Giannis Antetokounmpo trade rumors are heating up, with the Bucks reportedly open to offers from teams across the NBA.
Let's be real for a second. Nobody saw this coming when Giannis Antetokounmpo was an 18-year-old kid from Athens who could barely speak English and was playing for a Bucks team that won 15 games. The Greek Freak era in Milwaukee was supposed to be the kind of story that only happens in movies — small market, generational talent, one championship, genuine loyalty.
It was a great run, but it's seemingly over. The Milwaukee Bucks are officially open for business. According to Shams Charania, the franchise is fielding trade calls and offers for their two-time MVP heading into the NBA Draft combine, with ownership and the front office expecting a robust market.
The Milwaukee Bucks are open for business on trade calls and offers for two-time MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo entering the NBA combine and over six weeks away from the draft, sources told ESPN.
— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) May 11, 2026
New on ESPN: https://t.co/dF56qBtMMR
How did they get here? A combination of bad luck and bad timing. Antetokounmpo is still an elite player — he averaged 27.6 points, 9.8 rebounds, and 5.4 assists while shooting 62.4% from the field this season — but he played only 36 games. That's the problem in a nutshell. The body isn't cooperating the way it used to, and for a franchise betting its entire future on one player staying healthy, that's a terrifying proposition. The Bucks also didn't help themselves in the lottery, holding the 10th overall pick when they hoped to move up significantly to change the calculus of a post-Giannis rebuild.
So now comes the hard part, for both sides. The Celtics, Lakers, Knicks, Timberwolves, and Cavaliers all reportedly pursued Antetokounmpo at the trade deadline, and how those teams finish the playoffs will play a major role in how aggressively they come back this summer. Giannis turns 32 in December and is owed $58.5 million next season with a $62.8 million player option for 2027-28, so whoever lands him isn't just getting a player; they're making a statement about their championship window and writing a very large check to back it up.
For Milwaukee, this is the moment that defines the next decade. Get this trade right, and they have a path back. Get it wrong, and they're the next cautionary tale about what happens when a franchise doesn't maximize its superstar before the window closes.
The Greek Freak era was worth every minute. What comes next is the real question. So, let's cut through the noise. Here are eight teams that could actually make a move and what a deal could look like.
New York Knicks
This one has been brewing for years, and the pressure only grows if New York falls short of a title this postseason. The fit makes sense on paper — Madison Square Garden, the market, the moment. The complication is the return. A package centered around Karl-Anthony Towns and a surplus of future pick swaps has been floated, but Milwaukee needs a foundational young piece, and it's fair to wonder whether Towns — at his age and salary — qualifies as that. The Knicks can get this done. Whether they can get it done at Milwaukee's asking price is another conversation.
Boston Celtics
The Celtics just lost in the first round to the 76ers, and Jaylen Brown's postseason comments opened a door that many people in Boston didn't expect to see opened this soon. Boston could conceivably package Brown, Derrick White, and future picks to make the money work, and that might be the offer Milwaukee has the hardest time turning down. The risk for Boston is real, though. Giannis turns 32 in December and carries a massive contract, and counting on a player that size to maintain peak production deep into his 30s is a gamble that could age poorly in a hurry.
Los Angeles Lakers
The Lakers have made a habit of this. Superstar becomes available, Los Angeles finds a way to make the call. The Lakers were among the teams that pursued Antetokounmpo at the trade deadline, so the interest is established and the logic is straightforward, especially if LeBron James and the franchise go their separate ways this offseason and the front office needs a new centerpiece to sell. The sticking point is the return. A package built around Austin Reaves and draft picks is probably the ceiling of what Los Angeles can offer, and Milwaukee is going to want more than that. The Lakers have the brand; whether they have the assets is a different question entirely.
San Antonio Spurs
This is the one that nobody wants to say out loud because it sounds too good to be true. Giannis and Victor Wembanyama in the same frontcourt. The comparison to Tim Duncan and David Robinson has already been made, and it's not a stretch — only this time with modern spacing and athleticism that those teams could never have dreamed of. The vision is right there. The question is whether San Antonio is actually willing to blow up a young core that is ahead of schedule to get it done. Any realistic deal almost certainly involves Stephon Castle or Dylan Harper, and that's a steep price to pay for a player on the wrong side of 31 with a massive contract. But the fit is clean, the timeline is decent, and the ceiling with Wembanyama alongside him is genuinely terrifying. If San Antonio pulls the trigger on this one, the rest of the league should be very, very nervous.
Golden State Warriors
This one is about Stephen Curry's closing chapter, and everybody knows it. Golden State was among the teams linked to Antetokounmpo as a potential suitor, and the vision is obvious — pair the greatest shooter of all time with a two-time MVP for one last run at a title. It's a beautiful story. The problem is Milwaukee isn't in the business of beautiful stories right now. They want youth and picks, and the Warriors are running low on both. Unless Golden State gets creative in ways that aren't currently obvious, this one feels more like a dream scenario than a realistic deal.
Cleveland Cavaliers
Cleveland is still alive in the playoffs, so this one is TBD, but if the Cavaliers go out in an ugly fashion, expect personnel changes to follow. Evan Mobley is the name that matters here. He's exactly the type of young, switchable, two-way big that Milwaukee would want coming back in a deal, and pairing him with a Giannis asking price of picks makes Cleveland one of the more realistic suitors in this field. Keep an eye on how their postseason ends.
Houston Rockets
Houston made a big swing last offseason for Kevin Durant, and it didn't land the way they hoped. If they decide to make another move, they have genuine foundational pieces to offer — Alperen Sengun, Jabari Smith Jr., and Amen Thompson are all names that should be appealing to a Bucks front office that wants youth coming back. The question is whether Houston wants to blow up a young core that hasn't fully matured yet for a 32-year-old on a massive deal. Bold move. Not impossible.
Minnesota Timberwolves
An Antetokounmpo-Anthony Edwards pairing is the kind of thing that keeps opposing coaches up at night. Minnesota reportedly pursued Giannis at the trade deadline, and if they can't get past the Western Conference semifinals, expect them to come back harder this summer. They have movable contracts in Jaden McDaniels, Julius Randle, and Rudy Gobert to construct a package, and Edwards as the centerpiece of a new era alongside Giannis is a compelling vision. The fit is there. Now it's just about whether the assets are enough to get Milwaukee to say yes.