Tyler Herro said he is ready to move past a physical confrontation with former Miami Heat teammate Bam Adebayo that occurred in Las Vegas on July 10 and is directing his focus toward his new team in Milwaukee, where the Wisconsin native said he has always wanted to represent the state and city he grew up in.
The confrontation at a Las Vegas hotel gym took place after Adebayo approached Herro following a morning workout, the two men having found themselves on adjacent schedules at the same training facility. What followed was a verbal exchange that escalated into a physical altercation, with Adebayo striking Herro near his chin according to sources with knowledge of the encounter. Others in the gym intervened before the situation escalated further. Descriptions of the precise nature of the physical contact varied among those with knowledge of the incident.
What triggered the confrontation
The exchange was rooted in friction that had been building between the two players throughout Herro’s difficult final season in Miami. Adebayo apparently took issue with commentary from a social media account associated with Herro that questioned whether the Heat center justified his significant contract and suggested that Herro, rather than Adebayo, had been the player who needed more supporting cast around him. That commentary appeared to be a response to public comments Adebayo had made after Miami’s playoff exit, in which he suggested he needed more help from those around him.
The social media back-and-forth brought to the surface a relationship that had grown strained over the previous year. Herro played in only 33 games during his final Miami season due to a series of injuries, and as he worked to return from those setbacks, he encountered a version of the Heat offense that had moved away from the pick-and-roll actions where he has historically been most effective. Adebayo, as the team’s captain, made comments on multiple occasions suggesting Herro needed to adapt to the new system, comments that sources said wore on the guard as he was simultaneously dealing with his health and hearing his name in trade discussions.
The relationship between the two players had been largely positive across their seven seasons as teammates, according to those close to the situation, but the final year created distance that had not previously existed.
Why Milwaukee feels different for Herro
The trade that sent Herro to Milwaukee as part of the blockbuster deal bringing Giannis Antetokounmpo to Miami ended one chapter and opened another that Herro described as genuinely meaningful to him.
Herro grew up in Wisconsin and said he had wanted to represent Milwaukee professionally since leaving for college. Coming to the Bucks gives him the opportunity to play in his home state for a franchise that is rebuilding around a new core after trading its franchise cornerstone. He described the chance as something beyond basketball, framing it as a homecoming that carries personal significance separate from any competitive considerations.
He said he intends to be part of building something special in Milwaukee rather than simply stepping into a ready-made contender, and described the team’s decision to trade Antetokounmpo as creating an opportunity he and his new teammates can help shape.
The Las Vegas context and what came after
Herro was present courtside at a summer league game between the Heat and Bucks in Las Vegas the evening after the morning altercation, where he spoke warmly about his Miami relationships before news of the confrontation became public. His public comments in that setting suggested a desire to manage the departure without public conflict, a posture consistent with how he has addressed the situation since.
He said he remains on good terms with the Heat organization and views the situation as a fresh start for both parties rather than a rupture.

