Giannis Antetokounmpo trade grades: How Bucks and Heat fared in massive deal including Tyler Herro, Bobby Portis

The writing has been on the wall for over a year now, and it finally happened. The Bucks decided to move on from their franchise player and two-time MVP, shipping Giannis Antetokounmpo off to the Heat. 

Read more Michigan’ star forward Yaxel Lendeborg poses an age-old problem for teams in 2026 NBA Draft

This trade will shake up the landscape of the NBA. Antetokounmpo made his 10th All-Star game last season and at age 31, still has a lot of gas left in the tank. He’s a consensus top-five player in the league as far as talent is concerned. The Heat clearly got better with this move. 

Did they pay too big of a price? And did the Bucks get enough back in their return? Here’s how each team did in the biggest three-way trade of the season.

MORE: Latest NBA Mock Draft | Big Board

Giannis Antetokounmpo trade details

Bucks receive:

  • Tyler Herro
  • Kel’el Ware
  • Jaime Jaquez Jr.
  • Kasparas Jakucionis
  • No. 13 pick in 2026
  • Pick swap in 2030
  • Unprotected first-round picks in 2031 and 2033
  • Second-round pick in 2033

Heat receive:

  • Giannis Antetokounmpo
  • Bobby Portis

Heat trade grade

The Heat have been stuck in mediocrity for a while now. Giannis will undoubtedly get them out of the middle. When you look at the surrounding cast that he had to work with in Milwaukee, the Heat have more stuff even after trading away so much depth. Keeping Bam Adebayo in this deal gives Miami two All-Defensive caliber players in their starting lineup. 

Giannis is also still more than capable of spearheading an offense. He averaged 27.6 points, 9.8 rebounds, and 5.4 assists while shooting a career-high 62.4 percent from the field last season. He’s developed a killer midrange game over the past few seasons to go along with his unstoppable driving ability, and he’s an underrated passer. 

Portis isn’t the guy he was during the Bucks’ championship run, but he can still provide some stretch shooting and scoring off the bench, replacing some of that depth that Miami lost. 

The Heat are going to be a very good team in the East with a starting five of Giannis, Adebayo, Davion Mitchell, Andrew Wiggins (who will likely opt into his $30.2 million this season), and potentially Norman Powell if the team can re-sign him in free agency. They’re still behind New York and Boston. But they should be in the hunt for home court advantage in the playoffs. 

Is that outcome worth giving up so many of their young prospects and picks that have a chance to be excellent in 2030 and beyond? If I were in charge of the Heat, I’d say probably not. For 81-year-old Team President Pat Riley and 76-year-old owner Micky Arison, the answer was a resounding yes. 

Grade: C+

MORE: How Giannis fits into new Heat lineup

Bucks trade grade

The Bucks should have made this trade a year ago. Instead, they held onto Giannis for a miserable 2025-26 season, impacted their books through 2030 by waiving Damian Lillard in a desperation move to stay afloat, and lost value by moving him when he was a year older and had one less guaranteed season on his contract. 

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Putting those mistakes aside, this is not a bad haul for them. Herro is a good regular season player who will help keep them at least somewhat competitive. That is important because they don’t control their own picks through 2030 and have no reason to try and bottom out. Herro has looked worse in playoff settings where he has gotten attacked relentlessly defensively, but that won’t be as much of an issue for a Bucks team that is now far from contention. 

The Bucks also added some nice blue chip prospects, which they badly needed given that Ryan Rollins was their only young player with decent upside. 

This is a good draft, and the Bucks can get a great player at No. 13. I have Yaxel Lendeborg falling to that selection in my latest mock draft. One of the Michigan three of Aday Mara, Lendeborg, or Morez Johnson should be available and would be good pickups. 

Ware is an intriguing two-way center with plus athleticism who has had focus issues in Miami. Jaquez is a talented scorer who was runner-up in Sixth Man of the Year voting last season. Jakucionis was selected No. 20 in last year’s draft and shot the ball well as a rookie guard. They are 25, 22, and 20 years old respectively, giving the Bucks a solid young core alongside Rollins, that No. 13 pick, and the 26-year-old Herro.

Milwaukee is going to take a step back with this trade. They were 15-31 in games that Giannis missed last season. Better chemistry, a new coach, and the addition of Herro and others should boost that mark some. But they’re not replacing a top five player in the league, and the Bucks are going to tread water until those potentially awesome future picks start conveying in 2030. 

Once Giannis was at real risk of leaving in free agency next summer, the Bucks had to pull the trigger on a deal. Given that pressure, this was about as good of a return as they could have hoped for.

A Jaylen Brown-centered package, which was reportedly also on the table, would have provided a stronger team in the short term. But this is the package that gives them a brighter overall future and was better value. 

Read more NBA Mock Draft 2026: Final 2-round predictions with AJ Dybantsa, Cam Boozer, and Darryn Peterson leading the way

Grade: B+

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