The Milwaukee Bucks are undeniably one of the NBA’s elite teams when it comes to three-point shooting. As of March 21, 2025, their roster boasts a collective prowess from beyond the arc that has propelled them into the upper echelon of the league. Players like Damian Lillard, Khris Middleton, and a cadre of sharpshooting role players have turned Milwaukee into a perimeter threat that defenses must respect. The Bucks rank among the league leaders in three-point attempts and efficiency, a testament to their modern, space-and-pace style which continues with coach Doc Rivers. Yet, lurking beneath this glittering statistic is a perplexing enigma: Giannis Antetokounmpo, the team’s superstar and heartbeat, is inexplicably getting worse from three-point range—and it’s a serious problem that fans are hypocritically brushing aside.

Let’s start with the Bucks’ three-point dominance. This season, they’ve leaned heavily into their outside shooting, with Lillard’s pull-up artistry and Middleton’s catch-and-shoot reliability leading the charge. Role players like Gary Trent Jr. and Bobby Portis have also stepped up, stretching defenses thin and creating the kind of spacing that makes Milwaukee’s offense a nightmare to guard. When the Bucks are clicking, their ability to rain threes opens up the floor for Giannis to do what he does best: bulldoze his way to the rim with unstoppable force. It’s a formula that has kept them in contention, with a record that reflects their status as a top Eastern Conference team even after a rocky 2-8 start.But here’s where the mystery deepens. Giannis, the two-time MVP and 2021 Finals hero, has never been a sharpshooter, but his decline from three-point range this season is alarming. He’s attempting fewer than one three-pointer per game—his lowest rate since his sophomore season in 2014-15—and converting at a dismal 19%. For context, his career high in three-point percentage was 34.7% as a rookie, and he hovered around 30% during his peak MVP years. Now, at age 30, with a decade of NBA experience, you’d expect some refinement in his jumper, especially given his relentless work ethic. Instead, he’s regressing, and it’s baffling.Why is this happening?

Theories abound. Some suggest he’s intentionally abandoned the shot, focusing on his midrange game (where he’s thriving) to preserve his body for the playoffs after years of injury setbacks. There’s also the possibility of a mental block—years of defenses sagging off him might have eroded his confidence in letting it fly. Whatever the reason, the numbers don’t lie: Giannis is trending downward while the Bucks’ system demands more from the perimeter.This decline isn’t just a curiosity—it’s a serious problem. In today’s NBA, versatility is king, especially in the postseason. The Bucks’ three-point barrage works wonders in the regular season, but playoff defenses are smarter, tighter, and more willing to dare Giannis to shoot. We’ve seen it before: teams build a wall in the paint, clogging his driving lanes, and if he can’t punish them from deep, the offense stalls. In 2021, he powered through with sheer dominance, but recent first-round exits highlight how his lack of an outside shot can bottleneck Milwaukee’s attack when it matters most. With Lillard aging, the Bucks need Giannis to evolve, not regress, to keep their championship window open. Note that this 3point percentage is close to the worse 3point percentage EVER in a season in NBA history!

And yet, Bucks fans—bless their loyal hearts—are playing a hypocritical game of denial. They’ll cheer every Lillard dagger and Portis triple, proudly touting their team’s three-point prowess, but when Giannis clanks another rare attempt, it’s crickets or excuses. “He doesn’t need to shoot threes!” they insist. “He’s the best in the paint—why change?” It’s a convenient narrative, but it dodges the truth: a Giannis who can’t stretch the floor limits the Bucks’ ceiling. Pretending otherwise is like ignoring a crack in the foundation of a house you love—it doesn’t fix itself, and it could bring everything down.
(The irony is that the Bucks this season also have THE BEST 3point shooter in the NBA on their roster!)

The Bucks are a three-point juggernaut, no question. But Giannis’s worsening performance from deep is a glaring flaw which makes the team extremely weak in the modern NBA. Until he rediscovers—or at least stabilizes—his outside shot, Milwaukee’s title hopes rest on a shaky premise: that their star can dominate without adapting to the league’s perimeter-driven reality. Fans can keep pretending it doesn’t matter, but the postseason will tell the real story. And if history is any guide, this mystery could turn into a tragedy.