Milwaukee, WI
Monday Morning Media Roundup: Stasis; It’s What’s (Likely) For Dinner
I’ve spent the column space here each Monday since the season ended thinking about the possible futures of your Milwaukee Bucks. Those thoughts have led me to lament how bad the team’s coming free agent class is, restate my adherence to the Giannis-as-C theorem, and to find ideas on how the team can build if the recent Finals contenders are models to emulate.
Underlying all of this digital ink spillage, though, is the very real possibility that there is no change on the cards. For reasons of contractual, continuity, and chemistry reasons, the baseline expectations for the Bucks should be that they will enter the 2024-2025 season without Jae Crowder and with some other random veteran player in that slot. They could take a contingent of five or six “young guys” — Beauchamp, AJ Green, Andre Jackson Jr., Chris Livingston, Draft Pick X, Draft Pick Y — but that would be anathema to how this front office builds. Expect, then, some draft night trades that see the team buying future capital at the expense of immediate scratch off tickets.
Expect, also, the likes of Bobby Portis and Pat Connaughton to be back, too. They have very tradable contracts and feel like they’ve played out their usefulness with this group. They also can’t be aggregated with other salary because of the Bucks cap situation and they may not have much value around the league besides protected picks and other also-ran vets.
Finally, expect little change in the way the team plays on both ends of the floor. Not for a want of trying on the part of the coaching staff, of course. It is simply the reality of what this group of (very (very)) established players is capable of doing. Brook Lopez doesn’t have another arc in his career that doesn’t lead to his retiring to a massive estate in Orlando. Damian Lillard isn’t going to self-actualize into a superb passer. Khris Middleton has ran at his peak for two playoffs in a row and must be more concerned with maintenance than growth.
It isn’t all that interesting or satisfactory, but it is the likeliest outcome. We’d do ourselves well to prepare for the possibility.
Let’s roundup!
Milwaukee Bucks Links
Bucks offseason primer: Milwaukee’s key roster questions as NBA Draft nears & Who could the Bucks select in the 2024 NBA Draft? Bub Carrington, Tyler Kolek and more options (The Athletic)
You may or may not have already hit your free article limit over on the Times, but if you haven’t I’d say these pieces by Nehm are worthwhile to get a solid baseline understanding of where the Bucks stand. That’s especially the case vis a vis the cap, the first and second aprons, and how difficult it may be to get under the second apron in particular.
One note on Nehm’s draft piece: Found it very interesting that he scouted almost exclusively guards and a few wings. He is rarely in the news breaking business in the way Shams/Woj are, but he isn’t just pulling names for the hell of it, either.
Chronomat Giannis Antetokounmpo (World Tempus (???))
Cracking me up that the AI writer of this never refers to the Bucks by name, but often as “Giannis Antetokounmpo’s team”. Now ain’t there something poetic and true in that.
I’ve no idea how large the crossover is between Brew Hoop readers and Swiss luxury watch purchasers, but if you’re out there, this one’s for you.
How Celtics and Mavericks built their rosters and lessons other teams can learn (CBS Sports)
Some interesting observations in here that were more likely than not inspired by my intro to last week’s MMMR where I tried to determine a few lessons for the Bucks from the Mavs-Celtics Finals. Tend to agree with Sam Quinn on all of his points, and the Bucks aren’t far off on a few, either. Being opportunistic is something GM Jon Horst will often attempt to do, but he’s fallen short occasionally in terms of “hard choices” (trading Jrue could count here, too, though) and the depth of the roster. We shall see where things lead now.
The Seven Commandments of Scoring in the NBA Playoffs (The Ringer)
Again, another interesting piece that tackles a key component to playoff winning: Scoring. As with most of these pieces, if you read them through a Bucks-tinted lens and ask whether the ideas apply to that team you may come up feeling a bit wanting. Giannis is a fearless guy and physicality is his great strength, but his durability issues have prevented us from seeing whether he has truly learned from his failures as well. Beyond him and his two co-stars, I often wonder about the other guys’ skillsets on this plane. In a world where playoff basketball is more iso-heavy as the years go by, maybe it doesn’t matter if the seventh man brings next to nothing in terms of scoring.
Mock Draft Prospect of the Week
Tyler Smith – G League Ignite – 6’9”, 225 pounds, 19 years old, SF/PF
With the MarJon Beauchamp experience underway — and still to be determined even if my hopes aren’t particularly high — will Jon Horst find himself allured by another G League Ignite prospect with his first round draft pick? Tyler Smith at 6’9” with a 7’1” wingspan could be a possible project piece if placed in the right developmental system that will keep him on his nascent upward trajectory. The highlights!
Not bad, actually! The first half of the video is mostly clips of him finishing a ton of dunks off pick and rolls or his reading and reacting to a tough shot/miss by a teammate to finish a play. Crucially, he can elevate off of one foot on the move which is something MarJon can’t quite nail. A couple of made threes shows some promise, although scouting reports say the 36.4% he made as a member of the Ignite could end up being an outlier if his amateur numbers are more reflective of what he’s capable of. On defense, the one-on-one capacity just really isn’t there, but you’d be happy seeing some of those off-ball rotations of his to close and block attempts where he starts on the weak side.
Smith played in 27 games for the Ignite with two starts in there. That team won a total of 2 games all season.
He averaged 22.0 minutes played, 13.0 points (.481/.364/.725), 5.1 rebounds, 1.1 assists, and 1.7 stocks (0.7 steals+1.0 blocks). For a guy his age and coming mostly off the bench, his usage rate was pretty substantial (24.4%) and his offensive game mostly matched the coaching staff’s expectations when allowing that many possessions to run through him. Of course, it all comes down to how his body develops and whether he can add strength and defensive understanding to hang in the NBA. If the Bucks were to draft him I see no world in which he makes an impact in the first season outside of marginal appearances during the regular season. But if he does continue to strengthen and can keep hitting threes, he’d be a very promising guy to pair next to the likes of Antetokounmpo on both ends of the floor.
It’d take courage and a lot of faith in Doc Rivers’s staff as a developmental group. Very few Ignite guys have broken through properly at the NBA level, so Smith would have to be the first guy to buck that trend to be a success.
The Social Media Section
Give it like five more years and Kobe apocryphal-isms will have passed from stories told on podcasts to foundational national myth/lore
Think we’ve identified what caused all that Achilles pain for Dame
We’re going to party our asses off here at MMMR HQ once this dude’s contract officially expires
Please Notre Dame God, convince Pat his calling is golf. I need cap room like something bad
Yes
I’m too isolated in my continent-spanning country to get the joke. Mbappe commented with crying face emojis, so that’s good I guess
Hala Madrid, indeed
We’re a little over two weeks out from the Draft and, shortly thereafter, free agency. The team will move quickly from open questions to a cohered answer and then we can finally kick off previewing what the future may hold. Nearly there!
Happy Monday!
Milwaukee, WI
Cincinnati Reds Fall to Milwaukee Brewers, Get Swept at Home for First Time Since 2024
The Cincinnati Reds fell to the Milwaukee Brewers 6-5 on Wednesday night at Great American Ballpark. With the loss, the Reds fell to 37-42 and still sit in last place in the NL Central, 12 games behind the first-place Milwaukee Brewers. The loss to the Brewers marks the third straight loss for Cincinnati and means they were swept at home for the first time this season and for the first time since 2024.
Reds pitcher Rhett Lowder was given the nod to start on the bump on Wednesday night, and was able to get in a groove early, striking out two batters in the first inning, and one in the second.
Lowder Struggled in Third Inning
The wheels fell off for Lowder and Cincinnati in the top half of the third inning, as Jackson Chourio singled to left and William Contreras slammed a two-run home run to right-center. Lowder wasn’t able to shake off the home run and allowed another home run in the next at-bat to Jake Bauers as the Reds fell behind 3-0 in the early goings. Lowder finished the game with 5.2 innings of work, allowing eight hits, three earned runs, and six strikeouts.
The Reds’ offense was sluggish and woke up too late in the series finale against the Brewers. Cincinnati had a mix of strikeouts, groundouts, and pop flies in the first five innings at Great American Ballpark until the home half of the sixth inning. Brewers pitcher Shane Drohan was effective in his outing, allowing five hits and 0 earned runs in 4.1 innings of work while striking out five Reds batters.
Reds Were Able to Figure out Brewers Bullpen
Brewers pitcher Chad Patrick came into the game in relief and Cincinnati was able to figure him out early, as Noelvi Martin and Tyler Stephenson worked back-to-back walks. Blake Dunn stepped up to the plate and injected some life into Great American Ballpark as he connected on a slurve to right field for a double that scored Marte and got Cincinnati on the board.
With the score 3-1, Reds pitcher Sam Moll came into the game in relief and ran into trouble, allowing a triple, two walks, and a double in four straight at-bats, the latter of which scored three runners to make it a 6-1 ballgame in favor of the Brewers.
Reds Offense Finally Woke up in Eighth Inning
The Reds’ offense officially arrived in the home half of the seventh, as they chipped away at the Brewers’ five-run lead. Sal Stewart doubled on a sweeper to left field and scored when Eugenio Suarez connected for a double on a fastball down the middle two at-bats later. The bottom of the eighth inning proved more fruitful as Elly De La Cruz worked a walk and Spencer Steer homered 400 feet to dead center to bring the Reds within one.
The Reds had a golden opportunity to tie or win the game in the bottom of the ninth inning, but Dane Myers grounded into a double play with the bases loaded with one out.
Cincinnati is off on Thursday before heading to Pittsburgh for a weekend series against the Pirates.
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Milwaukee, WI
Did Milwaukee Get Enough in Return for Giannis?
Let’s talk about Giannis, and I want to address this trade, uh, Milwaukee made with Giannis in Miami in kind of three different ways, and I want to start with the Milwaukee side of it, and I’ll ask the question, um, did Milwaukee get enough?
Uh, we know by now what the package.
It it is, it was the 13th overall pick in this year’s draft.
Uh, two other 1st round draft picks, a pick swap, 2nd round pick.
You got some players.
Tyler Hero was at the forefront of it.
Jaime Haquez Jr.
Khalil Ware, uh, Cass Yakashoish, I believe I’m still saying that name correctly.
I think that’s very impressive, Chris.
I like, we can get to him, but I like that kid a lot actually.
I think he’s a potential to be a franchise point guard.
Uh, they don’t get kind of the superstar young player.
They don’t get the super high draft pick, at least not now.
We’ll see how that plays out.
Um, do you think the Milwaukee Bucks got enough for Giannisokopo?
What was available.
I, I’m just not sure that that’s the question in terms of what were they supposed to do to get more.
Did you hear any offers around the trade deadline that you thought were better than this?
I did not.
He, I mean, look, we can get to Boston and whether or not their offer was better given the caliber of player that Jalen Brown is, um, I, you know, I think there were a lot of teams kicking the tires on Giannis, uh, but ultimately Miami was the team that was willing to push all their chips in and say, look, besides Bam Adebayo, you can have basically whatever you want off our roster.
I, I don’t think other teams were willing to do that.
I mean, my question more about did they get enough or what did Miami give up is the Giannis decision making, because here’s a guy who I know, I, I’ve talked to him several times over the past 12 years.
That leaving Milwaukee was very hard for him.
All the waffling, the back and forth, all the stuff.
You might not like how he did it so publicly, but I promise you it was legitimate.
This is where his children were born.
This is his home in America.
It’s where he became who he is.
He feels a deep connection to that city, that community.
He and his wife do amazing things in Milwaukee .
It was.
Hard for him to leave.
So this was a basketball decision.
And if it’s a basketball decision to go to a team that has gutted their roster is always just, I mean, we saw Carmelo Anthony pushed to go to New York and they had to, you know, mess up the roster and then they were trying to make up for it for years, but Carmelo was much, I believe he was significantly younger, right?
When he forced that trade was in his twenties, yeah, yeah, um , and it’s just sort of, you know, I have a lot of faith in the Miami Heat front office.
I think Andy Ellsberg is one of the unsung guys of the league, probably because, you know, he’s like lasagna, he moves in the G, he moves in silence, but, um, you know, I, I think that that team structure.
great.
I think Erik Spoelstra is a knockout coach.
Um, I, I think that everything about Miami is as advertised.
However, you only have who you have.
They only have so much more money that they can give out.
They’ve now gutted a bunch of draft picks.
The team as it stands, him and and Bam.
I think it’s a good fit.
I don’t think people are gonna, you know, people are like, Oh, they can’t even play together.
I don’t believe that .
I think they can play together, but it is, I wanna get, I want, I wanna get to the Miami side of it in a second.
I do want to hit up, spend some time on that, but like, but it’s not gonna be, it’s not gonna be a championship team.
And for me, the question about You know, Giannis going there, you know, he had to say he was going to sign an extension for Miami to be willing to cut their roster and gut their asset trove.
And if I were in Giannis’s shoes, if I were a player who was being wrenched away from a community that they really loved because they wanted to make a basketball decision.
To win, I would have been a mercenary through this process.
I would have gone around to every team, all 29 other teams in my head.
I would have said, these are the four teams I want to play with, and only if they don’t give up very much, and then I would have picked the one.
The one, this is where the player can really have influence, where there isn’t a bidding war.
The one team that I wanted to most play for, where I could see this is where I could win, and I would say I am not signing long term with anyone else.
And the Bucks would have had you, when you said, did the Bucks get enough?
The Bucks could have gotten a lot less if Giannis had done that.
If Giannis had said, this is the one team I want to go to.
Then that team could have offered not very much at all, because nobody else would have offered very much at all, because Giannis would have said, this is the only team I’m signing a long term deal with.
And I know that’s not in Giannis’s nature.
I know he doesn’t want to be super demanding like in that way, but when you look at what the Bucks got for this, where Giannis is going, what the Boston.
And all of this.
That’s the only thing that I sort of look at this whole situation and I think, man, I would handle this differently if I was on the side.
I’m ruthless .
I thought that.
I, I, I thought that Milwaukee did as well as they could in this situation.
Um, they got some very good usable young players, which is important for them in the position that they’re in because they’re not in, yeah, they’re not in a position to tank.
They do not control their first round pick for the next 5 years.
So it, they have no incentive to be bad, um, moving forward, um.
I think that Tyler Hero may not be long for Milwaukee.
Um, I could see the Bucks turning around and flipping him for other assets, so the final yield of this trade may not fully be known right now.
Uh, but I think getting guys like Hakez Junior who can play where, who can play if they can get through to him, um, that’s certainly he could become kind of a franchise big man for there, and I like Yakohoish a lot.
I like him coming out of Illinois.
He’s big.
He’s a big tall point guard.
He’s a guy that averaged, uh, what, 18 minutes per game for Miami this season, played 53 games for them.
I think if you hand him the keys as your lead guard, there’s a decent chance he’s gonna take off and he could become a longtime starter, uh , in this league.
Miami liked him coming out of the draft, obviously, I think Milwaukee’s really gonna like him out there.
The question I would ask is all the things they got from Miami.
Is that better than getting their hands on Jalen Brown?
Because Jalen Brown is by a country mile better than anything that Miami was going to offer.
He’s significantly better than Tyler Hero, all the young pieces they have down there, and Boston was also willing to throw in.
A couple of first-round picks.
So if you were John Horst and you were that front office and you had to weigh these two offers, obviously they made a decision, but would you have made a different decision?
Would you have taken the bird in the hand that is Jalen Brown and the star player that he is with, by the way, 3 years remaining on his contract?
Yeah, I mean, it’s an interesting question.
For me, I am always fascinated by general managers who say, you know what I prefer?
I prefer a draft pick several years from now, who maybe possibly with some seasoning, some time in the league, some experience, could maybe best case scenario, turn into a Jalen Brown.
Instead of that, I’m gonna, I’m gonna do that instead of taking a Jalen Brown, who we know who he is.
I don’t know if this was a little bit about the fact that if they took Jalen Brown, they still aren’t going to be a team that’s going to be at the top of the east.
And so by the time his window as a prime in his prime runs out, are you getting sort of around him what you need, and then you’re kind of back to square one.
One again, you’re in a community where you still have to sell tickets.
They’re going to be reeling over using, losing Giannis, and you put Jalen Brown in there.
And I believe him when he’s on his twist treat and saying, you created a monster, all of that stuff.
I know Jalen, we know how hard he works.
I mean, we know how determined he can be.
We saw what he could do when he had his quote, own team this past season.
And so I would have taken Jalen Brown because he’s a guy to put.
The side of your building.
He’s a guy who can influence team culture with the other pieces you bring in and the other young players you have.
And there was a little draft capital in the deal to replenish some of the draft capital that they’ve given away in the past few years trying to build something around Giannis.
I would have taken the Jalen Brown deal.
I’ve heard people say taking the Miami deal gives you more run as a front office person in terms of uh You know, how much more rope you have on your contract because everything’s in the future.
And so, you know, you’re more likely to have the team owner let you play out the deal.
And also, there’s been reporting that the team owner, the guy who is controlling a lot of stuff there right now, and it’s always a murky situation because there are shared ownership of the team and there’s a rotation, all of these weird things, but that Jimmy Haslam walked in and said, I want the Miami deal.
You can’t go against what your owner wants, or you know it’s smart not to go against what your owner wants.
But yeah, to answer your question , I would have taken Jalen Brown, and partly because, you know, I’m always all about, you know, what are you doing to your fans in the building?
What are you giving them?
Only one team wins the title.
No one they traded for was likely to make them win the title in the next few years.
So give the, give the guy, give the people in Milwaukee a star.
I don’t know.
Yeah , um, I, I like the picks that they got because they’re into the 2030s and who knows what Miami’s gonna look like at that point.
Will Pat Riley still be around?
Will Erik Spoelstra still be around?
What will the team look like?
That, that has the potential to, they could be valuable picks and even if they’re not known to be right away, they’ll be valuable assets to deal over the next couple of years if they’re supposed to ask you about that.
Just about the pics before you go on to the rest of it.
So, this is, as I said, this is the part that I just, look, I’m not in the front office, I’m not a general manager like you, this is not what I do, um, and you not being a draft Nick, I am not a front office Nick.
This is not, you know, what I spend a lot of my reporting time on.
But I don’t get it.
You say those picks, at least one of them could be pretty valuable, because who knows what’s going on with Miami at that point.
Do you think with one of the picks that Milwaukee got in this deal, they will end up with as good a player as Jalen Brown?
In 2035, what was it, 2032, 2033, probably, probably not, um, but look, the thing with Jalen Brown is the reason I would have taken the Celtics deal is to go again.
You are not looking to be bad next year.
There’s no reason for you to be bad.
So if you get Jalen Brown, you play with him next year, you win 35, 40 games, whatever it may be with that group, which I don’t think is unrealistic given the players that they got.
Uh, and then summer of 2027, if Jalen Brown is still playing like an all NBA talent at the ripe age of 30, 31, you can deal him for other stuff.
Maybe there is a team out there that looks like the Clippers circa 2019 or, you know, the Knicks when they made the Carmelo deal or the Nets when they made the Paul Pierce, Kevin Gar.
Garnett deal.
You can wait for desperation, sniff desperation and see what happens and, and get a higher yield.
I think this, like you’re able to get stuff for Tyler Hero, sure, but Tyler Hero’s got 1 year left in his contract and not a lot of people are excited about the possibility of paying Tyler Hero like $35 million per year.
I think Jalen Brown could have made the final haul for this deal a lot better and could have made next year more palatable to this team, uh, as they’re.
It’s kind of treading water in their particular situation.
So where does Boston go from here is, is, of course, well, I wanna get, I wanna get to Boston.
We’ll get to Boston.
I wanna, I wanna pivot back to, to Miami here and, and, and with this team that Miami’s got now, uh, now you’ve got Giannita Deumpo.
You got Bam Adebayo.
You got a front court that, I don’t know, kind of makes sense, sort of.
I don’t know.
You could depends on how you look at it, uh, and you’ve got the rest of the roster which is kind of in flux.
You’ve got Andrew Wiggins who’s got a player option.
My belief is that.
They’ll try to get Wiggins to opt out of that contract, sign him to a new long-term deal at a smaller number.
Happens all the time in the NBA.
That would presumably give them the flexibility to bring back Norman Powell.
But after that, like, Daveon Mitchell is a good player, but, you know, he, he kind of is what he is.
He’s a good defensive player who’s never been a high-level offensive guy.
And, and then you’re kind of on the market for any vet minimum guys that want to come down and live in South Beach and play alongside.
Giannis and Bam.
Like, next season, I don’t have the heat over the Knicks.
I don’t have the heat over the Cavaliers.
I don’t have the heat over the Pistons.
I think they’re in.
They’re in a tricky spot and, and that is assuming full health for Giannis, which I don’t think you can assume.
I, I, you know, he’s coming off back to back years of soft tissue injuries.
A calf injury had limited him to what, 35 games this past season.
Look, these types of deals, and I mentioned a couple of them.
You talked about Carmelo.
Very rarely, at least in modern times, do they work out for the team that pushed all their chips in.
It didn’t work out for New York.
It didn’t work out for Brooklyn.
It didn’t work out for the Clippers.
I think if I was a betting man, I say a few years from now, the Heat are going, Oh wow.
Well, we took a shot.
We took a flyer, and it didn’t really work here.
I don’t love this deal for Miami.
Very much at all.
I understand why they did it.
They were kind of in this cycle of mediocrity over the last few years.
They weren’t going anywhere with the roster that they had.
Pat Riley’s only got so many years left on this job.
He wants to take a big swing.
It’s worked for them in the past when they made the free agent signings back in 2010, but I don’t love the fit with Giannis and Bam, and I don’t love the roster with the guys around them.
I mean, the fit with Giannis and Bam, as I, as I was saying, I, I don’t, I don’t worry about it.
Those are both guys who know how to play.
I think the paint will be fine.
You want guys who can, you know, within today’s NBA with the way things are trending, I think you want guys who can be down there, um, and the defensive, you know, prowess of both of those is, is certainly unquestioned.
Uh, it’s not an offensive team around them.
They need shooters.
I, I, I just don’t know how they’re gonna get them with the assets that they have and the money that they have, um, to your point, you know, if, if some of these guys who are vet minimum guys, uh, you know.
If people were desperate for them, they wouldn’t be vet minimum guys, right?
So what are they really bringing?
And by the way, you’re in a year where another really when you say, oh, maybe they just want to be in South Beach.
The Lakers want a bunch of vet minimum guys.
So now there’s gonna be a little bit of competition for, do you want to live in Los Angeles?
Do you want to live in South Beach?
It’s just not as clear as like, well, we’re the, we’re the better living spot.
Who knows?
It just depends on, I guess, how much taxes you want to pay.
But I, I think that Again, this brings me back to Giannis.
If I was Giannis, if I’m the guy who now has to go out and play for the next however many years in this new team I have gone to, and the express reason I have wanted to go somewhere is to win a title, I know it’s mercenary.
I get it.
I know it makes you the bad guy, but be the bad guy for one season, for one moment, and go around, find the one team you would most like to go to.
Announced to the world, you will only sign there, and then make sure that you are going to an asset heavy team.
By definition, a team that can win a title, and they’re just not, I, I just didn’t think anybody in these Giannis sweepstakes was gonna be in that position.
I’m not sure that Milwaukee would have traded him if he did that.
At least not before the draft.
Like, I don’t think that Milwaukee was in a position to do a deal like this where they got back 60 cents on the dollar.
And I know that Jimmy Haslam put the, threw the gauntlet down and said, hey, we’re gonna do this deal before the draft and we’re gonna settle this one way or the other.
But the Bucks did punt on a Giannis deal before the deadline.
I think they could have punted on this deal before the draft and then made a deal sometime in the offseason when maybe the dust settled a little bit.
I’m not sure they, if Giannis did all that and he said, I’m only going to play for Miami.
I don’t know.
And look, it doesn’t necessarily mean, you know, look what Damian Lillard did a couple of years ago.
I know he had more years on his contract, but the Blazers sent Dame to Milwaukee when he had no interest in going there.
So the Bucks still could have found a team potentially that was willing to give up real assets for him.
I, I just, the, the more, the more years on his contract is that’s not a yada yada yada.
Yeah, yeah, it’s big.
It’s big.
You, you’re, you’re protected by that, no doubt.
But I also, I look with Giannis, like I’m not convinced wherever he goes.
That the second he’s eligible to sign an extension, he’s not gonna sign an extension.
Like this is a guy that has a history of injuries.
He’s also a guy that like counts his money.
Like he’s the guy, the guy’s like a Calci ambassador.
Like he’s, he’s counting his money, and I think given his injury history, if I think it’s now January, they can get offered an extension, like whatever it is, October 1st, right?
No, it’s, I think now that he’s traded it to get, yeah, yeah, yeah, you’re right, um, I think whatever he gets off that extension is gonna take it because that injury history.
You never know what’s gonna come up over the next couple of years.
I think he’s gonna, he is now because he’s, because he’s, you know, I think, I, I think he might have taken it like in Houston or Atlanta or some.
I just think he would have.
I , I, I don’t think he would be willing to risk that money, leave that on the table for a free agency that might have gone a different direction.
Plus, you go into free agency, you have to hope teams have, have cap space which they don’t really have anymore.
I think it would have been a lot of risk involved for Giannis to play.
That card, uh, if he did, uh, with, but Miami though, like I don’t, I don’t look at, I don’t look at Miami as a, a championship contender now.
I don’t look at them as being one of the front runners to win the Eastern Conference.
Obviously a lot can change.
They can go out and add piece to that roster that I don’t expect, but again, when teams do this and they go all in.
More often than not, the team that goes all in winds up giving the other team the pieces they need to be a championship contender years from now.
It’s what Denver did or what, uh, New York did with Denver to a degree, I guess.
It’s definitely what Boston did with, what Brooklyn did with Boston.
It’s 100% what the Clippers did with Oklahoma City.
They gave all these assets to them and the Thunder wound up cashing in.
Plus the young player, like, who knows.
Maybe Yakohoni turns out to be Shay.
Never know.
You never know.
He’s a big guard, you know.
We didn’t think Shay was this guy, you know, coming over from LA all those years ago.
So we’ll see what happens there.
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