feature-image

Imago

feature-image

Imago

The Milwaukee Bucks reached their breaking point at the trade deadline. Once the question surrounding Giannis Antetokounmpo was settled, the front office finally moved.

Watch What’s Trending Now!

After weeks of speculation and leaguewide calls centered on the future of Giannis Antetokounmpo, Milwaukee made its stance clear. The Bucks informed teams that Antetokounmpo would remain on the roster through the trade deadline, immediately shifting their focus toward smaller, salary-based adjustments. That pivot produced their first move of the day.

ADVERTISEMENT

According to Shams Charania, the Milwaukee Bucks agreed to trade Cole Anthony and Amir Coffey to the Phoenix Suns in exchange for Nick Richards and Nigel Hayes-Davis.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

News served to you like never before!

Prefer us on Google, To get latest news on feed

Google News feed preview
Google News feed preview

The trade arrived quickly after Milwaukee’s Giannis decision, but it did not arrive with fireworks. On the surface, none of the four players involved are posting eye catching numbers.

Anthony was averaging seven points, 3.5 assists, and 2.5 rebounds. Coffey contributed 2.4 points, 0.4 assists, and 0.9 rebounds. Richards enters averaging 3.2 points, 0.3 assists, and 3.2 rebounds, while Hayes Davis sits at 1.3 points, 0.3 assists, and 1.2 rebounds.

However, the move was never about scoring output.

Milwaukee added size and frontcourt depth at a time when their roster construction was being evaluated around Antetokounmpo’s timeline. Richards has shown he can function as a rim runner and pick and roll option, while Hayes Davis brings positional flexibility and defensive switchability as a forward.

At 19 and 29 entering the deadline window, the Bucks were not in position to wait. This was a move designed to stabilize lineups and explore marginal upgrades rather than chase a dramatic reset.

The Bucks decide to stick with Giannis Antetokounmpo despite heavy interest

Before any trade discussions could advance, Milwaukee had to address the elephant in the room. Multiple teams had expressed interest in Antetokounmpo, including the Golden State Warriors, Miami Heat, and Minnesota Timberwolves.

The Bucks listened. They countered. Eventually, they stopped. As Charania reported earlier in the day, Milwaukee informed teams that Antetokounmpo would not be moved before the deadline and that they would begin executing smaller trades instead. This deal was the first consequence of that internal decision.

The timing matters. Antetokounmpo is currently in the second year of his three year, 175.3 million dollar contract. The final season contains a player option, and he will be eligible for an extension in October. Those facts ensure that pressure on the front office is deferred, not eliminated.

article-image

Imago

This trade does not elevate the Bucks into the top tier of the Eastern Conference. It does not signal a full commitment to contention, nor does it indicate a rebuild.

Instead, it clarifies intent. Milwaukee is choosing to play out the immediate season with Antetokounmpo while preserving flexibility and avoiding irreversible decisions. The front office is willing to adjust the margins, evaluate fits, and buy time before the larger contract conversation resurfaces.

That approach explains why the trade feels underwhelming in isolation. It was never meant to stand alone.

For now, the Bucks have answered the league’s loudest question. Giannis stays through the deadline. Everything else that follows is about how long that answer holds.

ADVERTISEMENT

Share this with a friend:

Link Copied!

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT