Tyler Herro Just Addressed His Heat Exit In A Big Way

With a significant new signing, player sentiments, and future roster changes, the Milwaukee Bucks are making bold moves this offseason that promise to reshape the team's dynamics.

Gary Trent Jr.’s new Bucks deal is already drawing plenty of side-eye around the league, but the sign-and-trade chatter around it may not tell the whole story.

ESPN’s Shams Charania said this week on the Shump Street with Iman Shumpert podcast that another team was “poking around” a possible sign-and-trade for Trent at “around the same number.” That said, the Milwaukee agreement is expected to be fully guaranteed, and that matters.

It’s one thing to circle a player at that price tag; it’s another to commit four years to a veteran wing coming off one of the worst seasons of his career. A sign-and-trade suitor also might have been trying to shed an unwanted contract as part of the deal.

Tyler Herro, meanwhile, is trying to leave the drama behind and focus on what comes next in Milwaukee. In an interview with ESPN’s Ramona Shelburne, Herro said he wants to “move on” from the trade that sent him out of Miami and from the physical altercation he had with former Heat teammate Bam Adebayo in Las Vegas.

“Honestly, I’m just trying to move past all of it,” Herro told ESPN. “I’m focused on Milwaukee and building something special.

They obviously just traded the greatest player in their history, so we want to come in and help continue what they’ve been doing.” Shelburne added that Herro is excited to represent his hometown team and indicated that if he had to play for any club other than the Heat, the Bucks would have been his pick.

Shelburne also reported more details on the Adebayo-Herro incident, saying sources told ESPN that Herro was not knocked to the ground by Adebayo’s blow and had to be “restrained by others in the gym from responding physically.” Heat sources told ESPN that Adebayo and Herro had a strong relationship during their Miami years, but that the two drifted apart over the past year.

Thanasis Antetokounmpo’s run in Milwaukee is over, too. After six of the past seven seasons with the Bucks, he won’t be back for 2026/27.

In a farewell clip from his “Thanalysis” podcast, Antetokounmpo thanked the city and the state directly. “I am grateful for everything from the bottom of my heart,” he said, addressing Milwaukee and Wisconsin.

“Everything you gave to my family.”

And as if the Bucks didn’t already have enough moving parts, they’re also said to be among the teams showing sign-and-trade interest in Peyton Watson.

In Other News...

Heat Offseason Tension Just Reached A Critical Turning Point

Bam Adebayos offseason run-in in Las Vegas has now been reviewed from the league office all the way back to Miami, and the matter appears to be closing without any formal punishment. The NBA spoke with the players involved and the players union before deciding to take no further action, leaving the Heat to handle a situation that briefly put one of their cornerstone players at the center of unwanted attention.

Miami is also not planning to fine or suspend Adebayo, which keeps the focus on basketball rather than discipline as the team moves through the summer. Even so, the episode served as a reminder of how quickly offseason friction can spill into the public view, especially when it involves a player as important to the Heat as Adebayo. [Read more 🡒]

Bobby Portis Already Sounds Like A Perfect Heat Fit

Bobby Portis spent his first day in Miami sounding like a player who already understands what the Heat want to be. Officially introduced after the blockbuster trade that also brought Giannis Antetokounmpo to South Beach, Portis talked about how excited he is to join a group built around versatility in the frontcourt, and the fit is easy to see on paper.

Erik Spoelstra wasted no time pointing to what Portis adds, praising him as one of the leagues best shooting big men and a genuine low-post threat. For a Heat team that just reshaped its roster in a major way, Portis gives them another front-line piece with real skill, and the bigger question now is how quickly all of these new parts start clicking together. [Read more 🡒]