Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks could land with the Knicks at the NBA trade deadline.
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Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks could land with the Knicks at the NBA trade deadline.
Milwaukee Bucks co-owner Jimmy Haslam publicly addressed the growing speculation surrounding Giannis Antetokounmpo, underscoring both the franchise’s respect for its superstar and the complexity behind any potential blockbuster — a dynamic that continues to shape the New York Knicks’ measured approach.
“Giannis is, I don’t know, a top-three, top-four player in the world,” Haslam said, via ESPN Cleveland. “He brought Milwaukee its first championship in 50 years. And he’s a really good person, too. He’s a great leader and tries hard. I think Giannis and the Bucks — and this goes back before we were involved — have always worked closely to see what’s best for Giannis and what’s best for the Bucks, and we’ll continue to do so.”
Haslam and his wife, Dee, purchased Marc Lasry’s 25% stake in the Bucks in 2023, joining Wes Edens and Jamie Dinan in a shared-control ownership group — a structure that has become a key variable as Milwaukee weighs one of the most consequential decisions in franchise history.
Why a Giannis Trade Remains Difficult
ESPN’s Brian Windhorst explained that Haslam’s comments reflect the layered decision-making required for a Giannis trade — particularly for a team like New York.
“You have to make the Bucks happy with the return. The team offering for Giannis has to agree,” Windhorst explained on NBA Today. “And because Giannis is a free agent after next season and would need to sign an extension, he has to be somewhat on board. He doesn’t have to sign off on it, but you’re going to get a better offer if he is.”
Windhorst also pointed to Milwaukee’s ownership structure as a complicating factor.
“When they have a big decision to make — like trading Giannis — the three owners vote,” he said. “Most of the time they’ve been aligned, but there have been moments when they haven’t.”
That reality means any deal requires alignment across ownership, the front office, Antetokounmpo himself and the acquiring franchise — raising the bar for teams unwilling to push all their chips in.
Knicks’ Restraint Rooted in Confidence, Not Hesitation
Speaking Monday on ESPN’s Get Up, Windhorst made clear that the Knicks’ posture is not driven by fear or conservatism, but belief in their current roster.
“The Knicks believe in this team, and that could end up being an excellent assessment or that could end up being a mistake,” Windhorst said. “But they believed in this team last summer when Giannis was sort of loosely available. They didn’t make an aggressive offer at that time to move those talks forward.”
According to Windhorst, little has changed since then. While rival teams across the league are closely monitoring Antetokounmpo’s status, New York has not signaled a willingness to assemble the type of complex, multi-team package required to pry the two-time MVP away from Milwaukee.
“If they want to win a bidding war for Giannis now, I think it would take a three- or four-team trade,” Windhorst said. “That is just not happening. They are not showing that aggression to get Giannis right now.”
Knicks Comfortable With Current Trajectory
That stance aligns with the Knicks’ recent on-court surge. New York has stabilized near the top of the Eastern Conference standings, buoyed by elite defense, improved depth and a rotation after a rough 2-9 stretch in January.
Internally, the Knicks have prioritized continuity, flexibility and future optionality — resisting the temptation to sacrifice multiple starters and draft assets for a single transformational move unless it clearly elevates them to championship-favorite status.
League executives note that, as New York lacks draft assets, constructing a deal for Antetokounmpo would likely require rerouting multiple rotation players to third and fourth teams to generate the draft capital Milwaukee seeks — a step the Knicks have so far been unwilling to take.
Bucks Still Weighing Trade Deadline vs. Offseason
According to ESPN insider Shams Charania, the Bucks continue to evaluate aggressive offers from several teams, including the Knicks, Golden State Warriors, Miami Heat, and Minnesota Timberwolves.
“Bucks officials, executives and ownership are all huddling against the clock,” Charania reported. “Giannis Antetokounmpo is ready for his exit from Milwaukee, whether that comes at the deadline or in the offseason.”
Complicating the calculus is Milwaukee’s position in the standings. The Bucks have slipped well below .500 while Antetokounmpo remains sidelined with a calf strain, raising questions about whether the franchise is better served acting now or waiting until the summer, when Giannis would enter the final year of his contract.
What This Means for the Knicks
For New York, Haslam’s comments and Windhorst’s reporting reinforce a familiar theme: patience backed by conviction.
The Knicks remain positioned to pivot if circumstances change, but as of now, their words and actions suggest they are content to see how far their current group can go — even if that means watching another opportunity to land a generational star pass by.
Whether that confidence proves prescient or costly will ultimately be judged in the postseason.