The Bucks have a strange opening in front of them, and it might point them right toward Jaylen Brown.
Milwaukee is now dealing with a roster that no longer includes Giannis Antetokounmpo, and the bigger problem is what comes next: the Bucks do not control their own draft pick for next season. That leaves them in a tough spot, but also a clear one. If a chance comes to chase another star, Brown is the kind of player they should at least seriously consider.
Brown fits Milwaukee in a way that’s easy to miss at first glance. For one thing, the Bucks could use a player like him because they’re not in a position to sit back and wait on the future. Just as important, Milwaukee could give Brown something he may not easily find elsewhere: the chance to be the clear No. 1 option again.
That matters after Brown’s postseason ended with a disappointing first-round loss. He said last season was his favorite of his career, and it’s easy to see why.
It was the only season in which he led the Celtics in scoring, helped along by Jayson Tatum’s injury. But Tatum is back now, and Boston had already moved away from a Brown-centered offense by the end of the season.
Outside of obvious tanking teams, there aren’t many places where Brown could arrive and immediately be the primary scorer. Milwaukee might be one of the rare exceptions. He’d be able to play the style he prefers while still trying to win, and he already proved last season that he can put up points with a limited supporting cast around him.
A deal would have to work for Boston too, and the Bucks don’t have a lot of obvious win-now pieces to dangle. Still, they do have a center rotation that could draw interest. Myles Turner stands out as the headliner and would fit in Boston in the role Kristaps Porzingis previously filled.
Tyler Herro could also appeal to the Celtics as another shooter and ball-handler who fits their usual mold. Herro has long been a confident outside shooter, and his offensive game matches the kind of guard Boston likes.
Brown’s exit from Boston feels inevitable after he was included as a possible Giannis trade chip. The twist is that Milwaukee, even without Giannis coming back the other way, might now be the cleanest landing spot for everyone involved. If the Bucks can build a real offer, Brown would make sense as the face of the team while they wait to regain control of their draft situation.
In Other News...
Clippers Linked To Bold Defensive Swing That Would Change Everything
A proposed three-team trade making the rounds would send Myles Turner to Golden State and Draymond Green to the Clippers, while the Bucks would come out of the deal with Bogdan Bogdanovic and Isaiah Jackson. It is the sort of offseason framework that forces a hard look at roster construction, especially for Milwaukee, which would be adding two different kinds of depth while reshaping the back end of the roster around players who can help in the short term and beyond.
The bigger point for the Bucks is what the move might mean for flexibility. By moving off Turners remaining contract in the proposal, Milwaukee would be opening the door to a cleaner financial path as it navigates the next stage of its roster plan, though this remains only a hypothetical from Sports Illustrated and nothing has been confirmed by any team. Still, it is the kind of idea that gets attention because it touches both the present and the future, which is exactly where the Bucks have some of their toughest decisions. [Read more 🡒]
Bucks Are Closing In On A Franchise Defining Ja Morant Clue
Milwaukees offseason has already taken on a different shape since the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade, and it has left the Bucks weighing what kind of upgrade would actually matter most. A report from Yahoo! Sports Kevin OConnor has linked the team to Ja Morant, which immediately puts a spotlight on how Milwaukee wants to rebuild the roster around its next era, especially with the backcourt already carrying plenty of bodies.
Ryan Rollins, Kevin Porter Jr., Tyler Herro, Kasparas Jakuionis, Brayden Burries, AJ Green and Gary Harris are all part of the equation, with Gary Trent Jr.s situation still unresolved, so adding another guard would only sharpen the logjam. That is why the more interesting question may not be whether the Bucks can chase a star point guard, but whether their best path is to resist that urge and use the rest of the offseason to address the forward spots instead. [Read more 🡒]
