
The Miami Heat remain the reported frontrunner to land Giannis Antetokounmpo, but they may not be able to get a deal done on their own. The Milwaukee Bucks are comfortable with Miami’s offer for the two-time MVP, with one significant caveat, according to multiple reports. They want a third team involved to sweeten the return.
Milwaukee covets the Portland Trail Blazers as a preferred facilitator, according to longtime NBA journalist Marc Stein. The reason is straightforward. The Bucks want back the pick swaps they sent to Portland in the Damian Lillard blockbuster, and regaining that future draft capital would be valuable to a rebuilding franchise.
There is a complication. Antetokounmpo reportedly will not sign off on being sent to Portland, meaning the Blazers would serve only as a third-team facilitator, not a destination. Any deal hinges on routing assets to Milwaukee while landing Giannis in Miami.
The framework helps explain why talks have dragged. Miami’s package has centered on Tyler Herro, Kel’el Ware, Jaime Jaquez Jr., a rotation piece such as Pelle Larsson or Kasparas Jakucionis, and draft capital. That hasn’t been enough on its own to satisfy Milwaukee, which is seeking young talent and future picks to expedite a rebuild.
The Bucks would look to redirect salary and acquire younger assets through additional teams rather than take back veteran money, per Ira Winderman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.
The competition complicates matters further. Giannis’ interest in the Celtics spells trouble for the Heat, as we covered, with Boston lurking as a rival suitor that could change the math entirely.
For now, Miami’s pursuit looks like the most likely path to a Giannis trade, even as the structure grows more complicated. A third team may ultimately decide whether the Heat can finish the job.
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