Milwaukee Bucks general manager Jon Horst addressed the trade of Giannis Antetokounmpo to the Miami Heat on a conference call with reporters Wednesday, describing the decision as genuinely difficult while defending it as the right outcome for both the franchise and for Antetokounmpo given the circumstances each was navigating.
Horst was candid about what the trade does and does not represent. He acknowledged that no one inside the organization is claiming Milwaukee is a better basketball team today than it was with Antetokounmpo on the roster. At the same time, he expressed optimism about the opportunity the trade creates and genuine excitement about the challenge of building something new.
Why Milwaukee made the move
The Bucks have been searching for a path back to championship contention since winning the 2021 NBA title. Last season, the franchise finished 32-50 and missed the postseason for the first time in nine years, making the situation increasingly difficult to sustain with an aging core and a superstar whose championship ambitions were not being met in the existing structure.
Horst framed the trade as a decision made from a position of organizational clarity rather than desperation. He said it was not a situation where the Bucks felt forced to move Antetokounmpo but rather one in which they genuinely believed an opportunity had emerged that served both parties. He said the organization might be right about that judgment and might be wrong, but that the decision reflected what they believed was best for the franchise and for the player going forward.
The deal brought Miami’s package to Milwaukee rather than alternatives from other interested teams primarily because of the flexibility the return provided. The combination of draft capital in the form of three first-round picks, a pick swap, and a second-round pick, alongside four players including younger contributors, gives Milwaukee more options and more runway as they attempt to establish a new foundation.
A transition that involved wide-ranging emotions
Horst used language that reflected the weight of the decision without dwelling in regret. He described a wide range of emotions accompanying the end of a 13-year partnership between the franchise and a player who by his account is the greatest in franchise history and one of the greatest to have ever played the game. He credited the relationship and expressed that the send-off felt appropriate given everything Antetokounmpo had given to Milwaukee.
He also noted that part of his peace with the outcome came from believing that Antetokounmpo is in a position to pursue what he wants to accomplish. Antetokounmpo had been clear for years that competing for another championship was his primary motivation, and the situation in Milwaukee had not been providing that realistic possibility. Miami gives him a competitive environment where that ambition can be pursued again.
What the Bucks do next
Milwaukee enters a genuine rebuild phase under a new head coach, who replaced the previous staff after last season’s disappointing results. Horst described the challenge ahead with energy rather than dread, saying he finds excitement in the process of assembling a competitive roster from a different starting point than the one the Bucks have occupied for the past decade.
The key assets the Bucks now hold, the draft capital from the Miami deal and the younger players who came back in the trade, give them meaningful tools to work with rather than an empty roster. Building a roster that can sustain competitive performance year over year rather than cycling through a single championship window was the explicit goal Horst articulated, suggesting the organization is thinking about the next chapter in terms of sustained competitiveness rather than a quick turnaround.

