The Milwaukee Bucks held onto Giannis Antetokounmpo at the 2026 NBA trade deadline, despite interest from multiple teams including the Warriors and Heat. Antetokounmpo expressed his desire to stay and win a championship with Milwaukee, posting on social media that 'Legends don't chase. They attract.' The Bucks now focus on roster adjustments to convince him to sign a lucrative extension this fall.
The NBA trade deadline passed on Thursday without Giannis Antetokounmpo changing teams, ending weeks of speculation. The Bucks received inquiries from contenders like the Golden State Warriors, Miami Heat, New York Knicks, and Minnesota Timberwolves, but no deal met Milwaukee's demands for multiple first-round picks and young talent.
Antetokounmpo, sidelined with a right soleus strain since Jan. 23, spoke to The Athletic and Milwaukee Journal Sentinel earlier this week, reaffirming his commitment. "If you ask me what do I really want, deep down in my heart? I want to be a Milwaukee Buck until I retire and win a championship here. End of sentence," he told the Journal. To The Athletic, he added, "You're saying that if they can convince me to stay within the team, and the next year that we can compete? Oh yeah, 1,000 percent."
Post-deadline, Antetokounmpo posted a clip from 'The Wolf of Wall Street' on social media, captioning it 'Legends don't chase. They attract,' signaling his intent to remain. The Bucks, now 20-29 and 12th in the East, traded for Myles Turner and others but avoided a full rebuild. With Antetokounmpo out, they are 5-14 without him.
Milwaukee's path forward includes tanking for lottery odds—their pick is owed as a swap to New Orleans—and potential coaching changes. Doc Rivers is 85-82 since taking over, and fans call for a younger coach. Roster reshuffling could involve trading Kyle Kuzma or Bobby Portis for stars like Ja Morant or Michael Porter Jr. Antetokounmpo becomes extension-eligible in October for a four-year, $275 million deal, giving the Bucks an edge over rivals.
The deadline saw 28 trades league-wide, but Milwaukee's decision keeps the focus on retaining their franchise cornerstone amid injury concerns and Eastern Conference struggles.