Davion Mitchell didn’t wait for the Heat to hand him an introduction. He got Giannis Antetokounmpo’s number, sent the text himself and decided the best way to start building this new partnership was to go straight to Greece.
“I’ll pull up there, and we’re going to work out,” Mitchell said Friday in Las Vegas. “It’s going to be fun.”
“I got his number and I texted him,” Mitchell said. “And now in the middle of the summer, I’m going to Greece.”
For Miami, that’s the kind of early buy-in the front office had to love. The Heat just made a massive bet on Antetokounmpo, and Mitchell is already acting like the point guard who’ll be asked to make it all fit.
Mitchell also brought another encouraging update: he said he has lost “a lot of weight” this offseason and is now dunking in workouts.
“I’m just moving a lot faster, more fluid, and I feel more comfortable,” Mitchell said.
That matters because the Heat’s backcourt has been completely reshaped. Tyler Herro went to Milwaukee as the headline piece in the Antetokounmpo deal, which also included Kel’el Ware, Jaime Jaquez Jr., Kasparas Jakucionis and a haul of draft capital. Norman Powell later left for the Chicago Bulls in free agency, squeezed out by the same hard cap that now limits Miami’s roster-building options.
That leaves Mitchell in a huge spot. He looks like the presumptive lead guard on opening night, the player who has to connect Antetokounmpo, Bam Adebayo and the rest of the roster.
The numbers say he earned that chance. Mitchell averaged 9.3 points, 6.5 assists and 2.7 rebounds in 70 games in 2025-26, while shooting 49.0 percent from the field and 39.5 percent from 3-point range, per Basketball-Reference. His assists were a career high, and his efficiency kept climbing after he arrived in Miami at the 2025 trade deadline.
There’s also a defensive angle that makes this fit even more interesting. In Yahoo!
Sports’ trade breakdown, Kelly Iko projected Miami as a potential top-five defense, pointing to Mitchell’s pressure on the ball, Andrew Wiggins’ length and the rim protection of Antetokounmpo and Adebayo. A guard nicknamed “Off-Night” hounding opposing handlers while two elite bigs clean up behind him is exactly the kind of setup Erik Spoelstra has spent years trying to build.
Still, chemistry is the piece that can’t be drawn up on a whiteboard. Mitchell is heading overseas to start solving that problem before camp ever opens.
Miami lost three rotation regulars in the trade, and there’s still a clear hole behind Adebayo in the middle. The sooner the new core gets comfortable with its franchise centerpiece, the smoother things should look in October.
There’s a personal layer here too. Mitchell is entering the final season of the two-year, $24 million deal he signed last July, with only 2026-27 left on the contract. On a hard-capped team with limited ways to replace a starting point guard, that gives him real leverage if this pairing works - and gives Miami every reason to hope it does.
The weight loss only adds to that picture. A quicker Mitchell attacking off Antetokounmpo’s gravity is a better version of the player Miami had last season, and potentially a more valuable one next summer.
The timing makes the whole thing even cleaner. Mitchell said the Greece trip will happen in the middle of the summer, giving the two of them a head start months before training camp.
And while Mitchell is flying out to meet his new co-star, Antetokounmpo has his own business ahead in Miami. Winderman reported that he is locked in at $58.4 million for the coming season and becomes eligible for a four-year extension worth roughly $275 million.
The Heat gave up a mountain of talent and picks to land their star. But the first move of the new era wasn’t made by the front office. It was a point guard getting a phone number, sending a text and booking a flight to Athens.
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