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Doubts emerge over Milwaukee Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo trade
Doubts emerge over Milwaukee Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo trade

Yahoo

time13-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Doubts emerge over Milwaukee Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo trade

After pairing Giannis Antetokounmpo with Damian Lillard, the Milwaukee Bucks felt that Doc Rivers was the head coach who could maximize the superstar duo's skill set. That apparently wasn't the case, considering the Bucks were eliminated in the first round of the Eastern Conference Playoffs. Making matters worse was the fact that Lillard suffered a ruptured Achilles tendon during the postseason. With an injury that severe, the Bucks can't expect to have their All-Star back in the lineup at all next season. Lillard's absence will surely impact Milwaukee's chances to compete for a championship, but will one lost year prompt a trade request from the Greek Freak? Advertisement According to NBA insider Jake Fischer, while there was some early optimism from other teams that Antetokounmpo could become available, now that feeling has turned to doubt. 'Honestly, right now I'd say the prevailing sentiment from rival teams that I'm speaking to—around the combine two weeks ago, two and a half weeks ago—there was no shortage of optimism, of hope, of excitement from other teams that they were going to be able to potentially make an offer to get Giannis Antetokounmpo into their franchise, into their building. Of late, I'd say that that confidence has been replaced with skepticism. To a man, from talking to agents, team executives, whoever, there is not a lot of belief right now at this juncture. I've been told all along that if there is a decision, a formal decision made to shut or open the door on trade conversations for Giannis this summer, that it would likely happen closer to the end of June and when the offseason really, really begins.' Jake Fischer on Giannis Antetokounmpo The Bucks were reportedly even prepared to potentially use a lottery pick in the 2025 NBA Draft, conducting extensive research on top NBA Draft prospects. Considering they don't have a selection until No. 47, any move into the top 14 picks would require a fairly significant trade. Shaking Antetokounmpo loose likely wouldn't have been easy anyway. Can you imagine how much backlash a small market like Milwaukee would face for trading one of their best two players in franchise history? Related: Toronto Raptors could pivot from Giannis Antetokounmpo trade for this multi-time All-Star Related Headlines

Sam Presti built a great Thunder team once. Then he did it again — his way
Sam Presti built a great Thunder team once. Then he did it again — his way

New York Times

time05-06-2025

  • Business
  • New York Times

Sam Presti built a great Thunder team once. Then he did it again — his way

The bye-bye game was only six years ago. That famous moment in Portland Trail Blazers lore, with Damian Lillard hitting a series-ending bomb over Paul George, also doubled as the nadir for the Oklahoma City Thunder. Eliminated from the 2019 NBA playoffs in five games for a third straight first-round exit, with an aging team and bloated salary cap that also paid a whopping $61.6 million in luxury tax while playing in the nation's 47th-largest TV market, the Thunder appeared to be at an impasse. Advertisement It seemed like Lillard was waving bye-bye to an entire era in Oklahoma City, one that disappointingly ended without a title, and that it would be a long, painful journey to contend again. In a sense, he was: Russell Westbrook and George never played another game for the Thunder. But as it turns out, Lillard was also waving hello to a dramatic rebirth, one that liberated Thunder team president Sam Presti — now in his 19th season at the helm — to paint his Mona Lisa. If the Thunder, as many expect, prevail in the NBA Finals over the Indiana Pacers, this season will serve as both the first-line item on Presti's Hall of Fame resume and the thing that ensures his eventual induction. What happened since April 2019 has been one of the fastest and most complete rebuilds in NBA history. Starting from a spot where they seemed completely screwed, the Thunder took only half a decade to post the Western Conference's best record with the league's youngest team. One year later, they are massive favorites to claim the franchise's first title in Oklahoma and set up to be favorites again and again and again for years into the future. That rebirth is as much philosophical as it is about talent. If you go in the way-back machine, the Thunder's origin story is the greatest three-year draft run in NBA history. Presti's career with the franchise began in Seattle three weeks before the 2007 draft, when he was then a 29-year-old wunderkind blowing people away as he worked his way up the San Antonio Spurs organization. (Even then, it was obvious to anyone who met him that he was destined to run an NBA franchise.) He drafted Kevin Durant and Jeff Green in 2007, Westbrook and Serge Ibaka in 2008 and James Harden in 2009. Green was eventually traded for Kendrick Perkins, but allowing for that swap means that, in three years, Presti drafted the top five players on an NBA Finals team and three future MVPs. Advertisement Those picks, along with Reggie Jackson at No. 24 in 2011 and Steven Adams at No. 12 and Andre Roberson at No. 26 in 2013, were amazing, but in time, they became just as much a philosophical prison. In hindsight, you wonder if those Thunder teams became good too fast. They were caught in win-now mode with great individual players who didn't necessarily fit great together. They ran through two coaches who were fine but also didn't move the needle for them, and they took too long to find the right center. (Flunking Tyson Chandler's physical in 2009 remains an all-time sliding doors moment in NBA history.) And as much as they talked about not skipping steps, the specter of losing Durant or Westbrook meant they started taking shortcuts, too — taking 14 cents on the dollar for Harden rather than trading Westbrook at the peak of his value, most notably, and later with moonshots on Enes Kanter Freedom, Carmelo Anthony and Dion Waiters. Here's the thing: If you talk to people who know and have worked with Presti, (or talk to Presti himself, for that matter), it's clear what gets his blood pumping. It's not the Durants and Westbrooks, but the high-character, cerebral, team-first grinders. This is a guy who cut his teeth in the prime of Spurs culture, one who gave Kenrich Williams a four-year, $27 million extension after a season in which he averaged 7.4 points and 4.5 rebounds for a 24-win team. That's important, because to me it's why this version of the Thunder feels so much more organic than the Durant-Westbrook one. Presti's platonic basketball ideal was nothing like his own team but a lot like his former one, the 2014 'beautiful game' Spurs squad that smoked his Thunder in the conference finals. (We'll get back to that San Antonio squad in a second.) Version 1.0 of Presti's Thunder was an overwhelming talent haul with a basketball team taped together around it; the whole was never greater than the sum of the parts, and at times was substantially less. Westbrook, in particular, was an off-the-charts athlete and a ruthless competitor; he was also stubborn to a fault and difficult for any other on-ball players to thrive alongside. The enduring image of the tail end of that era is a young Domantas Sabonis marooned at the 3-point line watching the Russ Show. This time, it feels completely different: From top to bottom, it's Presti-ball come to life. The core of the team is a dozen different versions of Kenny Hustle, just with some having more talent than others. In one sense, we have an easily available answer for how the Thunder rebuilt so quickly: The Paul George trade. Forget all the other goodies the Thunder still have coming from the LA Clippers; the first two assets in the deal were Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the pick that became Jalen Williams. That and one tank year that produced Chet Holmgren were enough to give the Thunder a championship core. Advertisement That answer is far too reductive, however, for the process that led the Thunder here. The three things that stand out about Presti's Thunder 2.0 rebuild were 1) stacking the draft-pick deck so heavily in the Thunder's favor that they didn't need to be perfect, 2) getting the right coach to share the vision and implement everything and 3) doubling down on the types of people they brought in as much as the talent. It so happens that they hit on the Jalen Williams pick, which was one of the five that had come from the Clippers in the George trade. But Presti also never stopped hustling, making a series of other trades to ensure the Thunder had a massive stockpile of first-round picks, nearly all with at least some potential to hit at the top of the lottery. Notably, even as it became clear that Gilgeous-Alexander would be a much greater star than initially envisioned, Presti stayed patient and kept making deals to enhance his odds of hitting big on talent. The ultimate tell was his willingness to give up an honest-to-goodness first-round pick in Dallas' P.J. Washington trade in exchange for an unprotected swap in 2028. There's a risk Presti might end up trading a late first for bupkus, and in the short term, he might inadvertently have helped the Mavericks upset his top-seeded team in the 2024 postseason. But in his eyes, he hadn't landed the plane yet, so the upside outcomes were worth it. To see this in practice, consider that the Thunder acquired the pick just before Jalen Williams in the 2022 draft and fired three lower-value future firsts into the sun to take Ousmane Dieng … and it doesn't matter. The whole point of accumulating six lottery picks between 2021 and 2024, as the Thunder did, is that perfection is no longer required. Build your chip stack high enough, and you can lose a few hands. They're not done, either. Oklahoma City has a redshirted lottery pick (Nikola Topić) ready to roll come summer. The Thunder will have two first-round picks this month, at No. 15 and No. 24; most likely have three first-round picks in 2026; and still have two in 2027 and 2029. They also have the aforementioned pick swap with Dallas in 2028 and one with the Clippers in 2027. If that wasn't enough, their second-round-pick inventory remains hilarious; they have 14 available from 2028 to 2031. That's 10 first-round picks in five years, and nine of them are likely to be other teams' picks, not their own mid-dynasty choice at No. 29 or No. 30. They could draft seven Aleksej Pokuševskis and it won't matter one iota if they hit on the other three. (More realistically, they likely will deal some of these for either future trades or move-ups in the draft to keep the loaded-dice party going even further into the future.) Advertisement The second element of all of this was hitting on the right coach, and Presti was deeply fortunate that the best candidate was already in his building in assistant coach Mark Daigneault. (Partly, we should note, because the Thunder gave him an unprecedented five-year run of reps coaching their G League team. The G has quietly been an awesome incubator of coaching talent.) Of course, that fortune wouldn't have mattered if Presti didn't have the stones to promote him after one total season on an NBA bench, and the two have formed a symbiotic partnership ever since. I asked Daigneault about this last weekend and about the challenges of the coach-GM relationship as a team goes from the bottom to the top. His lengthy answer underscored how fully integrated every level of this rebuild feels, and how important it was that, this time, Presti was as comfortable with the people as he was with the talent. 'When I started as the head coach, I already had six years in the organization,' Daigneault said. 'We had seen each other over the course of a long period of time in a lot of different situations, so there wasn't a relational feeling out process there. It was a continuation of an existing relationship that we had. … The communication between those two positions is essential, and I think that comfort helped with that. 'And then … a lot of those challenges come from philosophical differences. And I was raised here in professional basketball. Like, I didn't work anywhere else in pro basketball prior to coming here. I didn't know much about professional basketball before I came here. And so my entire philosophy in professional basketball was underneath the umbrella of the Thunder organization. 'A lot of it is stuff I've learned from Sam and learned from being in this organization in terms of understanding that these organizations are robust, and it's not just you coaching your team. You're part of a large ecosystem of developing players and developing a team, and you're executing a large strategy for an organization. Those are things that have to exist in order to be a sustainably successful team in the NBA.' Daigneault's promotion, however, is also one example of the larger trend line and the third item I mentioned above. Again, the Thunder were deeply fortunate that Gilgeous-Alexander was available in the George trade, but it's no accident that OKC targeted him in the deal. Remember those 2014 Spurs? SGA is the closest thing to Tim Duncan since Tim Duncan, a zero-maintenance superstar who, even coming out of Kentucky in the 2018 draft, had as many superlative exclamation points in his background reports as any draft prospect I can remember. (I was working for the Memphis Grizzlies at the time, and we did extensive research since we had the fourth pick that year.) Advertisement Of course, it goes way beyond Gilgeous-Alexander, Williams and Holmgren. That 2019 reset may have made it easier to win in other aspects of team-building. Remove all the first-rounders and Oklahoma City's player-acquisition resume in the last half decade is still a huge success; luck is always a factor in this, but a lot of it gets back to focusing less on hazy-outline projects and more on targeting Presti's type of guys. The other two players on this roster who were acquired by trade were the aforementioned Kenrich Williams and Alex Caruso — classic grinders in the Presti mold (and, in Caruso's case, a do-over after the Thunder let him slip out the door in the Westbrook era). OKC hit on a late draft pick (Aaron Wiggins at No. 54 in 2021), a waiver claim (Isaiah Joe in 2022), an undrafted development project (Lu Dort in 2019) and a cap-ballast trade throw-in (Kenrich Williams in 2020). None of these guys had 40-inch verticals or set scouts salivating as they went through the layup line. The Thunder used cap space to absorb contracts and get more picks year after year, including using one to move up to select Cason Wallace in 2023, until they finally found the perfect free-agent piece (Isaiah Hartenstein) to round out their team. They somehow traded Josh Giddey for Caruso without surrendering a draft pick. Even their biggest recent misstep came with a giant opportunistic side benefit. The 2024 trade for Gordon Hayward didn't work on the court, but it doubled as one of the great stealth salary-dumps in recent annals, shedding this era's one mistake contract (Vasilije Micić), Dāvis Bertāns and little-used Tre Mann and — at a cost of only two future seconds — giving the Thunder the necessary cap space to sign Hartenstein and extend the deals of Joe and Wiggins. You might wonder, after two decades in the same place, if finally winning a championship might spur Presti to ride off into the sunset, Bob Myers-style. Nobody I talked to can envision this happening. Behind the designer glasses is a ruthless competitor whose reaction to beating you four times in a row is to try to beat you even worse the fifth time. He'll get those chances and then some over the coming years. No team in the last dozen years has been more set up for a Spursian two-decade run of dominance than this one, not even the Golden State Warriors and Boston Celtics. Presti doing it from the ashes of the bye-bye game only makes it all the more impressive. (Top photo of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Sam Presti: Zach Beeker / NBAE via Getty Images)

Damian Lillard Sends Strong Message to Bucks Teammate Amid Offseason
Damian Lillard Sends Strong Message to Bucks Teammate Amid Offseason

Yahoo

time04-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Damian Lillard Sends Strong Message to Bucks Teammate Amid Offseason

Damian Lillard Sends Strong Message to Bucks Teammate Amid Offseason originally appeared on Athlon Sports. On April 27, during Game 4 of the first‐round series against the Indiana Pacers, Milwaukee Bucks' All-Star guard Damian Lillard suffered a non‐contact left calf injury. Advertisement An MRI the following day confirmed a torn Achilles tendon, ending his season and placing his 2025-26 availability in doubt. With Lillard already out since late March due to deep vein thrombosis in his right calf, Milwaukee limped to a 4-1 series loss against Indiana, their second consecutive first‐round exit. On Monday, roughly one month after Lillard's injury, Bucks forward Kyla Kuzma posted an Instagram video of himself slipping on boxing gloves with the caption, "Ding ding mf 😂😂😂 @damianlillard you next." Lillard, who had begun posting recovery updates on his own account, reshared Kuzma's clip to his Instagram story alongside the message, 'When I'm healthy… I'm stopping you in the 5th… long torso = BHop vs De La Hoya 🤷🏽🦍🦍.' Damian Lillard, InstagramDamian Lillard, Instagram The Bucks entered the 2024-25 season with high expectations, with a core made up of Lillard, Brook Lopez, Khris Middleton, Bobby Portis and 2021 Finals MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo. Advertisement Adding even more firepower to the roster was Kuzma, who was acquired on February 6 in exchange for Middleton and draft assets. Milwaukee Bucks guard Damian Lillard (0) and forward Kyle Kuzma (18).Benny Sieu-Imagn Images Milwaukee's mix of established stars and role players led them to a 48-34 record, good for the 5th seed in the Eastern Conference. However, despite a midseason surge, highlighted by winning the NBA Cup on December 17, 2024, injuries would ultimately derail their postseason hopes. Now, the Bucks enter a pivotal offseason with question marks surrounding the future of all of their stars. Related: Warriors Linked to Timberwolves Guard After Disappointing End to Season This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 3, 2025, where it first appeared.

Matthew Lillard: 'Chuck' is a beautiful articulation of the wonder of life
Matthew Lillard: 'Chuck' is a beautiful articulation of the wonder of life

UPI

time01-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • UPI

Matthew Lillard: 'Chuck' is a beautiful articulation of the wonder of life

1 of 2 | Matthew Lillard can now be seen in Mike Flanagn's film "The Life of Chuck," which is based on a Stephen King novella. File Photo by Chris Chew/UPI | License Photo NEW YORK, May 31 (UPI) -- Five NIghts at Freddy's, Scream and Scooby-Doo icon Matthew Lillard says he has found a kindred spirit in The Haunting of Hill House creator Mike Flanagan. Lillard met Flanagan about two years ago through a mutual friend and his since gone on to co-star in the writer-director's celebrated movie, The Life of Chuck, as well as collaborate with him on a unique venture in which Flanagan penned, "Rare Fine & Limited," an exclusive novella, to pair with a high-end liquor from LIllard's horror-themed Find Familiar Spirits line of libations. The actor recently told UPI at New York Comic Con that he wasn't familiar with Flanagan's work before he went out to lunch with him and his friend. "We got along great, and at the end of it, he was like, 'We're going to work together some day,' and I was like, 'Cool,'" Lillard recalled. "I was dropping my middle child off at Carnegie-Mellon [University] and I get a phone call and he's like: 'Hey, I have this opportunity. It's very small, but a piece I'm passion about. it's not going to define our relationship. I do not expect you to take it,'" the actor said, referring to the role in Chuck. "And I was like, 'I'll take the shot. I'm in.'" He ended up binging Flanagan's work, which also includes The Haunting of Bly Manor, Midnight Mass and The Fall of the House of Usher. "I fell in love with him and I fell in love with the way he works," Lillard said. "He's doing really cool things I want to be a part of." When he actually read the script for Chuck, Lillard was glad he didn't hesitate to say "yes." "I have a 5-minute piece. It's very small, but I found something in it that I fell in love with," Lillard said, noting he really believed in the movie and was happy it was a hit at last year's Toronto Film Festival. "I think the most profound thing for me -- other than sitting behind Stephen King and Mark Hamill [at the screening] -- was it is a three-act movie, going backwards and, in between the two acts, there's a 15-second run of black and, in a theater of 2,000 people, you can hear a pin drop and the standing ovation afterwards was one thing, which I sort of would expect, but the quiet, profound silence and the darkness was unforgettable." Despite its unique story-telling devices, the film -- in theaters Friday -- is a meditation on humanity, according to Lillard. "It's a little weird and awkward, outside the box. There's so much Doom's Day talk [in reality]," he said. "Here's this movie that is this beautiful articulation of the wonder of life." Because of his talent and sensibilities, Flanagan was a natural choice as a partner for Lillard's high-concept spirits company, which tells an ongoing story through 16 different product drops. "Each bottle has the next chapter of the story," Lillard added. "The whole thing is not what do we sell to a community, but what do we bring to the idea of literary horror, combined with a really delicious, hand-selected Sotol. It's a love language to horror films." Lillard said he and his partners asked Flanagan, who is sober, to be the first "voice of this brand," by writing a story that would be between 10,000 and 12,000 words. "He ended up writing just over 80,000 words," the actor added. Looking back on his career, Lillard said he is grateful that, for the past 30 years or so, he has been able to work consistently in projects he's proud of and that audiences of all ages let him know how much they enjoy. "People have always rooted for me," he said. "I feel like I've gotten a little bit of a comeback and it's really humbling and lovely to have that opportunity and I have been super-lucky," Lillard added. "I really thought I would end up doing Renaissance fairs for the rest of my life [when I was younger]. I really thought I would be the Green Knight at Medieval Times."

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