Kuzma, with better on-ball skills to create his own shot. He can break down the defense from the perimeter, unlike BP, who takes mid-range fadeaway jumpers from the post. Even though KPJ can do it, Hunter is more refined in this area.



Do you believe that Hunter can get back on track in Milwaukee, or would you prefer someone else? Let us know in the comments below.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...-hunter-kyle-kuzma-cam-thomas-ziaire-williams
 
Bucks vs. Wizards Player Grades: Turner’s blockfest sullied by Anthony’s horror shooting

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WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 29: Myles Turner #3 of the Milwaukee Bucks looks to pass the ball as Jamir Watkins #5 of the Washington Wizards plays defense during the game on January 29, 2026 at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Milwaukee Bucks got destroyed at the charity stripe against the Washington Wizards (28-9), a key reason for their 109-99 defeat (despite shooting it more frequently and at a better clip). It was really just more of the same from the Bucks; they are one of the league’s worst teams without Giannis. That said, I thought last night was a step down from how they played against the 76ers. Kyshawn George, who recently shared that he thought the Bucks were going to draft him, went off against Milwaukee. 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​

Ryan Rollins​


26 minutes, 17 points, 8 assists, 3 rebounds, 4 steals, 1 turnover, 7/13 FG, 3/5 3P, -3

Ryan was great… when he was on the court. The problem was that he was too aggressive on defence early on and had to sit much of the first half with foul trouble; he has to be better than that and know his importance. That said, his game when he did play was excellent. I mean, Ryan made a number of clutch plays on both ends.

Grade: B+

Myles Turner​


39 minutes, 21 points, 14 rebounds, 6 blocks, 2 turnovers, 8/16 FG, 2/6 3P, +2

Granted, some of Turner’s minutes were played with no opposing centre on the floor—the Wizards’ backup centres Marvin Bagley and Tristan Vukcevic were out—but for him to have six blocks was awesome to see; it shows he’s engaged and has the right mindset. I also loved his rebounding (again, easier in this one than usual, but you still have to grab ‘em).

Grade: A-

AJ Green​


37 minutes, 2 points, 3 assists, 1/6 FG, 0/4 3P, -10

Yeah, I barely remember AJ doing anything positive in this game (other than a nice read off the pick-and-roll in the first quarter). The reality for him as a shooter is that he needs to make shots. He’d been doing that, but not last night. Green’s defence—and specifically his ability to slide his feet—was less effective because there weren’t many good matchups for him.

Grade: D+

Kyle Kuzma​


34 minutes, 19 points, 6 assists, 9 rebounds, 3 turnovers, 8/18 FG, 0/3 3P, –8

While Kuz did have some nice plays towards the end of the game—both from a passing and scoring standpoint, especially in transition—there were just too many instances throughout the game where he was out of control. Missing 10 shots and turning the ball over three times just isn’t good enough.

Grade: C-

Bobby Portis​


36 minutes, 19 points, 3 assists, 7 rebounds, 8/17 FG, 2/5 3P, -21

Man, this was such a weird Bobby game. At points, he was the Bucks’ only source of offence and was actually quite effective with his backdowns. He even had an absolute dime to Pete Nance under the hoop at one point. But the fact that Portis had, by far, the worst plus/minus on the team likely indicates that he did a lot wrong on defence. I mean, the next closest was -10.

Grade: C

Pete Nance​


20 minutes, 13 points, 6 rebounds, 6/10 FG, 1/3 3P, -1

Just another great game from Nance, who actually got a shot last night over Jericho Sims. He put himself in the right spots to be a receiver and a converter once his teammates made the initial play—something he has a knack for.

Grade: A

Gary Trent Jr.​


24 minutes, 3 points, 1/6 FG, 1/5 3P, -1

I mean, GT took the right shots, but he has truly fallen off the map this year. Wow.

Grade: D

Cole Anthony​


17 minutes, 5 points, 1 assist, 2 turnovers, 2/11 FG, 1/6 3P, –9

Cole Anthony. Just the Ultimate tank commander. My guy was throwing up BRICKS.

Grade: F

Doc Rivers​


Hmmmm. The everlasting quandary of weighing Doc’s coaching acumen against the crappy talent level of his team. On one hand, I can’t expect Doc to make chicken salad out of chickenb sh*t, respectfully. On the other hand, let’s not act like he’s some technician who makes all the right calls. He played Nance, not Sims. That’s something. He gave AJax some minutes… didn’t do much. I thought BP was appropriately used on offence against a bunch of smaller wings. Rivers can’t control Rollins getting in foul trouble. But at the end of the day, the team should have been more competitive in the first three quarters against a side that, not so subtly, was playing its deep reserves for a suspiciously long time, I thought. Take what you will from that.

Grade: C-

Limited minutes:
Andre Jackson Jr.

DNP-CD: Amir Coffey, Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Pete nance

Inactive: Giannis Antetokounmpo, Alex Antetokounmpo, Kevin Porter Jr., Taurean Prince

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • The Bucks had at least three flagrant fouls where they got into the shooter’s landing space. Might have been four. That’s just clumsy. One of those came on Wizards rookie Tre Johnson, who left the game and did not return. Postgame, Doc was not happy with the amount the Bucks fouled shooters.
  • Myles had a late block that would have been his seventh of the night. It was clean up top, but there was some incidental lower-body contact, and they called it a foul. The Bucks challenged and lost. Here’s what Doc had to say about that play: “If you start calling the lower body after you block a shot, everybody’s going to be shooting a free throw. To make a call like that at the end of a game, to decide a game, is just absolutely awful.”
  • I wanted to know why in the world this game was nationally televised (I’m sure casual fans were watching this cellar-dweller matchup with high interest). Then I started putting two and two together that it was a night to celebrate John Wall.
  • Interesting that, even when they are ostensibly tanking, the Wizards still aren’t giving a load of minutes to AJ Johnson. He had a DNP last night.
  • Khris was solid, but it feels like they’re limiting his minutes. Maybe that’s good for both parties at this point.

Up Next​


The Bucks have a few days off now before they play in Boston on Sunday afternoon. Catch the game on ESPN and FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin at 2:30 p.m. CST.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...-stats-myles-turner-ryan-rollins-bobby-portis
 
Bucks vs. Celtics Player Grades: Rollins, Kuzma can’t score enough

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Feb 1, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown (7) shoots the ball over Milwaukee Bucks guard Ryan Rollins (13) during the second half at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images | Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images

The Milwaukee Bucks evened the season series to the Boston Celtics by losing this one, 107-79. Ryan Rollins was the main bright spot for the Bucks; his 25 points were a larger share of the Bucks’ total than anyone would have liked. Kyle Kuzma chipped in with 16 and some defense. Meanwhile, 30 points for Jaylen Brown and 27 for Anfernee Simons in a pretty complete performance form the Celtics. 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​

Ryan Rollins​


36 minutes, 25 points, 7 assists, 6 rebounds, 3 turnovers, 10/16 FG, 3/4 3P, -15

Rollins came out hunting buckets and got them in spades. He picked up some turnovers early but was clean the rest of the game. His teammates need to find him more and his whistle needs to catch up to his rising star power. Honestly the main reason I watch this team right now.

Grade: A-

Myles Turner​


26 minutes, 7 points, 4 rebounds, 2 steals, 2 turnovers, 2/8 FG, 1/4 3P, -21

Following Zac’s question from the preview, it seems like the last few games were a mirage. Four shots inside against this Celtics team? Decent rim protection but stickier hands would be appreciated.

Grade: D+

AJ Green​


29 minutes, 3 points, 2 rebounds, 1/5 3P, -27

Rough day at the office. Bad karma to be the first Buck to miss after a 13-3 start.

Grade: D-

Kyle Kuzma​


34 minutes, 16 points, 2 assists, 5 rebounds, 5/13 FG, 2/4 3P, –1

At least someone reached double-digits, even if my notes for a couple of his baskets included the word “somehow” and the efficiency leaves a little to be desired (luckily he got to the line). The team-best non-garbage plus-minus might speak to defense but I was busy watching the offense go nowhere.

Grade: B

Bobby Portis​


37 minutes, 8 points, 12 rebounds, 3 assists, 3 turnovers, 4/13 FG, 0/2 3P, -13

Oh Bobby. 11 of your 13 shots inside the arc, and not just in the paint cleaning up Cole’s misses? The turnovers weren’t great either.

Grade: D

Pete Nance​


18 minutes, 7 points, 4 rebounds, 4 fouls, 3/6 FG, 1/3 3P, -16

Tried his best. The fouls showed some inexperience.

Grade: C-

Gary Trent Jr.​


25 minutes, 9 points, 2/8 FG, 2/7 3P, -18

Just brutal. The two makes were splashed when the outcome was settled. And the one shot inside the arc was a classic fouled drive. It’s Gary at the rim, It’s Gary at the rim, It’s scary, It’s scary, It’s Gary at the rim!

Grade: F

Cole Anthony​


15 minutes, 2 points, 3 assists, 2 turnovers, 1/6 FG, 0/2 3P, –16

Yeah.

Grade: D-

Doc Rivers​


Just another game of Bucks basketball under Doc Rivers. No screaming errors to me. I was surprised at the space that Milwaukee gave Boston from deep—not that it really hurt them—but maybe that’s just upholding tradition. I don’t have numbers on this, but it doesn’t feel like this was the first time that the Bucks came out hot before they pretty much fell apart. I didn’t see errors, but I didn’t see key in-game adjustments either. Maybe that’s upholding tradition too.

Grade: C-

Limited minutes: Andre Jackson Jr., Amir Coffey, Jericho Sims, Thanasis Antetokounmpo

Inactive: Giannis Antetokounmpo, Kevin Porter Jr., Taurean Prince

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • It was the inaugural NBA Pioneers Classic, honoring the first Black players in the NBA. It turns out that Bobby Portis played one of them in a movie. Fun! It also turns out that a trophy was up for grabs. Not quite.
  • The five first-quarter turnovers weren’t a harbinger of things to come; only five more the rest of the way.
  • The Bucks tried to run in transition a bit in the first quarter, but nothing doing; outscored 11-1 in that department.
  • The net cam during free throws could be improved so that court language doesn’t awkwardly hover over the players. Just to be the squeaky wheel.
  • Doc Rivers got a shout-out from Bill Russell’s daughter. That’s something, at least!
  • Wesley Matthews vouched for a “case study” to determine who would find basketball interesting if it only consisted of free throws. I think you’re looking for a different social scientific methodology, friend.
  • Lisa described a kid who breakdanced at halftime and timeouts as “one of the best parts of the afternoon.” Too true, Lisa.
  • The Bucks may not have scored the ball, but at least their top three scorers put up 25 (Rollins), 16 (Kuzma), and 9 (GTJ). What’s so special about that, you ask? Pythagorean’s theorem, baby: 3^2 + 4^2 = 5^2.

Up Next​


The Bucks return home for a three-game stretch starting Tuesday against the Bulls. Catch the game on FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin at 7:00 p.m. CST.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...s-player-grades-stats-ryan-rollins-kyle-kuzma
 
Ranking the Bucks’ assets at the 2026 NBA Trade Deadline

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INDIANAPOLIS, IN - APRIL 22: Bobby Portis #9 and Kyle Kuzma #18 of the Milwaukee Bucks play defense during the game against the Indiana Pacers during Round 1 Game 2 of the 2025 NBA Playoffs on April 22, 2025 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Jeff Haynes/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Acknowledging the 6’11” Greek elephant in the room that may or may not be addressed this week, with just over three days remaining until the 2026 NBA trade deadline, Bucks GM Jon Horst has other decisions to make up and down the roster. Before Giannis’ most recent calf injury, we were operating under the assumption that the Bucks would be buyers, putting together a series of trade targets. They still might buy, despite the attractive path of tanking for a higher first-round pick in the 2026 NBA draft. There’s even a way you can do both: look at the Raptors this time a year ago. They acquired an injured Brandon Ingram—their current leading scorer—last February at 16-36, then picked ninth last June. Now they’re tied for fourth in the East.

So if Giannis remains a Buck moving forward, what does Horst have to work with? How can he get the Bucks back to relevance next season? Let’s take stock of what’s in his cupboard, which—unlike what national sources continue to say—is far from bare. One note: AJ Green is ineligible to be traded this season because he signed an extension on October 17, and no player may be dealt within six months of extending.

1–2. 2031–32 first-round picks​


If Giannis remains in Milwaukee, these draft picks would be made when he is 36 and 37. Even if he doesn’t, it looks doubtful they’ll be contenders then. Put simply, these are two of the most valuable future firsts any team can trade, and as such, two of the most valuable assets in the league. Perhaps partially for that reason, Horst has reportedly been loath to include them in any trade and would only do so in a trade for a bona fide star. Whether that type of player is available at this deadline is debatable, but I tend to think there is not, outside of Brooklyn’s Michael Porter Jr.

3. Ryan Rollins​


Probably the only silver lining to this disappointing season has been Rollins’ development. While he cooled off a bit in mid-January, the 23-year-old is now back on track and likely to receive some Most Improved Player votes. The three-year, $12m contract he signed last offseason is very team-friendly for 16.5 PPG, 5.5 APG, 4.6 RPG, and 1.6 SPG on .466/.403/.755 shooting. That final year is a player option, and if this keeps up, he’ll opt out and hope to secure a much larger deal in free agency, if an extension doesn’t occur first. The only downside is that his lower salary doesn’t allow much in the way of salary matching. But make no mistake, he’s the Bucks’ best young guy, and an offer for any All-NBA type of player would probably have to include him.

4–5. 2031–32 first-round pick swaps​


If either first in those years is traded, the only way the Bucks could deal the other would be as a swap, where the acquiring team could move up to the Bucks’ position if they so choose. Depending on how good that team feels they’ll be in those seasons, a swap could bump them up into the lottery or higher, so there’s plenty of appeal here.

6. Bobby Portis​


Portis ranks sixth leaguewide in three-point percentage, and his other numbers are largely in line with recent seasons. He turns 31 on February 10 and is in the first season of a three-year, $43.6m contract, which also has a player option in 2027–28. It might be too early to tell if he’ll pick up the final year at $15.6m, but it wouldn’t be wrong to treat him as a $14.5m expiring salary next year. All in all, a good salary-matching piece and a player who would help a lot of contenders with scoring punch off their bench. On his own, he would probably fetch a couple second-rounders.

7. Kevin Porter Jr.​


Out indefinitely with an oblique injury, KPJ was trending down big time before getting hurt. But prior to that, he was putting together a solid season, averaging over seven assists per game with decent—if inefficient—scoring, despite occasional turnover problems. He can opt out of the $5.4m remaining on his two-year, $10.5m contract and, even with an injury-marred campaign, probably will in hopes of a multi-year contract. The Bucks, or any acquiring team, will have his Early Bird rights, which means they can offer him a new deal of up to four years with a starting salary of up to $14.6m. That flexibility for a 25-year-old point guard who proved this past year he still belongs in the NBA could be attractive to some teams.

8. Myles Turner​


While Turner is obviously the best player mentioned in this list so far, being in the first year of a four-year deal tamps down his value. Yes, his $25.3m salary would be great for matching, but he’ll have two further years plus a $29.1m player option in 2028–29. He’s still 29, and though his stats are closer to his pre-Tyrese Haliburton campaigns in Indy, it’s still a reasonable price for a quality starting center. I just think teams would rather not have that long-term money on their books.

9. Kyle Kuzma​


Kuzma becomes an expiring salary next year without sort of option, but his salary drops from $22.4m now to $20.3m in 2026–27. More commensurate with his level of production and cheaper, which would be more palatable for a new team, but less helpful for salary-matching. By himself, Kuz would need draft assets attached to be moved, but combined with Portis, they could bring back up to $45.1m in return. After July, that figure drops to $43.8m.

10. Gary Harris​


None of us expected Harris to be the better Gary this season, but here we are. He’s 31 and has a $3.8m player option next year, which is about $85k less than he’d make on a new minimum contract, so he might opt out. He and Trent both make about the same amount—$3.6m could come in handy, and he’d be a quality piece on a contender’s bench. Seems more likely to be a throw-in than someone who would get value on his own. Maybe a future second or a borderline NBA player.

11. Gary Trent Jr.​


After a very effective first year in Milwaukee, GTJ’s next contract last summer seemed to be setting him up for a more lucrative, multiyear deal this summer. Trent will also have Early Bird rights come July if he declines his $3.9m player option, so another team could give him the same contract terms we laid out for KPJ, just as the Bucks could. But Trent has taken a sizeable step back in year two, and a vet minimum deal in free agency—if he opts out—would be about $300k less than that option, and he might not value a change of scenery at that much of a pay cut. Perhaps a team sees a fit in their rotation, though, and would send Milwaukee a second or deep bench player in hopes that he works out.

12. Utah’s 2026 top-55 protected second-round pick​


Believe it or not, Milwaukee does have one future second they can trade. It’s just not a good one. The Spurs will receive the Jazz’s second-rounder in June if it falls between 31–55; Milwaukee will get it should it come after 56. Utah is sixth in the lottery standings right now, so there’s zero chance they’d move back enough to one of the league’s best five records. That means the Bucks, or whoever possesses this asset, won’t be getting this pick. It’s almost worthless, but you have to send something out in a trade, even if it’s for a marginal asset in return. This might be enough to get the Bucks a back-of-rotation guy.

13. Andre Jackson Jr.​


The main reason Jackson is so high on this list is that other teams might still see untapped potential here, unlike the guys below, who have hit their ceilings as players. He’s also the lowest-paid Buck, about $75k cheaper than the league’s veteran minimum salary. For a luxury tax-conscious team, Ajax makes more sense than the average vet.

14. Taurean Prince​


Prince seems all but certain not to play this year after neck surgery, and he might decide to opt in for $3.8m next year. His $3.3m this year functions the same as Harris’ salary: maybe just enough to get a deal over the line. But teams probably don’t want a 32-year-old coming off a major injury on their 2027–28 roster, and would sooner take Harris or Trent.

15. Cole Anthony​


As putrid as Anthony has been most of the season, he’s still an NBA player (for now, at least) thanks to his track record. He could still get another minimum contract in free agency this summer, and since he’s also on one this year, any team could acquire him. He’s just not worth much of anything.

16. Jericho Sims​


I’m not confident Sims is an NBA player, however. He hasn’t been good this year, hasn’t really shown any development as a player, and is 27. Plenty of great athletes wash out of the league if they don’t show any plus skills, which seems like the route he’s headed. With a $2.8m player option decision this summer, he probably knows he’d have to settle for a non-guaranteed contract to remain in the Association next season and will exercise that option. He’s really cheap, but teams probably won’t want to use a roster spot on him.

17. Amir Coffey​


I guess the only reason Coffey’s salary became guaranteed in early January was to use him as a trade chip, because he still barely plays. Might be a throw-in if they need his contract to make the trade legal, but seems likely to be cut no matter where he is after the deadline.

18. Pete Nance​


Two-way contracts can be traded (we see this once or twice annually); they just count for $0 in outgoing salary. Nance has had some good games recently, but he’s in his final year of two-way eligibility, and he probably won’t get a standard contract elsewhere. I’d be surprised if he has any trade value.

19. Thanasis Antetokounmpo​


There’s only one reason a team would want Thanasis: if they were also getting his younger brother.

20. Alex Antetokoummpo​


This is not the brother I was referring to, but otherwise same rationale as Thanasis, plus the two-way stuff from Nance’s paragraph.



Am I off with any of these? It was hard to decide exactly where that 2026 Utah second should go, and how to order all the minimum guys. But we’re splitting hairs; everyone knows Milwaukee’s most valuable assets. Where does Rollins fit in among the draft picks? How would you order the 2031 and 2032 firsts? Curious to hear your thoughts.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...-rollins-bobby-portis-kyle-kuzma-myles-turner
 
Rapid Recap: Celtics 107, Bucks 79

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Feb 1, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown (7) controls the ball while Milwaukee Bucks guard Ryan Rollins (13) defends during the second half at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images | Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images

Milwaukee Bucks lost handily to the Boston Celtics due to a non-existent offense, 107-79. Ryan Rollins led the visitors with 25 points, six rebounds, and seven assists, while Jaylen Brown heated up to the tune of 30 points and 13 boards.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap


The Bucks started hot, scoring the first 12 points of the game. Ryan Rollins was the standout (he would have 12 points in the first quarter alone) alongside some buckets from Kyle Kuzma. But the Celtics would claw back, starting with back-to-back threes from Derrick White. For all his scoring, Rollins was also responsible for several turnovers. And although Boston didn’t take advantage early, Milwaukee was giving them too much space from deep (in part due to going under on screens). Anfernee Simons took advantage with three threes near the end of the frame to tie things up at 26.

The Celtics nursed a small lead for most of the second quarter, finding success inside with Myles Turner on the bench. Jordan Walsh was doing major work on the offensive glass (alongside his teammates) and helped limit Rollins after his strong start. For the road team… Pete Nance drained a couple buckets? Milwaukee was nearly doubled up in the frame and Boston finished on a nine-point run featuring White for their highest lead of the game, 56-42. The Bucks shot better but didn’t get it done on the margins.

Boston came out hitting several middies, prompting a Doc Rivers timeout. Jaylen Brown continued to shoot lights out, prompting ANOTHER timeout with over nine minutes still on the clock and the Bucks down 21. Neemias Queta had some nice moments on both ends, including a monster block. The teams then traded several-minute cold spells from the field, first the Bucks (partly because they were finally getting to the line) and then the Celtics, which enabled a nine-point Bucks run to bring them within 13. They’d muddle to the end of the quarter, though. Rollins found the basket again but (rightfully) complained about his whistle to earn a technical foul. 78-61 after three.

More strong play from various Celtics to start the final quarter. A 12-2 run built up a 23-point lead. The Bucks (feat. Kuz) would make it a little more respectable, but the deficit remained lofty. Some iffy moments led to Doc finally waving the white flag with five minutes remaining.

Stat That Stood Out


Milwaukee Bucks not named Ryan Rollins scored a grand total of 54 points. With honorable mention to Kyle Kuzma (16 points), not enough guys put the ball in the hoop.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...s-final-score-recap-ryan-rollins-jaylen-brown
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Boston Celtics Preview & Game Thread: Inverted expectations

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MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - DECEMBER 11: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics shoots over Myles Turner #3 of the Milwaukee Bucks during the second half at Fiserv Forum on December 11, 2025 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by John Fisher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Prior to the season, we expected the Milwaukee Bucks to make the playoffs and maybe even win a round, while the Boston Celtics were anticipating a gap year following Jayson Tatum’s Achilles injury—our friends over at Celtics Blog even said as much. How wrong we were. After another loss to the Washington Generals Wizards, the Bucks are now 12th in the East at 18-28, while the Celtics are sitting pretty at 30-18, tied with the New York Knicks for second place. Trending in opposite directions—but the Bucks holding a 1-0 season lead—the sides take to TD Garden this afternoon for the inaugural NBA Pioneers Classic, which recognises the start of Black History Month and honours the legacy of NBA Pioneers Chuck Cooper, Nathaniel “Sweetwater” Clifton, and Earl Lloyd, the league’s first Black players.

Where We’re At​


As you are well aware, the Bucks are the talk of the NBA for all the wrong reasons, with trade rumours galore dominating conversation. On the court, the Bucks continue to free fall, losing four in a row and eight of their last 10. It’s not all doom and gloom, though. Myles Turner is in the midst of his best stretch as a Buck (more on that below), Bobby Portis has found a new wrinkle with his passing, and Pete Nance is making a case that he’s more than just a two-way player. And, at this point, it seems losing games isn’t so bad after all, with 85% of fans agreeing that the Bucks should try and get a high draft pick.

Boston, on the other hand, continues its Cinderella season. Winners of three of their last five, the Celtics have defied the odds this season and are a legitimate threat in the Eastern Conference, even if there are some cracks in the armour. Jaylen Brown continues to lead the Celtics and was recently named All-Star starter for his efforts—the first time in his career he’s received that honour. Payton Pritchard has also been in red-hot form, putting up 21.2 PPG and 4.4 APG (shooting .545/.500/.714) over his last five. But that should come as no surprise for someone who’s the most efficient isolation scorer in the league. Yet, it’s his ability to score and create without turning the ball over that’s most impressive. On the season, Pritchard has an absurd 248 assists to just 52 turnovers, crediting his offensive mastery to his roots as a quarterback. Needless to say, the Bucks could learn a few things.

Injury Report​


For the Bucks, Giannis (calf), Taurean Prince (neck), and Kevin Porter Jr. (oblique) all remain out, while Gary Harris is listed as probable (hamstring soreness).

For the Celtics, it’s a clean bill of health besides Jayson Tatum (Achilles) and the G-Leaguers, with Amari Williams listed as questionable.

Player To Watch​


Over the past three games, Myles Turner has had his season-high in points (31, vs. Philadelphia), rebounds (14, vs. Washington), and blocks (6, vs. Denver and Washington). In this stretch, he’s averaging 23.0 PPG, 8.3 RPG, 2.0 APG, and 4.7 BPG, while shooting .568/.389/.923—the sort of output we dreamed he would offer when signed in the offseason and nearly twice as good as he’s been for the year. Digging deeper, though, there’s not as much change as there appears. Turner’s rebound percentage in this stretch (10.5%) is much the same as it has been for the season (9.4%), and his usage (21.5%) is only marginally increased from the 18.1% he’s had as a Buck (albeit much closer to the 20.7-23.4% he had with the Pacers over the last three years). What has changed, however, is his block percentage, going from 5.6% on the season to an otherworldly (and completely unsustainable) 12.1%. Moreover, his true shooting percentage has spiked from just 59% on the season to 69% over the last three. In large part, this can be attributed to Turner’s improved finishing inside, where he’s shot 88% from within five feet (compared to just 64% on the year). Not only has he been converting more from this range lately, he’s also attempting more (5.7 attempts per game, up from a measly 2.1). So, has Turner turned the corner and finally found his interior groove with the Bucks, is it that he’s getting more opportunities without Giannis dominating the interior, is Doc Rivers finally utilising him beyond floor spacer, or is this just a flash-in-the-pan hot stretch? Considering he put up just four points and three rebounds against the Celtics in their only other meeting this year, this afternoon’s game should provide at least some answers to these questions.

How To Watch​


ESPN and FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin at 2:30 p.m. CST.


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...scussion-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Rapid Recap: Bucks 131, Bulls 115

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MILWAUKEE, WI - FEBRUARY 3: Matas Buzelis #14 of Chicago Bulls passes the ball during the game against the Milwaukee Bucks on February 3, 2026 at Fiserv Forum Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images). | NBAE via Getty Images

The Milwaukee Bucks started their three-game homestand with a blowout win over the Chicago Bulls. It stops the bleeding a little bit, after the Bucks had lost five in a row. Kyle Kuzma tied a season high with 31 points on 12/22 shooting, while Ryan Rollins finished with a 21-point, 10-assist double-double. Second-year forward Matas Buzelis led the Bulls offense with 22 points on 5/10 shooting from three-point range.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


With nine rotational players out tonight on both sides (for various reasons), they each needed someone to step up. After Kuzma got the Bucks started with the first four points, AJ Green found his rhythm from distance. Green’s back-to-back threes helped extend Milwaukee’s lead to nine points after Kuzma laid it in, forcing a timeout from Chicago. That didn’t slow down the Bucks, finishing the quarter on a 10-4 run. That gave the Bucks their largest advantage, 39-24, heading into the second quarter.

Already up by double-digits, Milwaukee continued to pour it on a short-handed Chicago squad. They hit their first two shots from beyond the arc, making it eight consecutive makes from three-point range going back to Ryan Rollins’ three in the first. For once, the Bucks were the team ahead by 20+ points, after Myles Turner hit a couple of free throws. Turner and Rollins took turns scoring on the Bulls, with the pair going for 10 straight points. Green punctuated an explosive first half for Milwaukee’s offense, putting up 77 points while Chicago limped into the locker room with 52.

The Bulls got out to a fast start in the second half, going on a 10-2 run. After a timeout from Doc Rivers, the Bucks settled in thanks to Kuzma, scoring two straight buckets for Milwaukee. Yet, the Bucks we’ve come to expect this season reared their ugly heads once again. Chicago went on a 15-4 run, cutting Milwaukee’s lead from 19 to just eight. The Bucks were able to close out the frame on a 9-3 run, thanks in part to the two-man game of Cole Anthony and Pete Nance. The run gave Milwaukee a 16-point lead going into the fourth, 105-89.

The Bucks continued to cash in from three-point range. Three of their first four makes in the stanza were from beyond the arc, including two from Kuzma. The early barrage put them back up by 22, forcing Billy Donovan to call a timeout. From there, the Bucks were able to put the game into Kuz-control, as they ended their five-game losing streak.

Stat That Stood Out​


The Bucks’ three-point shooting was exceptional tonight. After a rough outing from distance against the Celtics on Sunday, they shot it efficiently against the Bulls. On the night, Milwaukee went 20/38 (60.5%), with Trent tying a season high in three-point makes with five.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...e-recap-kyle-kuzma-ryan-rollins-matas-buzelis
 
The case for a (qualified) Bucks tank

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MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - JANUARY 23: Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks sustained an apparent injury on the bench during the fourth quarter against the Denver Nuggets at Fiserv Forum on January 23, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This season has been a miserable one for the Bucks, whose record will only get worse now that Giannis is out for an extended period (again). Simply put, they are a bad team that, for the first time in a long time, sits at the lunch table with the NBA’s bottom-feeders as opposed to its contenders. I don’t need to go through the reasons why—we all know them by now: team has a major talent deficit, coaching is among the worst in the league, yada, yada, yada. The question is this: what should the Bucks be hoping to gain from this season at this point? As I’ll explain, they have the option to tank with somewhat minimal downside—a unique quirk of this season. Alternatively, the Bucks could do what they’ve always done and make moves to improve the roster and compete until the bitter end.

To compete or to tank​


For me, the place to start this conversation is to evaluate the incentives for each option. Look, I think there’s at least a chance that this team could make the play-in tournament, even with Giannis playing just the final portion of the season. I wouldn’t say it’s very likely, but it’s possible. From that point, there’s no telling what the eternal play-in trio of Atlanta, Chicago, and Miami will serve up. With Antetokounmpo, I’d give the Bucks as good a chance as any to at least win the first play-in game. Maybe they’d sneak into the playoffs. Maybe they’d win a game over the Pistons, Celtics, or Knicks. But I think it’s fair to say that they’d lose the series in a noncompetitive fashion. Now, I suppose there is some level of incentive for this path—both from a playing perspective and the org’s bottom line—but neither of which I see as anywhere near important enough to override the upside of the alternate route.

Put simply, there is a significant incentive to what I would call a “qualified tank” for the rest of the season. I added the word “qualified” because Milwaukee must still keep an eye on New Orleans. The Bucks own the least favourable of their own first-round pick and the Pelicans’ pick in this year’s draft. It’s easy to assume New Orleans won’t win much this season and will stay at the bottom of the standings. I guess it’s relatively likely that it ends up that way. Still, we should remember that 1. the Pelicans have no incentive to tank, while the teams around them do (and what do you think will happen when these teams play each other?), and 2. they actually have a pretty talented roster when healthy. This is why it’s not necessarily smart for Milwaukee to try to tank every game indiscriminately.

Ideally, the Bucks lose at the same rate the Pelicans lose, and win at the same rate they win (unless it’s the very end of the season and there’s a situation in which the Bucks can move up the draft odds order by losing, but the Pelicans cannot move down by winning). But let’s be honest, it’s also completely unrealistic to think the front office could hatch a plan in which they dictate who plays from night to night based on whether the team needs a win or a loss. I get that this strategy is somewhat typical for younger teams (that also generally don’t have to worry about swap obligations), but probably not for a veteran-laden squad like Milwaukee.

My take on the situation is that the Bucks, especially without Giannis, are very bad and will lose a lot of games without needing lineup manipulation. They’ll win the odd game too, which will probably be a good thing, because the Pelicans won’t go winless the rest of the way. From there, it’s simply out of Milwaukee’s hands. All Bucks fans can do is 1. hope New Orleans loses as much as possible, and 2. hope the other bottom-feeders win, though they will be increasingly trying not to as the season draws to a close. As I’ll get into, this is the ultimate foil for any “disaster” the Bucks could run into vis-a-vis the draft.

On a broader level, though, the Bucks need as high a pick as possible, so this dance is a necessary one. I want to remind folks of Milwaukee’s daunting first-round pick outlook moving forward. Should everything stay as is (which, it must be noted, could change), the Bucks will likely not have the opportunity to control their own destiny regarding their pick until 2031. Why? Because they don’t own their pick next year, and Portland either owns their pick or has swap rights in the three years after that. If you ask me, the Blazers are likely to be better than the Bucks by that point and thus swapping for Milwaukee’s more favourable picks.

However, as I mentioned, this year’s pick swap is with New Orleans, which is obviously worse than Milwaukee (right now, at least). Sidenote: the Pelicans’ pick is owned by the Hawks, but I hesitate to even mention this because it just confuses people; the only thing fans need to know is that it is New Orleans’ and Milwaukee’s picks in the swap. Anyway, assuming the Pelicans remain a bottom-feeder, the Bucks are likely to retain their own pick since they will probably finish a good number of spots above New Orleans in the standings.

That said, even if Milwaukee finishes with a similar record to New Orleans (at the bottom, crucially), the situation could still turn out fine for Milwaukee—and actually has higher-reward outcomes than the scenario above. Sure, the Bucks would have a much higher chance of their pick being swapped, but both their and the Pelicans’ pick will have a high floor to fall back on. For example, let’s assume just for argument’s sake that the Bucks end up with the third-worst odds and the Pelicans end up with the second-worst. Both of those picks would have a floor of seventh.

Alternatively, let’s lay out a scenario in which the Bucks end up with the ninth-worst odds and the Pels end up with the second-worst, but Milwaukee’s pick somehow jumps above New Orleans’ pick to number one (see Cooper Flagg). The Bucks would give it away, which wouldn’t be great. However, the Pelicans’ pick would have a floor of sixth. Of course, the disaster scenario is that by the end of the season, the Bucks and the Pelicans have somehow swapped spots with roughly where each team currently sits. Milwaukee could give up a top-three pick and only get swapped one seventh or after. Fingers crossed that does not happen.

About the 2026 NBA Draft​


So now that I’ve gone through the incentive to tank (again, provided the Pels are also bad) from a long-term team-building POV, let’s get more specific and discuss the strength of the 2026 draft itself. Obviously, no two drafts are the same. The no. 1 pick in one draft does not hold the same value as the no. 1 pick in another draft. I mean, just compare Cooper Flagg to Zaccharie Risacher (all due respect). Notably for the Bucks, this upcoming draft is loaded, per all the experts. There are three bona fide contenders for the top pick—Darryn Peterson, Cameron Boozer, and AJ Dybantsa—but the talent remains exceptional all through the lottery, first round, and heck, even second round.

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From SB Nation’s Ricky O’Donnell’s recent mock draft:

The 2026 NBA Draft was always destined to trigger a massive tanking race. This class clearly had three potential No. 1 overall picks from the very start of the process, and all three are living up to the hype to start their one-and-done college seasons.”

“The depth of this freshman class has also impressed, with North Carolina forward Caleb Wilson dominating on both ends with his high-motor, breakneck style, and Houston point guard Kingston Flemings emerging as a legit top-5 pick in his own right as the biggest surprise of the year so far.

“It isn’t just freshmen that make this draft class special. A group of upperclassmen led by Michigan’s Yaxel Lendeborg, Iowa State’s Joshua Jefferson, Iowa’s Bennett Stirtz, and Florida’s Thomas Haugh are proving that staying in college for a few years won’t kill your draft stock in the NIL era.

With that in mind, it seems clear that the incentives behind a tank are a lot more intriguing than Ryan Rollins getting playoff reps, rich owners getting richer, and the Bucks getting a pick in the mid-teens. I believe that moving forward, whether Giannis is in the picture or not, it’s a no-brainer to get as high a pick as possible in this draft and leave this season with the best possible asset. That player can slot in as a core building block for a team with the very few of those.

Final thoughts…​


Other than the obvious concern that the Pelicans go on a winning streak, the only other part of a “tanking” plan I worry about is whether Jon Horst will actually commit to it. I don’t expect him to change much about how the team operates, including lineup manipulation (other than holding Giannis out for the rest of the season, which I absolutely think the Bucks should do for several reasons). What I do worry about, though, is Horst trying to improve the team with a trade for some reason that gets them, like, five more wins than they needed. He’s only acted aggressively in the Giannis era. Is he capable of switching speeds and recognising the golden (but admittedly complicated) opportunity in front of him?

Finally, just a note on tanking in and of itself. Look, I admit that after hoping for this team to win every game for so long, as all fans did, it brings me no joy to now be “cheering” for the opposite result (most of the time). Tanking is tough for both teams and their fans. By the same token, finishing high in the lottery is the easiest way to acquire elite talent, which is what allows you to win in this league, especially in a small market like Milwaukee. Just about every team has tanked it or will tank in the future. I’m not here to get into the whole “is tanking bad for the league?” conversation; that’s a topic that’s been covered extensively at this point. I would just say that until the NBA changes the tanking incentives—which, to be clear, I don’t think it should—teams are going to operate with those incentives top of mind. Don’t hate the player, hate the game.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...-nba-draft-atlanta-hawks-new-orleans-pelicans
 
Rapid Recap: Bucks 141, Pelicans 137

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Feb 4, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; New Orleans Pelicans forward Zion Williamson (1) drives for the basket against Milwaukee Bucks forward Kyle Kuzma (18) during the first quarter at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images | Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images

It wasn’t easy, but the Milwaukee Bucks picked up their second win of the week, taking down the New Orleans Pelicans in a nail biter. The win indirectly improves the Bucks’ chances of keeping their pick, separating themselves from each other by nine games in the lottery standings. Ryan Rollins led the Bucks offense with 27 points, four assists, and four rebounds. Trey Murphy led all players with 44 points on an incredible 12/19 shooting from three-point range.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


After another 20+ point performance last night against the Bulls, Rollins got into a rhythm on offense early. He scored the first five points for Milwaukee, but through four minutes, he was the only Buck to put the ball in the basket, as they trailed by six. The deficit grew to eight before Amir Coffey finally hit a three, sparking a 7-0 run from the Bucks. Milwaukee was able to stay in striking distance of New Orleans thanks to Coffey, who finished with nine points on a perfect 4/4 shooting. A corner three from Pete Nance off an assist from Coffey cut the Pelicans lead down to four, 34-30, heading into the second quarter.

After going 4/9 from three-point distance in the first, Milwaukee started 3/6 from deep. Gary Trent Jr. picked up where he left off from yesterday, as he nailed two of them. Despite the Bucks’ shooting prowess, the Pelicans matched them. Jose Alvarado hit three shots from range, keeping New Orleans ahead of Milwaukee. The Pelicans took their largest advantage of the night at nine, thanks to a 8-2 run. After the Bucks cut the lead down to four, Trey Murphy connected on three straight buckets from distance. The third came with three seconds left, sending the Pelicans to the locker room up by seven, 70-63.

Milwaukee came out of the gates swinging, going on a 10-5 opening run to cut the lead down to two points. Murphy continued to shoot the ball with authority, dropping in two more threes. Zion Williamson started to put his stamp on the game, scoring five straight points including a fast break dunk to put New Orleans back up by six. The Bucks were able to draw even, after KPJ slammed home a dunk. Milwaukee did have a chance to take the lead on the ensuing possession, but a turnover from Porter led to a Micah Peavy fast break dunk. The Pels’ three-point shooting continued to give the Bucks problems, as Jeremiah Fears hit back-to-back threes. AJ Green responded with a three of his own at the buzzer, cutting the deficit down to five, 104-99.

The Bucks finally took the lead in the fourth, thanks to an 8-0 run inside the first three minutes. Trent’s third three put Milwaukee up by six, leading to an immediate timeout from James Borrego. Murphy dragged the Pels back into the game, drilling three straight from beyond the arc to cut the Bucks’ lead down to just three points. Murphy’s 12th three of the game tied the game with 90 seconds on the clock, and NOLA re-took the lead after Williamson buried two free throws. A dunk from KPJ tied the game back up, and after Kyle Kuzma drew a charge, Milwaukee had a chance to take the lead back with 11.1 seconds to go. With two seconds on the shot clock, Myles Turner drilled what was thought to be a go-ahead corner three. Official review determined that his left foot was out of bounds when he caught the ball, giving the Pelicans a chance to win with 7.7 seconds left. The Bucks got the initial stop with 1.1 seconds left, but Kuzma threw the ball out of bounds, giving New Orleans the ball underneath the Bucks’ basket. Murphy had a contested look at the rim and missed, sending the game into overtime.

Milwaukee scored a quick five points in the opening minute of overtime. Green converted a heavily contested three, pushing their advantage to six, but Herb Jones responded with a three for the Pelicans with 2:14 left. The Bucks clung to a one-point advantage after Williamson converted a couple of free throws with 95 seconds left. Green turned the ball over with 31.6 left, but Murphy’s long three missed, and Rollins was able to secure the rebound. Yet, he couldn’t put the Bucks up by three, going just ½ from the line. NOLA had a chance to tie or win the game, but Williamson committed an offensive foul, giving the ball back to Milwaukee. KPJ’s two free throws with 5.2 seconds put Milwaukee up four, essentially icing the game.

Stat That Stood Out​


It was a full team effort out of the Bucks tonight, and that was reflected in the box score. When it was all said and done, Milwaukee had seven players finish in double figures. Only two players who played more than 10 minutes didn’t reach that mark, with Kuzma scoring seven points and Jericho Sims putting up eight.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...ecap-ryan-rollins-kevin-porter-jr-trey-murphy
 
Giannis wants to retire a Buck, also wants to contend

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MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - FEBRUARY 03: Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 and AJ Green #20 of the Milwaukee Bucks sit on the bench during the second quarter against the Chicago Bulls at Fiserv Forum on February 03, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In a pregame interview with the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel’s Jim Owczarski before last night’s 131-115 win over the Chicago Bulls—snapping a five-game losing streak—Giannis spoke candidly about where his head was at as the trade deadline looms. Following some banter, Owczarski posed the two-time MVP a serious question: what do you want?

“You know,” he said. “What I want deep down in my heart is I want to be a Milwaukee Buck for the rest of my career and win here.” Giannis then went into his legacy with the Bucks:

“This is probably going to be the best story. In 20 years, they’re going to be talking about this story right here.

“I came here when I was 18. A human being, when is the time they have their earliest memories? Around the age of what, four, five, right? So from five to 18 is 13 years. From the time I could remember. I came here from 18 to 31, which is 13 years. I’ve spent more time in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, than in my country.

“I’ve created more memories in this city than in my country. The only memory I knew from my country is sell stuff in the street, go to practice, live in fear, protect my brothers as much as I can and be a good kid, be a kind kid.

“So here, I’ll tell you what I’ve known here. I’ve known what it is to be an NBA player, what it is to make it to the NBA. I’ve learned what it is to be an All-Star player. I’ve learned how to be a champion. I’ve learned how to be an MVP. I’ve learned how to be a father. I got married in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. And also, legally, from the courthouse. And also, I’ve had my kids here. My father is buried here.

“So people have the audacity to come tell me and say ‘this guy really doesn’t love Milwaukee.’ I don’t love Milwaukee? Not the people that know. The people of the city know how much I love them. This city has let me be myself, let me be father, have let me [be] a husband, have let me be my own, true, self.”

Giannis then addressed the elephant in the room: his future with the team. Rival teams are trying to trade for Antetokounmpo—either by the deadline or this offseason—and by all reports, the Bucks front office is now listening. Asked if he is in on these conversations, Giannis replied flatly, “Zero. Zero. I’m not.”

Of course, the reason the front office is listening to these offers—something they had not done at any other point in GA’s career—is because of the team’s record and standing in the Eastern Conference playoff picture. Now 31 years old, Giannis wants to contend, but can GM Jon Horst and his team make that a reality anymore? Antetokounmpo acknowledged that a playoff appearance this season is unlikely but insisted he hasn’t lost faith in Horst’s ability to build a contender around him:

“I always listen. That’s why I’m still here. I always listen and trust. But what I’m trying to say, how many chances do I have left to win a championship? So, you just gotta [be] more careful and more urgent in every decision that you make moving forward. It doesn’t change. I think I’ve listened since day one and that will never change. I have great respect, love and likeness for Jon and the ownership and that will never be different. Won’t change. But at the end of the day… you gotta look.”

He revealed what he wants most of all for Milwaukee, also acknowledging that ownership has to be aligned with him:

“They let me be myself in this city. And I ask for one thing. One. Thing. Only. To make, bring joy back. To. This. City. Because this city deserves it. We’ve been at the top, and I know we can have down years, but we have to continue to have the mindset. Period. OK. And if that’s not the case, then…”

Giannis expounded in clearer terms:

“I know what my goal is. I don’t know what their goal [is]. I know that I talk to them but I don’t think that it’s fair that to share the conversations that I talk with them. They haven’t come to the game recently; we haven’t been so good. So they’re probably upset. I bet you can, like, talk to them. Ask them, what’s your goal? What do you want to do? They might want to reveal. They might even want to… sell. They might want to do some other things. Maybe, I don’t know.

“I’ve seen the love of the people and what they wish for me. If it’s not the case, and people have different agendas within our own team, something gotta change. That’s all.”

Asked whether the recent past—the uber-successful regular seasons, the win-now trades for Jrue Holiday and Damian Lillard—shows that the team can get back to that place, Giannis was noncommittal:

“You cannot say. I’ve always been, always, always, this is the NBA, I love watching it, I always make hypothetical scenarios. What if I play with LeBron [James]? What if I play with [Kevin Durant]? What if play with [Michael] Jordan? What if I play with Kobe [Bryant]? Everybody makes hypothetical (sic) scenarios. What if you could get, blah blah blah. But at the end of the day, you have to commit somewhere, right? You have to commit somewhere. And I think for 13 years I’ve committed here more than anybody, any player, ever committed.

“If that is not possible to happen, and if then you realize maybe that’s not the case and maybe they’re looking elsewhere and that’s not what they’re trying to do, then automatically you have to be in the plans of what they’re trying to do or weigh the other options. It’s normal.”

Giannis also revealed that he returned too quickly from the first calf strain on December 3rd, only to reinjure it on January 23rd in the final seconds of Milwaukee’s near-comeback against the Nuggets. He said the team told him to exit the game in the first quarter:

“I play because I bleed green. I play because I know what I’ve built here. For me, it’s a huge puzzle. It’s a huge Lego piece that I’ve built and I don’t like people taking out pieces from it. I want to keep on building as much as I can.

“What does that show? Does that show a guy that’s not gonna be here? Is that what my actions show? I could tell you whatever I want, but what does my actions show? That I want to be here. I want to be here with people that know what it takes to win.”

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-rumors/59455/milwaukee-nba-giannis-trade-deadline-jim-owczarski
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Indiana Pacers Preview & Game Thread: Putting the distractions behind us

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INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA - DECEMBER 23: Myles Turner #3 of the Milwaukee Bucks dribbles the ball while being guarded by Johnny Furphy #12 of the Indiana Pacers in the fourth quarter at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on December 23, 2025 in Indianapolis, Indiana. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Dylan Buell/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Thank goodness we can focus solely on the Milwaukee Bucks on the court, not the trade rumors, as they host the Indiana Pacers tonight in a Central Division tank-off. Milwaukee has successfully defeated the Pacers in their previous two games this year.

Where We’re At​


Despite Shams Charania’s and Brian Windhorst’s best efforts, the Milwaukee Bucks did not trade Giannis Antetokounmpo. Jon Horst was able to add Ousmane Dieng to the roster, while the team parted ways with Cole Anthony and Amir Coffey. These departures won’t be too upsetting to most fans, but it will be interesting to see what transpires for this team for the remainder of the season. The Bucks have a slim chance of making the play-in with a two-game winning streak this week. Yes, it was against the Chicago Bulls and New Orleans Pelicans, but wins are wins, so you take what you can get.

The Indiana Pacers are just trying to get through the season. Last year’s runner-up, the Pacers sit near the bottom of the standings as they adjust to a season missing their star player, Tyrese Haliburton. Indiana has struggled on the road, only winning three of their 23 games this year. This season might be a lost cause, but the Pacers did make a trade on deadline day, acquiring center Ivica Zubac from the Los Angeles Clippers. They parted ways with Bennedict Mathurin, Isaiah Jackson, two first-round picks (the most juicy being this year’s first, protected both 1–4 and 10–30), along with a second.

Injury Report​


The Bucks will be without Taurean Prince (neck) and Giannis (calf), while Gary Harris (hamstring) and Bobby Portis (hip) are listed as questionable. The Pacers will be without Tyrese Haliburton and Obi Toppin, while Micah Potter is listed as questionable.

Player To Watch​


Pete Nance has gone from just another two-way player to a likely full-time roster possibility. Nance simply plays hard and has solid basketball IQ to boot. With Coffey traded, Harris potentially out, and Andre Jackson Jr. unlikely to break into the rotation, tonight will give Nance another opportunity to show the Bucks he is worth keeping around.

How To Watch​


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


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...scussion-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Milwaukee Bucks Poll: Giannis stays and fans get what they want

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MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - FEBRUARY 04: Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks looks on during a timeout in the first half against the New Orleans Pelicans at Fiserv Forum on February 04, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by John Fisher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, we took one last pre-deadline temperature check on the Giannis rumors as the typical national voices fanned the flames of him wanting out even further. Here are the highlights:

  • With an even larger sample size than last week’s survey, 57% of voters still believe the Bucks were correct not to trade Giannis before the deadline. 33% thought they should have, a net increase of 67 votes.
  • Surprisingly, despite reports from the usual national media sources, 6% more believe Giannis would not request a trade ahead of the deadline. Last week, 64% thought he wouldn’t.
  • Nevertheless, 77% of respondents believed reports that the Bucks were listening to offers and approved of them doing so. 19% disapproved of listening to the offers. Recent reporting from several sources suggests the Bucks were neither serious about these offers nor did they even make counteroffers.
  • 74% of fans polled think the Bucks will still trade Giannis this offseason, with the majority believing it will happen before June’s draft. It will be interesting to see how these numbers change in light of Giannis’ public comments about wanting to remain in Milwaukee the rest of his career.


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

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-polls/59694/milwaukee-poll-nba-trade-deadline-giannis-rumors
 
Rapid Recap: Bucks 105, Pacers 99

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Feb 6, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Bucks center Myles Turner (3) looks for a shot against Indiana Pacers forward Pascal Siakam (43) in the first quarter at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-Imagn Images | Benny Sieu-Imagn Images

The Milwaukee Bucks capped off their three-game homestand with a win over the Indiana Pacers. They finally got the monkey off their back, winning three games in a row for the first time this year. Kevin Porter Jr. was the game’s leading scorer with 23 points. Andrew Nembhard led a depleted Pacers squad with 22.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


The Bucks found themselves in an eight-point hole early on, thanks to a rough 2/6 start from the floor. Milwaukee was able to course-correct, responding with a 14-2 run to take their first lead of the game. It was all capped off by a Bobby Portis three-pointer in his first game back, after missing the last two with a hip contusion. Indiana’s bench continued to be a pain in Milwaukee’s backside, as they engineered a 12-3 run to retake the advantage. Aaron Nesmith drilled a shot from beyond the arc with 30 seconds left, giving the Pacers a six-point lead after the first 12 minutes, 29-23.

Portis made his return well-known in the next quarter. With the Bucks down by six, BP went on a personal 7-0 run to pull them ahead. The two former playoff adversaries, now turned draft lottery hopefuls, went back and forth throughout much of the second frame. AJ Green shifted the momentum to the Bucks, drilling a top-of-the-key three, putting them ahead by five. That margin grew to nine points for Milwaukee after Ryan Rollins and Myles Turner each buried threes. Jarace Walker finally stopped the bleeding for Indiana with a two at the buzzer, but Milwaukee went into the locker room up 54-47.

The Bucks continued to pour it on to begin the second half. Green buried two more three-pointers, as Milwaukee went on a 16-6 run, building their advantage to 17.

BP got in his bag again in the waning stages, hitting his patented post fadeaway, and then pulled up from mid-range in Micah Potter’s face. Those two buckets gave the Bucks their largest lead of the night to that point, going up 19. After a couple of baskets from T.J. McConnell got the lead down to 15, KPJ ended the quarter with an and-one layup, sending Milwaukee up by 18, 83-65.

While the Pacers scored the first four points of the fourth, the Bucks scored on three straight possessions, extending their lead to 20. Pete Nance joined in on the fun, throwing down a two-handed jam, leading to an Indiana timeout. Things seemed to be in cruise control, but the Bucks went cold as the Pacers went on a 15-0 run, cutting the lead to just five with 5:07 left. Rollins finally ended a four-minute and 35-second scoring drought for Milwaukee with a layup. The Pacers got the game within four, but a 9-2 run by the Bucks put the game out of reach. Rollins put the Bucks up 11 with 1:21 to go, but Indiana wouldn’t go away, trimming the Milwaukee lead down to just four with 11 seconds left. Portis scored a quick layup on the other end, officially sealing the game for the Bucks.

Stat That Stood Out​


One of the biggest storylines for the Bucks this season has been their inability to rebound, especially on the offensive glass. Tonight was a much different story, as they secured 13 in the win. Myles Turner and Jericho Sims each had four.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...green-bobby-portis-jericho-sims-pascal-siakam
 
Bucks waive Nigel Hayes-Davis

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OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA - DECEMBER 10: Nigel Hayes-Davis #21 of the Phoenix Suns drives against Chris Youngblood #3 of the Oklahoma City Thunder during the second half of the Emirates NBA Cup - Quarterfinals game at Paycom Center on December 10, 2025 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by William Purnell/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Jon Horst and the Bucks front office have decided to waive journeyman Nigel Hayes-Davis, who got another shot in the NBA this season with the Phoenix Suns after a long and successful career overseas.

Hayes-Davis, a wing-forward combo, actually would have fitted a position of need for the Bucks. But at 31 years old and with a questionable skillset to succeed in a Giannis-led offence, the Bucks opted to put more eggs in Ousmane Dieng’s basket.

The journeyman averaged 1.3 PPG, 0.3 APG, and 1.2 RPG on 32.6% from the field and just 12.5% from three with the Suns. He had his first NBA stint way back in the 2017-18 season with three different teams—the Lakers, Raptors, and Kings—before departing for EuroLeague opportunities.

Hayes-Davis played for three teams across Europe’s premier competition: Zalgiris (2019-2021), Barcelona (2021-2022), and Fenerbahce (2022-2025). In 2025, he led Fenerbahce to a EuroLeague title, winning the Final Four MVP as well.

The Bucks now have a vacant spot on the 15-man roster as well as a vacant two-way spot. You imagine they’d be looking long and hard into converting Pete Nance—currently on a two-way deal—to a standard deal, creating multiple two-way openings. Suffice to say, there’s still a lot to play out in Milwaukee.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-rumo...s-ousmane-dieng-pete-nance-nba-trade-deadline
 
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