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  • Greek Freak Folly: Giannis, not Doc Rivers, Is Sinking the Bucks

    Greek Freak Folly: Giannis, not Doc Rivers, Is Sinking the Bucks

    Milwaukee Bucks fans are at it again. As the 2024-25 season wrapped up with another frustrating early playoff exit— a first-round flameout against the Pacers after scraping into the postseason as the East’s No. 5 seed at 48-34—the scapegoat du jour is Doc Rivers. Social media is ablaze with calls for his firing, memes about his “clutch-time meltdowns,” and hot takes blaming everything from his rotations to his post-game pressers. But let’s pump the brakes. Doc Rivers isn’t the villain here. He’s a championship-winning coach (2008 with the Celtics, remember?) who’s now saddled with a .548 winning percentage in Milwaukee despite inheriting a roster that’s equal parts superstar talent and glaring mismatches. The real culprit? Giannis Antetokounmpo. Yeah, the two-time MVP, Finals MVP, and perpetual All-NBA freak of nature. His limitations—stubborn refusal to evolve his game, a personality that keeps potential teammates at arm’s length, and a playing style that’s tailor-made for 82-game stat-padding but crumbles under playoff pressure—are the anchors dragging this franchise down. It’s time to stop with the excuses and face the music: Giannis is a regular-season monster who vanishes when the lights get brightest.

    Doc Rivers: The Fall Guy for a Flawed Star System

    Hired mid-2023-24 after Adrian Griffin’s abrupt firing, Doc Rivers walked into a pressure cooker. The Bucks were 30-13 under Griffin, but whispers of locker-room discord and defensive lapses were already swirling. Rivers steadied the ship somewhat, finishing that season at 13-7 after a rocky 5-6 start in his tenure. Fast-forward to 2024-25: 48 wins, a top-11 offense (115.5 PPG), and a middling defense (113.0 PPG allowed)—hardly the apocalypse. His overall Bucks record? A pedestrian 66-54.

    Fans point to Doc’s “poor adjustments” in the playoffs—like last year’s second-round debacle against the Celtics in 2024, where Milwaukee got swept in five after Giannis’ calf injury sidelined him for two games. But even when healthy, Rivers’ teams have overachieved relative to talent. In Boston, he won 56 games with a balanced roster; in Milwaukee, he’s squeezing blood from a stone. As one insider noted ahead of 2025-26, Rivers is “uniquely qualified” to maximise this group’s defence, yet the Bucks’ interior personnel (hello, Giannis and Lopez) hasn’t translated to elite stops because the offence stalls in crunch time—more on that later.

    Blame Doc if you want rotation roulette or sideline suits, but he’s not the reason the Bucks are 11-17 in the playoffs since their 2021 title run. That’s on the guy whose name is on the marquee.

    Giannis’ Game: All Gas, No Brakes—And No Jumper

    Giannis Antetokounmpo is a walking highlight reel: 6’11”, freight-train athleticism, and stats that scream superstar. Career regular-season averages? 23.9 PPG, 9.9 RPG, 4.9 APG on freakish efficiency. In 2024-25, he bumped that to 30.4 PPG and 11.9 RPG, finishing second in scoring. But playoffs? That’s where the mask slips. Career postseason: 27.0 PPG and 12.2 RPG—impressive volume, sure, but on brutal efficiency. His true shooting dips to 56% from 61% in the regular season, and his three-point volume craters (1.5 makes on 4.0 attempts at 38%, vs. 29% career). Teams pack the paint, dare him to shoot, and he obliges with wild drives that yield turnovers or contested bricks.

    The real indictment? Clutch time. In his last seven playoff games (spanning 2024-25’s first-round exit), Giannis averaged 29.9 PPG but on laughable 53/25/60 splits—53% FG, 25% from three, 60% FT—and a 56% TS. That’s not elite; that’s inefficient heroism. Critics have roasted him for years: In 2020, he “choked” against the Heat by settling for jumpers instead of attacking; in 2023, Miami’s zone exposed his lack of shooting, forcing 20+ FT attempts per game (he shot 63% from the line). Even in the 2021 Finals, his 50-point closeout was iconic, but it masked a series of inefficient outbursts (e.g., 34 points on 28 shots in Game 4).

    At 30, Giannis hasn’t grown. No reliable mid-range, no pull-up game, no off-ball movement. He’s a one-dimensional bulldozer who pads stats in open-floor regular-season romps but gets neutralized when schemes tighten. As one analyst put it, “Giannis is the only severely limited player of that caliber in the NBA,” and opponents exploit it ruthlessly. Doc can’t coach evolution into a guy who’s won two MVPs without bothering to add a jumper. He can’t screen either. Hell, he can’t even understand more advanced plays and dumbs down the entire team.

    The Lone Wolf: Why Superstars Ghost the Bucks

    Giannis’ personality doesn’t help recruitment. He’s infamously antisocial with rivals—refusing offseason workouts with other NBA players because it “takes off his edge.” In a league where chemistry is king (think Curry-Draymond or LeBron-AD), this “me vs. the world” vibe screams red flag. He doesn’t train with active players, doesn’t build bonds; it’s all business, no buddies. Damian Lillard joined in 2023, sure, but that was a salary-dump necessity, not a dream team-up. Dame’s fit was clunky—pick-and-rolls fizzle because Giannis clogs the lane—and whispers of friction emerged by mid-2025.

    Other stars? Crickets. Why join a small-market grind where you’re the sidekick to a ball-dominant alpha who won’t pass out of doubles? Trade rumours swirl around Giannis himself—recent “very real” talks with the front office about his future—but no superstar is lining up for Milwaukee. As one Bucks beat writer noted, even Giannis knows trades happen to “superstars” if the front office falters, yet his isolated style makes building a superteam feel impossible. In an era of player empowerment, who’d choose iso-ball in the Deer District over Hollywood glamour?

    Excuses, Excuses: Bucks Fans’ Greatest Hits (And Misses)

    Bucks Nation has a PhD in deflection. Let’s run through the classics:

    • Coaches Are the Cancer: Budenholzer “couldn’t adjust” in 2023 (fired after a first-round loss). Griffin was “too green” in 2024 (axed after 43 games). Now Doc’s “clueless rotations” and “awful clutch offense” get the boot. Reality? Three coaches in four years, same result: playoff no-shows. The constant? Giannis’ unchanged game.
    • Front Office Fiascos: Jon Horst gets roasted for trading Jrue Holiday for Lillard (a net loss in defense and vibes) or not surrounding Giannis with shooters. Fair, but Horst built the 2021 champs. Blaming execs ignores that no GM can fix a star who won’t shoot threes.
    • Refs Robbing Us Blind: “The league hates Milwaukee!” cries after every foul call (or non-call) on Giannis’ drives. But his 60% FT in playoffs? That’s on him, not zebras.
    • Injuries Are Curses: Giannis’ 2024 calf tear, Middleton’s endless ankles, Lillard’s groin—valid hurdles, but they’ve played 70+ games each in 2024-25. Excuses don’t win series.
    • Roster Rejects: “We need shooters!” Sure, but adding Portis and Crowder hasn’t moved the needle because Giannis’ gravity pulls defenders inward, killing spacing.

    These aren’t conspiracies; they’re shields against the truth. As Kevin Garnett bluntly said, Doc’s struggles stem from “the players,” not his schemes—every roster can’t play for him, but Giannis’ limitations amplify flaws everywhere.

    Time to Trade the Freak? A Reckoning for Milwaukee

    The Bucks’ 2021 ring was lightning in a bottle—health, grit, and a perfect storm. Since? Four straight playoff disappointments: ECF loss in 2022, first-rounders in ’23 and ’24, and another quick exit in ’25. Giannis is the common denominator: a stat-sheet stuffer who feasts on regular-season cupcakes (30+ PPG on fast breaks) but wilts when schemed against. His “clutch block” in 2021 was magic; his 2025 closeouts were duds.

    Doc Rivers might not be the saviour, but firing him now is just another excuse. The real fix? A hard reset around a star who can actually grow—or trade the one who won’t. Bucks fans, your loyalty is admirable, but denial is deadly. Face it: The Greek Freak’s limitations aren’t fixable by coaching tapes or trades. They’re baked in. Until Milwaukee admits that, the parade dreams stay on hold.

    If you’re reading this in Milwaukee, stock up on therapy sessions. Stop sharing his points/assists/rebound numbers. We all know they are rigged for him, the entire team helping him get those numbers and sacrificing their own. Stop shouting “when he gets a jumper…” he never will. Or “wow, what a dribble” in the one time it works out. Giannis can’t shoot. He can’t dribble (tops the leagues in palming and other errors.) He can’t pass, Sengun is 100% correct. Forget about that highlight mid season when it didn’t count. He has no court vision and no basketball IQ. Stop judging him from highlights against easy opponents and re-watch the tougher games. The truth hurts, but it’s the only path forward.


    Giannis loves Doc Rivers – here is why and how https://greekinter.net/giannis/2025/05/20/doc-rivers-tenure-with-the-milwaukee-bucks-giannis-loves-him-end-of-story/

    What Doc Rivers said to Giannis and Dame in their not so secret meeting https://greekinter.net/giannis/2025/03/23/what-doc-rivers-said-to-dame-and-giannis-in-their-secret-meeting/

    Giannis is uncoachable – read the signs https://greekinter.net/giannis/2025/03/19/it-aint-doc-rivers-fault-giannis-is-simply-uncoachable/

  • Giannis Can’t Play Like Carmelo Anthony

    Giannis Can’t Play Like Carmelo Anthony

    In the pantheon of NBA greats, few players embody offensive versatility quite like Carmelo Anthony. Known for his silky mid-range game, deadly jab steps, and isolation scoring prowess, Melo was a nightmare matchup for defenders throughout his career. On the other hand, Giannis Antetokounmpo, the Greek Freak, has built his Hall-of-Fame trajectory on sheer athletic dominance—barreling to the rim with eurosteps, thunderous dunks, and relentless drives. While Giannis has expressed interest in training with retired legends like Melo to expand his arsenal, the reality is stark: he simply can’t replicate Anthony’s style. Over a decade in the league, Giannis has shown minimal evolution in key offensive skills, adding precious few tools while regressing in others.

    The Fundamental Clash of Styles: Athleticism vs. Finesse

    Carmelo Anthony’s game was a masterclass in offensive craftsmanship. He excelled in the mid-range, where he consistently shot around 35-36% from 10-16 feet in his prime years, using footwork, pump fakes, and pull-up jumpers to create space. His three-point shooting peaked at over 40% in seasons like 2013-14, and he maintained a free-throw percentage often above 80%, making him a reliable closer in crunch time. Melo’s assists hovered around 2-4 per game, but his value lay in self-creation—iso plays where he could dismantle defenses one-on-one without needing elite speed or vertical leap.

    Contrast that with Giannis. From his rookie year in 2013-14, where he averaged just 6.8 points on 41.4% shooting, his game has always centered on physical gifts: length, speed, and power. He thrives at the rim, converting over 78% of attempts there in recent seasons, often via straight-line drives or transition buckets. But this reliance on athleticism limits him in half-court sets against packed defenses. Unlike Melo, Giannis lacks the refined footwork for jab-step pull-ups or the touch for consistent mid-range fadeaways. His career three-point percentage sits inconsistently low, and he rarely attempts the kind of contested jumpers that defined Anthony’s scoring. Even as Giannis has voiced admiration for Melo—recently stating he wants to train with him because “I don’t like working with players who are playing right now”—the body types and ingrained habits make emulation improbable. Giannis is a 7-foot freight train; Melo was a 6’8” surgeon with the ball.

    Giannis’ Stunted Development: Incremental Gains, Minimal Additions

    Giannis entered the NBA as a raw, skinny prospect from Greece, with scouts praising his potential but noting his lack of polish. Over 12 seasons, he’s transformed into a two-time MVP and champion, but a closer look at his stats reveals a player who has leaned heavily on his natural tools rather than building a diverse skill set.

    • Scoring Efficiency at the Rim: This is where Giannis has shone, improving his field goal percentage from 41.4% as a rookie to a career-high 61.1% in 2023-24. His points per game ballooned to 30.4 in 2024-25, but this growth stems from higher usage (up to 35.2%) and better team spacing, not new moves. He’s still primarily a slasher, with over 70% of his shots coming within 10 feet of the basket in most seasons.
    • Playmaking: He hasn’t developed the off-ball screening or spot-up shooting that could make him a true offensive hub like LeBron James.
    • Limited Perimeter Expansion: Giannis has attempted more threes over time (up to 4-5 per game), but his accuracy hasn’t followed. After a decent 34.7% in his rookie year (on low volume), it’s plummeted to 22.2% in 2024-25. Mid-range shots? Virtually absent from his repertoire, unlike Melo’s bread-and-butter. Analyses of his progression highlight this stagnation: while he’s added muscle and confidence, core skills like ball-handling in tight spaces or off-dribble shooting remain underdeveloped.

    Expert takes echo this. Discussions on his growth mindset praise his work ethic, but they often circle back to the same traits: obsession with the game and physical dominance, not technical refinement. One analysis notes he’s “not the most skilled,” relying on discipline over innate finesse. In essence, Giannis has polished his strengths but added few new weapons, making his game predictable in playoffs where athletic edges are neutralized.

    Regressions That Highlight the Plateau

    Worse still, Giannis has backslid in areas that could have diversified his attack, further distancing him from a Melo-like versatility.

    • Free-Throw Shooting: A glaring weakness. Peaking at 77.0% in 2016-17, it regressed to a dismal 61.7% in 2024-25—worse than his rookie 68.3%. This not only hurts in close games but discourages aggressive drives, as hacks become a viable strategy. Melo, by comparison, rarely dipped below 75%, maintaining clutch reliability.
    • Three-Point Regression: From sporadic highs around 30%, it’s tanked to sub-25% in recent seasons, reducing his spacing threat. Defenses sag off him, clogging the paint and limiting his drives—the very core of his game.
    • Overall True Shooting: While it peaked at 64.9% in 2023-24, it dipped to 62.5% the next year amid these shooting woes. Rebounding has stayed elite (around 11-13 per game), but that’s another athletic staple, not a learned skill.

    Social media and forums buzz with similar observations: while fans laud his passing as “underrated,” broader takes question if his development has plateaued, with one post calling him “one of the best development stories” but implicitly noting it’s more about physical maturation than skill acquisition.

    Why Training with Melo Won’t Bridge the Gap

    At 30 years old (turning 31 in December 2025) fundamental changes are tough. Melo himself responded enthusiastically to Giannis’ interest, praising his “student” mindset and offering to mentor. Yet, absorbing Melo’s jab-step mastery or mid-range touch requires years of repetition Giannis hasn’t invested. His body—built for explosion, not subtlety—doesn’t lend itself to Melo’s deliberate pacing. Plus, with regressions in shooting mechanics, adding finesse now feels like patching a sinking ship rather than rebuilding it.

    Analyses suggest Giannis thrives by amplifying his gifts, not reinventing them. Attempting a Melo transformation could dilute what makes him special: that unstoppable force to the basket. As one veteran coach might say, “A—holes don’t get better”—implying ego can stall growth, but in Giannis’ case, it’s more about path dependency.

    Giannis’ inability to play like Carmelo Anthony underscores a career of limited skill expansion. He has regressed in shooting reliability, leaving his game one-dimensional compared to Melo’s multifaceted scoring. As the NBA evolves toward spacing and versatility, Giannis’ stagnation could cap his legacy unless he defies the odds. For now, the Greek Freak remains a force of nature—not a craftsman like Melo. And his lack of development is showing in comparisons with younger more capable players that can do it all. Just because Giannis happened to see some old YouTube clips of Melo one night recently doesn’t mean he can emulate anything at all.

  • Giannis full interview translated

    Giannis full interview translated

    I came to tell you everything.

    Giannis Antetokounmpo on SPORT24, this is the original article here. All rights reserved and all that Disclaimer stuff, not my text, all photos from there, click for the original, I am just translating for foreign readers.

    Literally everything has been written and said about Giannis Antetokounmpo. Pleasant and unpleasant. He has been deified and leveled, like every great athlete. Who he is is up to each person to decide .

    But surely, the megastar of the Milwaukee Bucks and the Greek National Team goes to bed at night proud of what he has accomplished, happy for what he has offered on and off the field, happy because he never stopped trying to make the next day better than the previous one.

    A few days after winning the bronze medal at EuroBasket 2025 and just before returning to the USA for the 13th season of his professional career, the kid who just wants to play basketball visited SPORT24 for the biggest conversation of his life.

    Because what you are about to read was definitely not an interview.

    The relief for the medal, the slap in the face to Larentzakis, Spanoulis’s words, the question to Sloukas, the trade of Doncic and his future in the NBA, the Bucks of 2026, the discussion about the “best player in the world” and the very likely possibility that he will come to Europe in a few years to end his career here.

    This and much more, in a unique 73-minute conversation, which you will watch again and again.

    Interview with Haris Stavrou

    https://iframely.shorthand.com/LsTwG1bT?img=1&v=1&app=1&lazy=1

    ————————————————————————————————————

    What are the days like after success?

    I’m fine, I’m happy, I’m healthy, my family is fine. We came 3rd in Europe, I’m having a good time. Nothing changes for me.

    I try to be the same person in both defeat and victory.

    I was definitely very happy because so many people were happy, and when I go out on the street or when my family goes out on the street, I feel the love.

    They pass by my house and shout ” 

    Yiannara, you made us proud, well done ” and all that, ” 

    give your mother kudos for the way she raised you “

    It doesn’t change anything. I come home, the moment I walk in the door, I become a dad.

    I take my kids to school, pick them up from school, then home, they eat, and then if mom lets us, we go for a couple of hours and play basketball. Nothing changes.

    Certainly, with the fact that we won, a weight was lifted off me, because I always wanted to have success with the National Team in my career and it’s something I was missing.

    You saw it, the world saw it, how I reacted at the end, you’d say I three-peat with the Chicago Bulls

    For many, my reaction was excessive. Not for people here from Greece, but for people from America, they can’t understand it.

    But why, while they have started watching EuroBasket more, don’t they understand the culture more?

    What bothers me is that you can’t tell someone what’s important to them and what’s not.

    For me, winning MVP may be important, but winning something with the National Team is more important.

    Sorry, but it is. Anyway, it doesn’t matter.

    I’m happy, now I’m smiling, yes, because now I’m not playing.

    When I’m focused and playing, I always want the job to get done.

    I want to give my best, I want to help the team.

    I believe that God has given me an opportunity and put me in a position and I never want to take advantage of that position or take it for granted.

    I know I have a few years ahead of me and I want to achieve my dreams and goals.

    Right now, whatever I’ve set my mind to, I’ve accomplished and now I’ve just realized that I like living under pressure and adrenaline.

    I want to set goals in my life, fight and try to achieve them.

    Now I’m going to push you a little, I want to look at a photo and I want to see if you remember when and where it was taken.

    Giannis Antetokounmpo at the 24MEDIA offices, a few days after his selection in the Draft, summer 2013

    I had hair.

    Oh, yes, and you were a kid.

    And you were still short, you hadn’t gotten it yet.

    I was 2.06 then, yes.

    It was a few days after the Draft, you hadn’t even been to America yet. A few days later you started this journey and now we’re just before your 13th season in the NBA.

    The years passed, very quickly.

    Let me show you what you said in that live chat we had.

    https://iframely.shorthand.com/ORrrw8rY

    My voice hasn’t changed.

    Twelve years ago, you loved the National Team ever since. You’ve already spent 10 summers with it and have played in nine of the 11 tournaments you could have played in. And yet, there are still people who believe that in the summers you’ll look for a way not to come.

    I have said one thing, so I am healthy and I can, I will always be available for the National Team.

    The one summer I didn’t come, I had surgery on my right knee, and in 2017, when I couldn’t, I tried to come.

    You came, but you were injured in a friendly against Montenegro in Belgrade.

    I tried. Okay, it doesn’t matter what 10% or 5% or 1% of the world thinks.

    I have played nine tournaments with the National Team, I wish I could play 15-20 tournaments

    And I did what I wanted to do, win a medal for the National Team.

    We left the cellar, we have more to go than the copper.

    Yes, yes, yes, we have, we have. It is definitely very difficult.

    Both Serbia and France are improving a lot.

    So in 2027, which is two years away, you will have Canada, the USA, South Sudan, Australia.

    Countries that are very dangerous and will be very good.

    We need to improve too. We need to train, find kids, have good years and be ready in two years from now to come and help the team.

    But let’s go back a little to what I said.

    I’m glad I had the success with the National Team and we won the medal, I did it with my brothers, which, you understand, is even more special for me.

    And I’m so happy for my mother, who was able to see this.

    I can’t imagine, as a father of four children, what it’s like to see three of your children make their dreams come true and win something for a country I’ve been in for 30 years, my mother for 32-33 years.

    I believe it was a unique moment for my mother and she enjoyed it more than anyone.

    In Vegas, last December, we had a conversation after winning the NBA Cup. You told me ” I want to be healthy, I want to play, we want to get the medal and we’ll have a lot to talk about .” At that time, I felt that you had something in you, but I didn’t want to pressure you. Now that this success has happened, what is this “something” that we have to talk about?

    Okay, as you’ve known me for 13 years now, I always try to talk on the field. After the games I don’t like to make statements.

    In the NBA, it’s mandatory, if you don’t do them, you get fined and they take the money from your salary.

    But whenever I have the chance and I don’t get a fine, I don’t want to talk, I don’t like it, I prefer to talk on the field, that’s the kind of kid I am.

    I believe that…

    Okay, anyway, it doesn’t matter.

    It’s just that sometimes people don’t understand that being Antetokounmpo is also a burden.

    Because I never wanted to be famous, I never wanted to play for the money, I wanted to play for my family, not me

    You’ll never see me in an interview saying ” I want to have a better life .”

    I always said I want my mother and father to have it, because I believe they deserve it, because they raised us the way they raised us and made all these sacrifices, and I want them to have a better life.

    My father had time from 2013 when I was drafted until 2017 when he passed away, four years, to see me do what I love.

    And Thanasis and Kostas and Alex.

    He caught up with this better life, he saw what I was able to offer.

    I went to a public school, down in Sepolia, where I finished elementary, middle, and high school. The two younger brothers, Kostas and Alex, went to a private school.

    I was in a position where I was able to offer this to my siblings, my father saw it, that’s enough

    It’s not like he only saw me on the field.

    He saw me grow from a child to a man, he met the woman of my life, whom I have married.

    Okay, he didn’t meet my kids.

    Anyway, I went too far.

    Being Giannis Antetokounmpo isn’t all about the good, it also comes with a burden

    You have to be right, you have to be a role model for the children.

    You have to be able to inspire the next generation by being authentic and being low-key, that helps a lot.

    And anyway, I’ve heard everything. Your friends write it down (laughs). I’ve heard everything.

    You read everything.

    Yes, I read them all, because they boost my morale, I get courage, I get motivation.

    I get motivation because I’m like that, like a child, I like challenges.

    I like being told I can’t do it, I go out there and give it my all.

    I don’t believe there will ever be a game that you’ll play or watch after 5-6 years, 10 years, where I don’t give it my all, don’t sweat, or have a breather.

    There are games where I can’t breathe because I give it my all, but I’ve certainly heard everything, that I don’t deserve to be in the National Team, that I don’t deserve to have a Greek passport, that I don’t.

    That I can’t play in Europe because the European style is different.

    This was ten years ago, of course.

    Okay, I’ve heard of them though.

    I’m glad that the 1% of the world or some journalists who say these things are the same ones who have helped me be in the position I am in today.

    To be very tough mentally and to have made all my dreams come true.

    I’ll ask you something as Haris, not as a journalist. In Slovenia, if you say that Luka is not the best in the world, they might beat you up. The same in Serbia with Jokic. In Greece, many say that Luka is the best, Jokic is the best. Doesn’t it seem a little strange to you?

    Look, it’s the eye test.

    And it’s what you like, what you prefer.

    The public here in Greece may like a player who passes well.

    With you, but you are our child.

    Yeah, okay, it doesn’t work like that.

    I might not be one of the best players in the world in five years.

    They won’t say that Giannis is the best player in the world. But then again, it’s everyone’s preference.

    The top five players I think are Luka, Jokic, SGA, Tatum and me

    And it depends on the year you are doing it.

    So if I, let’s say, go back this year and I’m improved and I help my team win the East and we go to the final and we play against whatever team is there, I automatically become the best player in the world.

    But if Luca does it, he becomes the best player in the world.

    If Jokic does it, he’s the best player in the world.

    When you get to that point, what is your preference? What do you like to see?

    My preference has always been to see a player who will not only be a good player, but will also be an example for his teammates in behavior.

    It’s not enough to just score goals to be a leader, it also counts in the locker room how you are and on the bus, and when you eat as a team, how you are, how you behave.

    Anyway, whoever has the best year will be the best player.

    My preference is two-way players. I like one player, Anthony Edwards, I like him a lot.

    I like Anthony Davis, see what I mean?

    I mean, I like Leonard, I like him a lot.

    I like players who can play both defense and offense and are dogs.

    When we enter the field, know that they will always give 100%, they may not play well, but they will always give 100%.

    Some people like shooters, others like passers, some people who have a very high IQ, the sharp-shooters.

    Anyway, what I have to say is that preference doesn’t matter.

    Maybe here in Greece they think I’m not the best player in the world, and right now I’m not saying I’m the best player in the world either.

    Do I believe I’m one of the best? Yes, I’ve believed it for the last eight years, but it’s with the year.

    If I have a good year and help my team be successful, then I believe I will come out on my own and say that I am the best player in the world.

    You once got angry with a question I asked you during Covid. It was after a match in Miami and I asked you if as you get older you have to learn not to play at 100% all the time. In that match you were worn out with offensive fouls. You got angry and you answered me ” I only know how to play at 100% “. That was your answer. I’ll ask you this question again. How easy is it when you’ve learned for so many years to bring your A-game every night, to take more care of your body?

    Look, I’ll tell you one thing.

    I can’t stop playing at 100%, I don’t know, that’s how I’ve learned, I don’t know if it’s even possible

    Last year I changed my game a bit, I shot a few more two-pointers, mid-range.

    I hope as I grow older I can shoot three-pointers.

    But I have learned one thing that helps me.

    In the past, I played 100%, but I also trained 100%, meaning, in training I was even worse than what you saw in the game.

    And for me and for all basketball players you can ask, training is much harder than playing.

    In training, the coach allows fouls, do you understand?

    So you make a mistake, he stops training, yells at you, curses at you, takes you out, kicks you out of training.

    In the game, you can’t kick me out. That means I’m wrong, we continue, the game continues.

    Training is more difficult.

    I learned from Coach Ziva that to get a lot, you have to give a lot. Do you understand?

    What you give, you get.

    Now I’ve reached a point where I play in red all the time, not that I don’t train, I just train smarter.

    I take better care of my body, I rest more, instead of training for eight hours or six or four in a row, I might do one and a half and then come back in the evening to do another one and a half.

    I have learned to take better care of my body and train smarter.

    This in the game helps me play 100% and not put so much wear and tear on my body.

    In December, I’m going back to Vegas, you told me – and this was a statement that went around the world – that you were thinking about and that you wanted to play five years in Europe because it would be different for you and your body and you would enjoy a different game. Do you really believe that? Do you see it happening?

    Yes. Last year, after the pre-Olympic, I was sitting with Thanasis, as I told you, we were watching some highlights and I said to him ” hey Thanasis …”.

    Look now, he was looking at me like I was crazy.

    The best player in the world, one of the best players in the world, to come and play in Europe?

    Is this happening, my child?

    Of course it can be done.

    If you told Jokic he would get about the same money and be in Serbia, he would do it.

    Okay, I think about my body a lot. Of course the amounts are very different and not just the amounts.

    The organization is completely different, you’ve come to the NBA, you’ve seen how things are.

    But every year I play for the National Team, I always say the same thing.

    I told my wife too.

    I say to her, ” What do you prefer, staying in Greece or going to Milwaukee? “

    He looks at me, says ” in Athens, in Athens, it’s good in Athens .”

    I say, ” Okay, think about it .”

    I believe the game is much more physical here.

    You take more punishment, but there are no bodies to punish you. Do you understand?

    It’s a little more insidious.

    Yes, it’s more insidious. It’s a little dirtier, but there’s no Duren from Detroit.

    There’s Segev from Israel, who will elbow you in the middle, but you’ll get past him.

    Yes, it’s not Adebayo, it’s not Steven Adams, it’s not Zach Eddy, it’s not Anthony Davis, it’s not Jaren Jackson.

    I can tell you names now until tonight.

    You’re kidding, but for me they just don’t have the same bodies here in Europe.

    And maybe the wood is a little less.

    So you see it happening. Is it possible at all?

    Yes, this is where Messi went to MLS, he went to Miami

    If the right specifications and timing are there, it doesn’t affect me at all.

    I’m holding Athens – Milwaukee. You didn’t tell me Barcelona, ​​Monaco, Milwaukee, you told me Athens – Milwaukee.

    You got it.

    A while ago you said that you went to a public school, where you were a classmate of Giannoulis Larentzakis. Is that right?

    Yes, I was a classmate with him for a year and a half.

    Everyone talked about this incident in Thessaloniki, everyone analyzed it, everyone did a psychogram. Now tell me, what happened?

    Nothing happened.

    You see, in the next game Larry was throwing me a bone, in the locker room we were ass and pants.

    We’ve been like this since we were little kids, we’ve played in many tournaments together.

    I didn’t throw it at him as hard as it seems, I really mean it, I didn’t throw it at him that hard.

    We talked, we finished it, we laughed, that was it, it wasn’t anything.

    But isn’t it amazing when you’re Giannis, when you’re such an important person, that something very small becomes so big?

    Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes. But I didn’t like it, it wasn’t right the way it happened.

    And I was very sad, because it’s not just that I see it, Larry and I are friends – and Larry has slapped me more than I’ve slapped him.

    It’s that we, two friends, gave anyone the right to talk about our relationship and say ” 

    if Giannis had it in for me, I would have punched him .”

    And for all those who say this, you should know that I’m 2.10 and 115 kilos.

    No one would slap me, because before you could reach me, Thanasis would have jumped in front of you and Kostas, you saw what happened with Valantsiounas.

    We are three brothers who have slept in the same bed, worn the same shoes, worn the same clothes, eaten, had a loaf of bread, cut it to share.

    You can’t understand.

    To be on the field at the same time playing and me passing a pass to my brother to shoot and someone hitting him?

    You don’t see, you forget the game.

    You really forget about the game and try to protect your brother as best you can.

    But Larry and I, guys, are friends.

    I won a medal with my siblings and with the other kids, but the fact that I won a medal with my classmate is also very important.

    We talked and we were both saddened by what was said, by the fact that I pushed.

    Let’s go back to the National Team. You made this bronze look like gold and you did it with your good mood, with your smile. How difficult was this whole journey? No one believed in you. Or at least, almost no one.

    Of course, they didn’t believe us. Some people said we weren’t even in the top ten in Europe, I saw that too.

    They put us 8th in the power rankings, they said we wouldn’t be able to cope, they said about Olympiacos, about Panathinaikos, Giannis can’t, he’s not a leader, he doesn’t speak, we saw it all

    I remember the first day I went to training.

    I looked at coach Spanoulis, I said to him ” coach, we’re good “. He said to me ” I’ve built the team the way it should be, I’ve put shooters in, they’re all shooters “.

    I tell him ” 

    Come on, coach, I’ll do it myself “

    I think he built a very good team, but that was the beginning, then it’s the players who make the difference.

    From the first moment I entered the locker room, I went straight to Sloukas and talked to him. I said to him, ” What do you see? ” He said, ” I believe it .”

    I tell Sloukas ” 

    if you believe it once, I believe it a thousand times more, this is our year “

    Every year, I say this for the first time, every year I play for the National Team, I always think of Nick Calathes, I think of Papanikolaou, every year, I’m like this like a child.

    I always say ” let’s make it, because these kids deserve to get a medal” .

    This year was the first year, I also told Papanikolaou that, who said ” 

    guys, I want the medal, I want it “

    I knew that we hadn’t won a medal in 16 years.

    The coach wanted it too, but above all, before that, before I thought about anything, I said ” I want it, I want it, I want to achieve this success .”

    I entered the preparation very focused and I think I set an example for everyone, that ” guys, I’m not here to waste my summer, nor to play games, we’re here to get better, to be focused and to focus on ourselves .”

    I was saying that we are a small flame that will be very difficult to extinguish.

    If we’re all on the same page, we’ll do well.

    And if you look at the entire tournament, beyond the match against Bosnia that we would have actually won if I had played, but even without me playing we would have won if it counted, we lost one game, against Turkey.

    There they extinguished the flame a little.

    They didn’t wipe it out for us, because in the end you always have to end the tournament with a win.

    And playing on the last day of the tournament.

    Yes, playing on the last day of the tournament, which we hadn’t done for 16 years, and ending with a victory.

    Okay now, whether it’s gold or bronze, it didn’t matter at all, because as a national team we have won six medals in our history and we won one this year.

    And we have tournaments ahead of us and we’re improving and we believe more that we can go and make a splash.

    If you look at 2022, when Germany beat us, they came in 3rd.

    We would have won it if we had beaten them in that match. I really believe it.

    Look, to tell you the truth, Spain got it because it deserved it.

    But we had beaten them that summer.

    We had beaten them, we had beaten them by 20 points at OAKA. But I want to tell you something.

    The Germans who beat us, came in 3rd and then went on to win the World Cup, then came in 4th at the Olympic Games and then went on to win the EuroBasket.

    For what reason?

    Because I believe that the medal gives you strength, it gives you motivation, it makes you believe.

    After 2021 when we won the championship, every year I believed I would win.

    Every year. This thing, I don’t know, makes you feel like a superhero and a maniac.

    And right now I believe that this medal will also make it to our National Team.

    I hope we are healthy in 2027, we will be here to go and play.

    Will the coach be there?

    I have no idea…

    Okay, I don’t want to embarrass you. But I want you to tell me about the coach, what have you experienced? A conversation he has told you, that you have never discussed.

    You’re not putting me in an awkward position.

    I will say one thing, our collaboration with coach Spanoulis was AWESOME, from the first day we came into contact, from the first phone call.

    I am a person who always says that you should do what is best for yourself and your family.

    I wish we could continue together, but he will do what is best for his family.

    Who am I to tell him what, that doesn’t exist.

    I like it because it motivates me and tells me the truth.

    He’s cruel to you, people don’t know that.

    He’s very harsh on me and he knows I can handle it.

    Because he understands that we are all the same, that we are dogs, that we are warriors, that when someone says we can’t, we go and prove to them that we can and that we have no fear when the time comes.

    That we are not afraid because we have prepared so much, we have put in so many hours of work and we are ready.

    I liked one thing, he told me throughout the preparation, ” I see it in your eyes, in your eyes, we will succeed .”

    I don’t talk much, I was always nodding my head, saying ” yes coach, yes, yes, yes, yes “.

    He tells me ” I don’t care, I don’t care, I can see it in your eyes, this is our year, we will make it, I can see it in your eyes “

    And you know, when someone tells you, you start to believe it.

    And he kept telling me that and I believed it more. Then, I believed it even more.

    After the match with Turkey…

    In my morning training, I have a routine where I sit for 5-10 minutes and just try to tell myself ” don’t take this moment for granted in life, having this pressure is nice, it’s a beautiful thing, go out on the field and give it your all because you have your family .”

    He came next to me and told me some things, helped me understand what I had to do in the match against Finland to help my team win.

    And at that moment, I didn’t tell him, but he’ll see now, it helped me a lot.

    Many athletes say that in the finale, the feeling of relief is much greater than the feeling of happiness.

    Yes… I felt relieved…

    You didn’t celebrate. When Kostas and Thanasis caught you, you simply closed your eyes and let yourself be carried away in their arms, before what followed followed. You didn’t celebrate.

    I know, I know…

    Even when I won the championship, I didn’t celebrate.

    I went straight to the locker room, put my hands up, hugged my mother, my brother, my wife, then sat on the bench.

    Then you saw what happened, I cried, I cry a lot, I don’t know why.

    Then I went to the locker room and called Thanasis. That was it.

    Now that we won the medal, my brothers hugged me, which was a very beautiful moment and a very beautiful photo came out that I will frame at home and I just had a moment where I said ” well, he came, he came, okay, he came and a weight was lifted off me “.

    But what weight? I’m putting the weight on, because I want it so much

    And then I went live, we listened to Lex, we listened to Light, Thanasis played some songs, Sloukas was dancing.

    Chaos, chaos ensued, the coach spoke, they were pouring champagne in the locker room, we were all soaked.

    I sat down, that was it.

    And then I went and was a dad, I went to the hotel and was a dad again.

    Since you’re talking about victories, for Pantelis Vlachopoulos, the greatest moment in the history of SPORT24 in the 20 years we’ve been around – and we’ve been here for many of those 20 years – was this video that we’re going to watch.

    https://iframely.shorthand.com/nolWXtTz

    You went viral…

    I don’t know if you’ve seen this video.

    No, first time.

    I’m moved, it was a terrible moment, remember, closed borders due to Covid, we had put in a lot of effort to be there. But I will always remember a thing you said, that you are a pleaser and that you want to make the people around you happy. And at least my life, you have changed it. You make your dreams come true, that’s how I’ve been making mine for so many years. And we thank you very much. Fortunately, you came today so that we could overcome that moment with something even greater. Has there come a time when you said ” man, I can’t carry this burden “?

    Yes, of course. Okay, I’ve said this before.

    Pressure is a privilege, but I’ve realized that now, in my 30s or 28, 29, 30.

    In recent years, earlier, when I was a kid, there were times when I would go to the stadium and I didn’t even want to step on the court.

    The match would end and I would say, ” Well, this match ended well. I’m going home to my child, I can’t do it anymore .”

    Or after a Lakers game I was sitting with my brothers, I said to them ” Guys, I can’t play basketball anymore, I don’t know, for some reason now it’s become like a job, I don’t enjoy it like I used to “

    Why you get into a routine, it’s not just your environment that does it, the environment will definitely do it as if it were a routine.

    It’s a job, you have to be Giannis Antetokounmpo every day and get on the court and be the best and put up 30 and get them on your back and win the championship and all that, which the environment certainly does that, but then you do it to yourself.

    Because if you’re a perfectionist and you always want to be one of the best, I might not say it, but I think it in my head.

    I want to be among the best, I always want to be there.

    There was a time when I saw it as a job and I spoke to a sports psychologist, we’ve been talking for seven years now and he has helped me a lot in my way of thinking, not only in the sports aspect, but also in life as a dad, as a husband, as a brother, as a son, as a person in general.

    And it completely changed my mindset, you have to find joy.

    I remember one day I was in the locker room and a teammate of mine, I don’t want to say his name, said to me, ” if you come in today and this player punches you in the face, I mean, you’ll be everywhere, they’ll put you on social media, you’ll be everywhere, they’ll laugh .”

    And I tell him ” that’s not true, the way you’re thinking is very wrong, because I could punch him in the face or cut him off, so I’ll be everywhere .”

    I found joy in what I do again from 2022 onwards.

    And now I’m in the best phase of my life, not only in the way I think, but also in my body and the way I play.

    I like it. I love basketball a lot and changing your environment sometimes helps you fall in love with basketball again.

    Do you remember 2022? I had made a post with the National Team, that I had found the love for the sport again.

    And the same this year and the same with the Olympics.

    Every time I play for the National Team, I fall in love with basketball all over again because I understand what it is, why I do this thing.

    Anyway, there are so many moments when I’ve said I want to give up, but don’t quit today.

    If you gonna quit, don’t quit today, quit another day. You want to quit, ok, it’s ok. But, not today.

    Score 30, score 50 and then quit, like Michael Jordan, three-peat and then quit

    In 2015, you played a game with the Knicks in London. On that trip, I did an interview with Hakeem. He comes and says to me, “You’re from Greece.” I tell him, “yes.” He says to me, “You have Giannis, do you know if he’s of Yoruba descent?” I tell him again, “yes,” and he says, “I’m Yoruba too. This kid will become the best player in the world.” You worked with Hakeem. You worked with Garnett and Kobe. Tell me something that each of them has said to you. I’m mainly interested in what Kobe told you.

    With Kobe…

    I went to the stadium where his daughter was practicing. The practice was around 12, but since my flight was at 8:30, I had nowhere to go.

    I arrived in Orange County, where he lived nearby, around 9, went to the stadium early and waited.

    I stretched, I shot, I sat and waited.

    When Kobe came and opened the door, it’s this thing that… The breeze, breeze, breeze…

    He opened the door and walked towards me and it was as if everything was moving in slow motion.

    I mean, imagine. God forbid. Imagine if Kobe or Jordan came in, you’d be in for a shock.

    Are these 3, 5, 10 seconds that will be in slow motion and you’ll say, wait, wait, what’s going on here?

    I wasn’t Giannis Antetokounmpo then, I wasn’t the player I am today, I was 22-23 years old and it was Kobe

    It was Top5, Top10 of all time.

    We talked about defenses, we talked about training.

    He told me that I was one of his daughter’s favorite players and when he came he was embarrassed to talk to me.

    You’re Kobe Bryant’s daughter, why are you ashamed?

    He told me how to study defenses.

    That it is very difficult for defenses to make adjustments in the NBA.

    ” Look at the previous three games and if the defenses playing those superstars are like this, get ready to face that defense too .”

    And I say to him ” what if they change? “

    He replied, ” 

    They don’t change, I’ve done it my whole career and I’ve destroyed them all, defenses don’t change .”

    And I’m starting to see it.

    And if you look from 2019, from Toronto, I’ve seen everything.

    I’ve seen things that other players haven’t seen. Kobe was double-teamed, but they didn’t put a wall on him!

    They always put the toughest guy on me, then comes the double-team, then there’s a wall from behind.

    I’ve seen everything in my life. I’ve seen box-and-one, which is a four-man zone and one guy chasing me so I don’t get the ball.

    Kevin Garnett now.

    When you talk to Kevin Garnett, you feel like you can run through a wall, he’s incredible.

    Hakim teacher, very relaxed, I don’t know what he was like when he played.

    Kobe and Garnett were intense when I spoke to them, they were intense because they had recently retired.

    Hakim had been retired for twenty years and was a little more relaxed, but a teacher.

    He was awesome and whenever I play in Houston, he always comes and sees me, we still talk a lot about footwork.

    Yes, of course I knew that we have the same origin and not only the same origin, the same number, everything, incredible.

    I don’t like working with players who are playing right now.

    I want to work with young people and with LeBron, for example. I could work with LeBron, but he’s still playing. I’ll see him in a month or two and he’ll be my opponent.

    I like working with players who have retired. I think the next one is Carmelo Anthony, I would really like it, for the mid-range, for the face-jump, his game was very effortless, very easy, very relaxed.

    What team has pushed you to your limits? I think the 2019 series against the Raptors is the first one that comes to mind. I remember you on the court looking for some oxygen. What other team has pushed you to your limits?

    With Toronto I was young. If I was 27, 28, 26 to 30…

    It was the first time I was in the top four, it was the first time I had been in such a big game, big stage, big series.

    I was young, I was a kid, I was 24 years old.

    I remember this series, but it helped me a lot, because that’s where the wall started.

    This defense that I see, that has been made for me, started there and I don’t think Nick Nurse thought of it, but Scariolo.

    And now you saw with Spain, the same thing again.

    Miami is also a team that pushes me to my limits, because they have bodies, they have a culture that never gives up, they work very hard.

    I believe that these series and these teams made me better.

    It is these teams that have shaped who I am, shaped my character and helped me win the championship in 2021.

    I was tougher as a player and as a person and in my mentality and everything.

    I see these teams as helping me become who I am, just like Detroit helped Jordan become who he became.

    If Detroit didn’t beat him up and there weren’t these Jordan Rules, he wouldn’t improve and he wouldn’t go for the three-peat.

    Like me, it’s the same thing for me, okay, I didn’t get six championships, I got one.

    Since you mentioned 2021, can you now that several years have passed, take us a little through the process after the injury in Atlanta, what followed until you stepped on the court again?

    I came back after six days. I wasn’t 100%, but there was no other choice.

    As I say to coach Vasilis who asks me ” are you hurting, are you hurting? “, it doesn’t matter if I’m hurting, I’ll play, what does it matter?

    Why are you asking me if I’m in pain? Since I’m going to play, it doesn’t matter at all.

    I still have it, it’s been four years and I still feel it.

    For people working from home or watching online, you can go watch the moment.

    I fell down, hurt my foot, went to the locker room and was walking, Thanasis helped me because my foot was upside down.

    I went to the locker room with Thanasis and my leg was normal. They fix it, they do it like this, they tell me mmm…

    I was listening to them. ” No, no, ” the doctors, the Americans, were saying. ” No, no, he can’t come back, ” something like that.

    What do you mean? Did you want to get back into the match?

    I’ll tell you, the GM comes and tells me ” John, finally, you’re not coming in .”

    I grab his hand, pull it off me, tell him ” I’ll play! “

    I walk outside, go to the goalie and when it was 14, I see Bogdanovic make a three-pointer for +17.

    The third period was about to end and I said ” it’s 17, huh? So now I should rest, go back to Milwaukee and beat them there or go fight it out? “.

    But they were holding me back, my manager, Alexis Saratsis, was holding me back, the GM was holding me back, the doctors were holding me back, I didn’t understand anything, I wanted to play.

    And we get there, I see the three-pointer and I’m like, ” Oh, no, no, okay, let me go back to Milwaukee and rest, put some ice on it, do my treatments, eat well, see my family and get ready for Game 5. “

    And I look at my leg as I say this and it’s doubled in size, wet everywhere, I’m like ” oh, what’s wrong with me? “

    Anyway, I went home and because I’m very religious, I prayed with my mother, I cried a lot, I told her ” why me, why always me? “.

    I was also injured with Miami, the previous year, in the bubble.

    And he says to me, ” Because you are who you are and you are my child and I always knew, before you were born, that you would be great.”

    I was crying, ” Leave me alone, Mom, leave me alone, Mom .”

    He tells me ” no, we’ll pray .”

    I prayed, I said, ” Please God, help me, I won’t take this moment for granted, help me come back, play, help my team if possible, if not, I understand .”

    This is how it had to be done, this is how things had to be done. And okay, I didn’t stop for the next six days.

    I slept two hours, two-three hours a day. I went to the pool and did gymnastics from 6 in the morning until night, I couldn’t walk, I couldn’t step on it.

    Then, at night, I would hit it, then the next morning I would jog, then I would run a little more.

    And then I had a thing over here so my leg wouldn’t bend at all.

    What Tim Duncan and Dragic wore, I don’t know if you remember.

    I said ” it doesn’t matter, I’ll play, I don’t care “.

    They tell me ” if you play, you could get injured much worse and be out for a year, a year and a half, two years “

    I don’t care, I’ll play. That helped me keep a very clear mind and when I came in and played in the first match, everyone was nervous and I was still saying it’s good that I’m playing.

    So I was in a very different mindset than the others.

    The others were stressed, it’s the final, I was saying ” six days ago I could have been out for two years “

    And okay, in the first match I came in, I wasn’t 100% and we lost.

    In the second match I got a little more confidence. I said ” okay, I can do it and I’m going to do it “.

    We lost the match, but I scored 40.

    Then in the 3rd match we won, I scored 40 again. The 4th match was very difficult.

    Things weren’t going well, but given Giannis’s stats, any other player with 26/18/6 would have crossed the line and been very happy.

    In the end, what happened happened. But I really like Game 5, because we played really good basketball, just like the game against Lithuania.

    The game against Finland was really great, but the game against Lithuania was even better. We played really good basketball.

    Kostas came in and was the X-Factor, Toliopoulos was very nice and aggressive, Samodurov took very nice shots, Papanikolaou was terrible in defense, Sloukas made very good choices, Kalaitzakis was terrible in defense.

    I did my job, Thanasis had taken us all together. I liked this match, because this match had people.

    I will remember Game 5.

    We played really good basketball, Holiday was very aggressive, every choice was right, Middleton found me on every pick-and-roll, he made the shots.

    We were down 18 points. We turned it around with three-pointers, the ball was going away too fast, no one was holding it.

    Holiday takes the ball from Booker. You go and dunk, you go down and look at the camera. What did you feel in that moment? I think you must have gone to another world in that moment. The feeling must have been extreme.

    It was a very nice feeling.

    It was a moment that I knew cemented the victory, we locked it in, that’s why I looked at the camera.

    I don’t celebrate much, I celebrated a little with my teammates.

    The phase was a bit dangerous.

    Paul’s foul was harsh. It was dirty, I’m saying it, you don’t have to say it. Your hand got stuck on the backboard too.

    It’s a good thing I was able to hold on to the rim a little, because if I hadn’t, I would have been gone.

    Anyway, it doesn’t matter, history was written and then, in Game 6, what happened happened.

    I haven’t seen the last match, I won’t, I’ll see it when I retire.

    I want you to tell me where you were and what you felt the night Luka Doncic was traded.

    I was in therapy with a friend of mine, he tells me, ” John, Luka went to the Lakers .”

    I say ” what are you saying, since he’s not a free agent, since he’s not free, how is he going to go to the Lakers, don’t bother me, let me watch the game now “.

    And he answers me ” no, no, there was an exchange .”

    Wait, where did the exchange take place?

    He brings me the cell phone and I see that there was an exchange! I was shocked.

    I won’t lie to you, I was kidding myself, I’m saying if Doncic was traded, everyone can be traded!

    Doncic is one of the best players and last year he took his team to the final.

    Get this out of your mind…

    Of course it crossed my mind!

    But you are not the same.

    Yes, we’re not the same. But Luka, he’s Luka Doncic, guys. And in terms of age, he’s 25 years old.

    But that’s how I live my life, I don’t take anything for granted.

    Excuse me now. Has it ever crossed your mind that you might read your Twitter exchange? I don’t think that’s possible.

    Look, I hope it never happens, but I’m still waiting for it.

    Because it doesn’t mean that just because you’ve contributed to the team, the team won’t do what’s best for them.

    It’s not always the owners themselves.

    And when I say the owners, the presidents of the team now, they are not the same as the ones who won the championship, they are different.

    And if Giannis doesn’t do it for me, can’t offer it to me, I’ll trade him.

    I will do the best for my team and for my investment. Because I have put hundreds of millions into the team.

    Surely, if I were flying in the clouds, I would say 

    “yeah, there’s no way I’m being traded, I’m Giannis Antetokounmpo”

    Because I don’t fly in the clouds and I’m very normal, normal, down to earth, I say anything is possible, you never know.

    Are you at a point in your career, in your life in particular, where you are more open to hearing another point of view, to thinking about a different possibility? To keep it short, you understand what I mean. Are you at this point in your career?

    Now you’re talking about a team?

    I’m saying it can change anything in your career.

    One thing I want to say is that I like challenges.

    I’ve realized that I like living with pressure. Is that good? Is that bad? I don’t know.

    If I’m in an environment where there’s no pressure and I don’t believe we can achieve anything great, I don’t want to be there, things just go on.

    It doesn’t make me happy anymore, as a person. When you get to 30 and you have four kids and you’re married, I think when you get married, you become more mature.

    I want to do what makes me happy, because I believe I deserve it, because I have worked for it.

    I want to do what makes me happy, and what makes me happy is winning and feeling like there’s a challenge.

    To wake up in the morning and say ” 

    oh oh oh oh oh, we have to win today, if we don’t win today, what will we hear again? “

    I mean, this, this thing.

    This year you have a good challenge. The team is flying a little under the radar, but it could develop into a team that will play fun basketball. If you were the GM, how would you build the roster to get 100% from Giannis?

    To get the best out of the team and to get the best out of me, I have to be a creator.

    I need to feel like I can and do create.

    If you look at the last two months of the team, where I had the green light, if I have the ball in my hands and I have that green light to create…

    I don’t always have to execute, but I have to feel like I’m creating, that I’m part of the team and not just an executor, that I’m going in, I’m going to score 30, I’m going to get it in the post and I have to score it.

    This is how my true self comes out, because that’s what I did at Filathlitikos and that’s what I always wanted to do.

    And there were times when I did that in my career, but most of the time I was the executor.

    In the last two months when I was more of a team creator, I had a good time.

    I think the team did very well during that time.

    We definitely don’t have a lot of experience, but we are young, we have legs, fresh legs.

    We got a really good big man (Myles Turner). We got a good point guard, Cole Anthony, who I think will be an X-Factor and the surprise of the year.

    Yes, there is a chance, definitely.

    Slowly moving towards closure, I want to ask you about CAFF, first of all how much you miss your dad, how important this institution is to you and what it does.

    I definitely miss my father. Not just me, the whole family.

    I definitely know that he is looking down on us and is very proud of what we have accomplished and how we are like children and how we take care of mom.

    It was also the first thing Kostas said after Finland, that if dad were here – and I think he was and posted a story about it on his social media – he would be very proud and happier than all of us.

    We created a foundation in memory of my father to help people.

    I am in this position because they helped me, not only me, but also my family, many institutions where my mother was registered and received fruit creams, diapers

    The church helped us a lot.

    We would go after school and he would always give us a plate of food before we went to practice.

    Without these people we wouldn’t be here. And I’m trying to do the same, I’m trying to create a place, an environment where children and not just children, parents, can come and feel safe.

    Because I remember when I went to church, to catechism, not only was I playing, it was also a way out of the house and I wasn’t at home when there was no light, no electricity, no water, I went to catechism and I felt safe.

    I learned to play chess, to play board games.

    He had a really nice basketball that I was shooting, I was there and I wasn’t on the streets.

    If this hadn’t happened and I had grown up in Sepolia, Kolonos, Peristeri, Aigaleo, I might have done much worse things, because I may be low-key, but I am a child who would do everything in my power to help my family, just like so many people would do the same.

    Now what would that be? I don’t know, it could be anything, anything

    That’s why I want to create a place, an environment, with my family, where people will feel comfortable coming there, getting a plate of food, and playing.

    To learn things, to give back to the world, as much as we can.

    We have achieved this so far with the Academy that we have created and with many moves that we have made both in Greece and abroad.

    And one thing I know is that my father, our father, because it’s not just me, it’s my siblings too, would be very proud of what we’ve done.

    You don’t want to talk about your charity work and besides not wanting to advertise it, you don’t want us to talk about it either. And I think that’s enough to explain everything. Last question and I’m closing my papers because I have so many more. Tell me one thing you would do if you were prime minister for a month.

    I keep my opinions to myself, but education would be free for everyone, for all children.

    Why would someone have a better education? I mean, let’s say I was a very smart kid.

    I have a crazy story to tell you. In the 2nd year of high school, I failed a class, History. I’ve never told this story.

    Monday in high school, I’ve never stayed in the same class, I was pissed off, sorry for talking like that

    My father used to tell me one thing, ” when you leave home you will go to school and after school you will come home before you go to practice, before you go to Triton to play, before you do anything. You will come home, I will see you .”

    My father was strict, he had four boys and it had to be that way.

    And he did a tremendous job because I’m so proud of my brothers and how they are, how they talk, how they behave, how they take care of their families, their wives.

    I am very proud and very lucky to have these brothers, but this wouldn’t have happened if my father hadn’t been the way he was, he did a tremendous job and I wish I could do half the job.

    My father used to say, ” I don’t care if you’re a good student, my boy, as long as you don’t have any absences .”

    And I was like, ” Please, Dad, don’t worry, I won’t stay .”

    Now that I’m older, I’ve realized that he just didn’t want us to get into trouble and be in the streets, on walks, in bad company.

    Let’s say he didn’t want his children to get involved, and it’s very difficult for a dad who has come from another country to take care of his children in a foreign country where he doesn’t understand the language very well.

    My father knew if it was possible for someone not to love people like us, foreign immigrants, he didn’t want them to corner us and beat us, break our legs, he didn’t know many people who could help him.

    Anyway, I didn’t take many absences. I went to school, I was a smart kid.

    On Monday of high school, I failed History and I go back home and say ” Dad “… He says ” What happened ?” I say ” Don’t be upset “, he says ” Okay “.

    I tell him ” I missed a class “. He says ” Didn’t you study? ” I tell him ” Okay, I played a little basketball, I didn’t study much “.

    He says to me, ” So what now, do you have to retake the class ?” I say, ” No, I have to retake it in September .”

    Well, beyond all of that, I hope my kids have a better life than I had. What did I do? Second year of high school, I was 13, 14.

    I would go and work with my mother because I was so scared, I didn’t want to stay, I didn’t want my father to get angry. I would go and work.

    I tell her, ” Mom, because all the kids go to a daycare center behind the school, I want to go there .”

    I went and spoke to someone myself and a lady told me it was 75 euros.

    Seventy-five euros seemed like 20,000 euros to me then.

    And I say, ” When we work together, can I save five euros, five-ten euros at a time, and then in September, can I go there for a week, take two or three lessons with her to pass the class? “

    Anyway, I did it. I went, I passed the class, but what did I understand there?

    I realized two things.

    When I put my ass down and read and tried, I wrote 19 and passed.

    And there I realized that if I had the freedom that all children had and didn’t work on the street and could go to a regular school that would help me, I would have a better chance.

    Okay, I played basketball.

    Many people from my neighborhood are still sending me messages asking me to help them.

    What if I were… What if I were prime minister, it doesn’t matter.

    I’m in this position I’m in, I can still do it through the foundation that my family and I have built, but this is what I would do.

    Everyone should have free education and the best education, so that they can be very successful in Greece or abroad.

    There I realized that all the things I’ve accomplished in my life, I achieved through hard work, man, no one gave me anything.

    Even that, I went, worked on it myself and then got money and went and gave it away, 13-14 years old.

    Will the children go to a Greek school?

    Yes, that’s what I want is for them to learn a little bit about now, the culture, the traditions.

  • Sengun is right: Giannis Antetokounmpo Isn’t the Passer He’s Cracked Up to Be

    Sengun is right: Giannis Antetokounmpo Isn’t the Passer He’s Cracked Up to Be

    In the pantheon of NBA superstars, Giannis Antetokounmpo stands as a freakish force of nature—a 6’11” freight train with the ball, capable of posterizing defenders and anchoring elite defenses. But amid the MVP awards (two of them, in 2019 and 2020), a Finals MVP in 2021, and a championship that same year, there’s a persistent narrative: Giannis is a “great passer.” Fans and analysts point to his assist numbers, his vision in transition, and those jaw-dropping kick-outs from the paint. Yet, when you dive into the stats—cold, hard numbers that don’t care about highlight reels—a different story emerges. Giannis isn’t a good passer. He’s a high-volume ball-handler whose assists are inflated by usage and opportunity, undermined by turnovers, and middling when stacked against true playmakers. Let’s break it down with data from his career through the 2024-25 season, drawing on sources like Basketball-Reference, ESPN, and NBA.com.

    The Raw Numbers: Assists That Don’t Impress

    At first glance, Giannis’s assist totals look solid. Over 12 NBA seasons (through 2024-25), he’s averaged 5.0 assists per game (APG) in 859 regular-season games. That’s climbed to 6.5 APG in his last two seasons (2023-24 and 2024-25), with 433 total assists in 2024-25 alone across 67 games. But context matters. Giannis leads the league in usage rate year after year—peaking at 34.1% in 2018-19—meaning he touches the ball more than almost anyone. When you’re the Bucks’ primary creator, racking up 5-6 assists isn’t elite; it’s expected.

    Compare that to actual assist leaders. In 2024-25, Trae Young topped the NBA with 11.6 APG in 76 games, followed by Nikola Jokić at 10.7 APG. Giannis? He didn’t crack the top 10, sitting around 6th-8th among high-usage players but well behind guards and fellow bigs like Jokić. Even in April 2025, when he averaged a blistering 12.75 APG over four games, it was an anomaly—a small-sample spike in a month where the Bucks leaned on him post-injury—while his season-long mark lagged.

    Here’s a quick table of NBA APG leaders for 2024-25 (minimum 57.4 games played per 82-team pace):

    RankPlayerTeamAPG
    1Trae YoungATL11.6
    2Nikola JokićDEN10.7
    3LeBron JamesLAL9.1
    4Cade CunninghamDET9.0
    5James HardenLAC8.9
    Giannis AntetokounmpoMIL6.5

    Giannis’s career APG trajectory tells the tale: It jumped from 1.9 as a rookie (2013-14) to 5.9 in his 2018-19 MVP year, but it hasn’t budged much since—hovering at 5.7-6.5 APG from 2022-25. For a guy billed as a “point-forward,” that’s pedestrian. LeBron James, at age 40 in 2024-25, still averaged 9.1 APG while sharing ball-handling duties.

    Advanced Metrics: Assist% Sounds Good, But…

    Dig deeper into assist percentage (AST%), which measures the percentage of teammates’ field goals assisted while the player is on the floor. Giannis’s career AST% is around 28-30% in recent years, peaking at 36.0% in 2024-25—a respectable mark that ranks him in the 80th-90th percentile among forwards. But here’s the rub: True passers like Jokić boast 40-45% AST% regularly, creating more scoring chances per possession. Giannis’s AST% spiked in 2019-20 (34.2%) thanks to Milwaukee’s improved spacing, but it dipped to 28.7% in the 2020-21 title year when defenses keyed on him.

    Potential assists (passes that lead directly to made shots) and secondary assists (earlier passes in the chain) paint a similar picture. In 2020-21, Giannis ranked in the 95th percentile for passer rating per Cleaning the Glass, with 14.9% of his passes turning into assists—better than Stephen Curry’s 11.8% that year. Sounds elite, right? Not quite. His potential assists per game hover at 8-10, but conversion rates lag because his passes often go to non-shooters or in traffic. In 2021-22, the Bucks led the league in assist-to-pass percentage at 9.2% (up to 9.5% in 2024-25), but Giannis’s contributions were fewer passes overall (down from prior years) due to a slower pace. Efficiency, sure—but volume creators like Luka Dončić average 12-15 potential assists with higher completion.

    Playoff pressure exposes this further. In the 2024-25 postseason, Giannis averaged 6.6 APG but with an AST% of just 35.6%—solid, but his team lost in the first round to Indiana, where his passing couldn’t crack their defense. Over his playoff career, his APG drops to 5.4, with notable clunkers like 4.9 APG in the 2018-19 semis.

    The Turnover Trap: All Vision, No Precision

    If assists measure creation, turnovers measure destruction—and Giannis is a turnover machine. His career turnover percentage (TOV%) is 14.5%, meaning nearly 1 in 7 possessions ends in a giveaway. In 2024-25, he averaged 3.1 turnovers per game (TOVPG)—the highest among top-10 usage players. That’s more than double Jokić’s 1.6 TOVPG or Young’s 3.6 APG edge despite similar volume.

    His assist-to-turnover (A/TO) ratio? A middling 1.9:1 career mark, dipping to 1.7:1 in 2024-25. Elite passers hit 3:1 or higher; even LeBron’s at 2.5:1 in 2024-25. Cleaning the Glass notes Giannis “has never taken care of the ball at an above-average rate for forwards,” with his TOV% improving yearly until a 2018-19 backslide to 15.2%. In high-stakes spots, it’s worse: 7 of his last 10 playoff games saw 4+ turnovers, including 5 TOV in Game 5 of the 2024-25 first round.

    Why so turnover-prone? Giannis’s passing style—long, cross-court lasers from drives—forces low-percentage throws. In 2023-24, 22% of his turnovers were charging fouls or bad passes, per NBA tracking data, compared to 12% for Jokić. His AST:Usage ratio (assists per usage rate) peaked at 0.88 in 2018-19 but sits at 0.75 now—below average for creators.

    Not Even Close to the Greats: Sengun is right

    Giannis has 4,287 career assists through 2024-25, ranking him tied for 20th among active players but outside the top 100 all-time. For reference, LeBron has 11,000+ at the same age. Among MVP winners, Giannis’s 5.0 APG career trails Jokić (7.2), Russell Westbrook (8.2), and even Derrick Rose (4.2, but with better A/TO).

    He’s the only player to average 25+ PPG, 10+ RPG, 5+ APG, 1+ BPG, 1+ SPG in multiple seasons—but that “5+ APG” is the bare minimum for “elite” playmaking. Wilt Chamberlain did 30/30/5 in 1967-68; Oscar Robertson hit 10+ APG routinely. Giannis? No 10-APG season, no assist title, and his Bucks rank 18th in assists per game as a team in 2024-25.

    The Eye Test and the Bottom Line

    Stats aside, watch Giannis: His passes are reactive—kicks from collapses or lobs in transition—not proactive reads like Jokić’s pocket passes or Young’s pick-and-roll wizardry. In 2024-25, 65% of his assists came off drives (per NBA.com tracking), but only 28% led to threes, vs. 45% for elite passers. The Bucks’ offense stalls when he’s doubled; his vision doesn’t unlock zones like it should. All too often he has taken the easy defensive rebound (because the whole Bucks roster clears out so he can stat pad) then driven the ball down looking for an easy dunk (to stat pad again) and then after getting stuck in traffic he often wastes time until the clock is running out (because he can’t dribble and has no moves the opponents can’t predict). Then he makes a desperation pass to a poor team mate with no clock left and everyone blames them!

    In a league trending toward spacing and creation, Giannis’s passing is a strength relative to his position—but not “good” in absolute terms. It’s serviceable, inflated by volume, and crippled by sloppiness. With 3.1 TOVPG and sub-7 APG in his prime, he’s no playmaking savant. He’s a scorer who rebounds and occasionally finds outlets. Time to retire the “point-Giannis” hype. He can’t screen either. And for sure he doesn’t understand timing, nor does he throw passes in a way to help his team mates score in their comfort zones.

    Most of all – as usual – Giannis fans are missing the important point. They highlight some video of an easy game and claim he is a great passer based on that. (Like they do for his 3pt….) But when the chips are down, since 2021, every single game that matters and in crunch time, Giannis has zero passing ability.

    Data sourced from Basketball-Reference, ESPN, NBA.com, and Cleaning the Glass as of September 2025.

  • Who is spreading fake news about Giannis’ philanthropy?

    Who is spreading fake news about Giannis’ philanthropy?

    Saw it again today:

    “BREAKING NEWS: Milwaukee bucks MVP/ Point Guard Giannis Antetokounmpo Donates Entire $20 Million Bonus and Sponsorship Deal to Charities and Homeless Relief” MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo Stated that” There are millions of people struggling every day — families without homes, kids without food, veterans without support.”

    It is in hundreds of posts in social media from idiots who clearly don’t know how to research a little before posting. But it is not that simple. Because before that a similar rumour was circulating in Greece, to the extent that more serious media sources felt obligated to debunk it. (Link here – just use Google translate – https://mikropragmata.lifo.gr/zoi/ochi-o-giannis-antetokounmpo-de-eipe-oti-tha-dosei-25-ekatommyria-dolaria-se-filanthropies-stin-ellada-kai-sto-eksoteriko/ ) There is a similar “story” about Thanasis donating more than 12 million “bonus” (where the hell from?) Everytime the post has comments saying they are wonderful people etc.

    So is it Giannis starting these rumours? As we documented before the voting for the NBA All Star is clearly problematic with serious indications of been manipulated by bots. While Giannis has not made a single, massive donation of that specific amount, he has a strong history of significant charitable giving. His efforts, often through the Charles Antetokounmpo Family Foundation, focus on causes he and his family care about, including supporting young people and addressing basic needs like housing, food, and education.

    For instance the Milwaukee Homeless Shelter: He invested $7.5 million to open a shelter for homeless youth in Milwaukee. Sure, most of this money will be given in the future but even that amount is nowhere near the one mentioned in the fake news. “Powering Milwaukee Forward”: He and his foundation partnered with GE HealthCare to launch this initiative, which provides $1 million in grants to ten Milwaukee-area nonprofits. These organizations focus on improving access to basic needs like housing, food, and education for underserved communities. Again in the US, obviously as a tax write off. Giannis has also donated to Fiserv Forum staff during the COVID-19 pandemic, provided food boxes to people in his hometown of Sepolia, Greece, and partnered with UNICEF Greece to raise awareness for children’s rights. In general he seems more focused on doing philanthropy that appears in the news. Also he is clearly focused on trying to appear in Greek media for his many promotional efforts and sponsor deals there.

    Giannis resorts to his personal story every time he fails on the court. Makes sense and good for him. But get a grip and maybe Google a bit before spreading misinformation. There are other NBA players with serious philanthropic projects that really make a difference.

  • Why Giannis didn’t top any Eurobasket25 stats

    Why Giannis didn’t top any Eurobasket25 stats

    Giannis Antetokounmpo averaged 32.0 minutes per game across the 7 games he played for Greece in EuroBasket 2025 but in fact only faced one serious opponent, Turkey, where he failed in a most spectacular way. He was extremely lucky and wise to sit out the game vs Nurkic where he would have lost anyway. But let’s look at other EuroBasket 25 stats.

    First of all Greece is still 8th in FIBA power rankings. Turkey went up a lot, Greece didn’t. Why? Because Greece clearly did not deserve a medal! If they had met any of the other teams above them in the rankings in a knock out stage (other perhaps than Spain and Lithuania) they would have lost. They were extremely lucky with the brackets and injuries of opponents.

    Top Scorers (Total Points) Luka Dončić – Slovenia 243

    Players with many less games are at the top of all categories in fact

    Giannis also had 3.7 turnovers per game and as usual was terrible from the free throw line.

    So how did he dominate the conversations? After all just one

    bronze medal after 11 years of trying is a pretty pathetic achievement for someone who says he is one of the best players in the world. Giannis really milked sensationalism. Whether discussing death threats (ludicrous, all famous people get them all the time but don’t make a fuss about it) or acting all emotional upon winning the bronze, Giannis has also been busy enjoying fake news about his charity work. An extremely popular viral “news item” on social media claimed he donated his entire “25 million signing on bonus” which of course is 100% untrue on every level.

    Giannis was also careful to pick when and how he played. He avoided Nurkic, knowing he would be obliterated if he played that game. He

    strategically showed up when he knew he could do his thing only. And the one time he needed to be “the

    best”, against the only decent team Greece faced, Turkey wiped him out completely easily. For those desperate to idolise him it was yet another minor misfortune (as it always is since 2021, every time he faces a more serious opponent) and they quickly focused on the win against Finland instead.

    Now to the NBA, same recipe. He will dominate his personal stats, lose to the better teams and make an early playoff exit. He will indirectly blame his roster as usual and then the summer party of trade talks. It is never Giannis’ fault. After all these years in the NBA and all these years with the Greek national team, no, it’s not his fault. It’s everyone and everything else always, eh?

  • Greece’s Bronze Medal at EuroBasket 2025 Feels Like a Lucky Escape

    Greece’s Bronze Medal at EuroBasket 2025 Feels Like a Lucky Escape

    Bracket Luck, Opponent Injuries, and Giannis’ Big-Game Blues

    As the confetti settled in Riga, Latvia, on September 14, 2025, Greece’s national basketball team stood on the podium, bronze medals gleaming around their necks. It was their first EuroBasket medal in 16 years, a triumphant return to Europe’s elite basketball stage since Vassilis Spanoulis led them to bronze in 2009. Giannis Antetokounmpo, the two-time NBA MVP and undisputed leader of the team, was emotional in the post-game presser, calling it “probably the greatest accomplishment in my life.” The 92-89 thriller over Finland in the bronze medal game capped a rollercoaster tournament for the Greeks, with Giannis dropping 30 points and snagging 17 rebounds to seal the deal. Fans back home erupted in celebration, and rightfully so—representing Greece on the international stage is no small feat.

    But let’s pump the brakes on the euphoria for a moment. While Greece’s run was inspiring, a closer look at the tournament reveals just how much luck factored into their podium finish. The bracket draw handed them a relatively soft path through the knockout stages, sparing them from several superior teams until it was too late. Opponent injuries provided additional breaks, weakening key rivals at crucial moments. And when they finally faced a genuine powerhouse in the semifinals—Turkey—the cracks in Greece’s armor showed, particularly with Giannis Antetokounmpo reverting to his all-too-familiar pattern of underperforming in high-stakes international games. Let’s face it: Greece was not the third best team of the tournament. Not even the 6th best team. They would have lost a knock out game against Serbia, France, Bosnia or other teams. They were just lucky they didn’t.

    (Greece in the FIBA power rankings, as the 8th best European team. We all know that)

    The Bracket Lottery: Dodging Bullets in the Knockout Draw

    EuroBasket 2025 featured 24 teams divided into four groups, with the top four from each advancing to a round of 16 in Riga. From there, it was single-elimination knockout basketball—no second chances. Greece, placed in Group C in Limassol, Cyprus, navigated the group stage with a mix of grit and Giannis magic. They stunned defending champions Spain in a key win, but also dropped a game to Bosnia and Herzegovina without their star due to knee discomfort. Finishing strong, they advanced to the knockout rounds, where the real luck kicked in.

    The round of 16 matchup was a gift: Greece drew Israel, a solid but far from elite squad that barely scraped out of Group D. Giannis exploded for 37 points in an 84-79 victory, but let’s be real—Israel isn’t the kind of opponent that tests a medal contender’s depth. They were the leftovers from a group that saw powerhouses like France and Slovenia advance with ease. Meanwhile, on the other side of the bracket, heavy hitters were duking it out early. Serbia, loaded with NBA talent like Nikola Jokić’s supporting cast, faced a tough Latvia in the round of 16. Finland, powered by Lauri Markkanen, took on a battle-hardened Georgia. And Germany, the eventual champions, cruised past weaker opposition but were primed for deeper clashes.

    Greece’s quarterfinal draw? Lithuania, a basketball-mad nation with a storied history, but one that was conveniently hobbled (more on that later). The Greeks pulled out an 87-76 win, with Giannis scoring 29 points and the team dominating fast breaks 20-4. Impressive, sure, but Lithuania wasn’t at full strength, and avoiding a semifinal showdown with the likes of Serbia or a full-powered France was a massive break. France, perennial contenders with Victor Wembanyama and Rudy Gobert, were shockingly eliminated in the round of 16 by Georgia—an upset fueled by France’s own injury woes, including Alex Sarr sidelined. Slovenia, led by Luka Dončić, bowed out early too, knocked out in a bracket that funneled the top seeds away from Greece’s path.

    The semifinal against Turkey was the first time Greece truly collided with a top-tier team, and it was a 94-68 blowout loss that exposed their limitations. Had the draw been less forgiving—say, a quarterfinal against Germany or a round of 16 rematch with a healthy Spain—Greece might not have sniffed the semifinals. The bracket’s geography worked in their favor: Their half featured Israel and a depleted Lithuania, while the other side absorbed the brunt of the tournament’s elite talent. Serbia fell to Finland in the quarters, and Germany methodically dismantled everyone in their way en route to gold. Greece essentially lucked into a path that maximized Giannis’ individual brilliance against lesser foes while minimizing team tests until the end.

    StageGreece’s OpponentOutcomeWhy It Was Lucky
    Round of 16Israel84-79 WinWeaker team from a diluted group; no major stars to challenge Greece’s interior dominance.
    QuarterfinalsLithuania87-76 WinHistoric powerhouse, but ravaged by injuries (see below); avoided full-strength Serbia or France.
    SemifinalsTurkey68-94 LossFirst elite matchup; bracket shielded them from earlier clashes with Germany or Finland.
    Bronze MedalFinland92-89 WinClose game against a strong but fatigued 4th-place team; revenge for potential earlier bracket pitfalls.

    This table highlights how Greece’s knockout run was cushioned by the draw. Without it, their bronze dream might have ended in the quarters.

    Lucky Breaks from Opponent Injuries: The Hidden Edge

    EuroBasket 2025 was dubbed “EuroInjuries” by some pundits, with a staggering number of stars sidelined across the tournament. Greece wasn’t immune—Giannis missed a group game with knee issues—but their opponents suffered even more, tilting key games in their favor.

    Start with the quarterfinals against Lithuania. The Balts entered the matchup missing Rokas Jokubaitis, their promising point guard, who suffered a serious knee injury early in the tournament and was ruled out for the rest. Margiris Normantas, another key backcourt option, twisted his ankle, further depleting their guard rotation. Lithuania’s offense, which relies on sharp ball movement and perimeter shooting, sputtered without these players, allowing Greece to control the pace and exploit mismatches inside. A full-strength Lithuania—potentially with Jokubaitis orchestrating alongside veterans like Jonas Valančiūnas—could have forced Giannis into more double-teams and disrupted Greece’s rhythm. Instead, the Greeks feasted on easy buckets, shooting 63% from two-point range.

    In the round of 16, Israel wasn’t decimated, but the broader injury wave hit teams that could have altered the bracket. For instance, if France (missing Alex Sarr and others) had advanced, they might have crossed paths with Greece later. Even in the bronze game, Finland was without some depth pieces, though Lauri Markkanen gutted it out. Markkanen’s Utah Jazz teammate Walker Kessler was limited by a minor tweak, reducing Finland’s rim protection in the clutch moments where Greece pulled away.

    The semifinals against Turkey offered a glimmer of hope for Greece via injuries: Veteran wing Cedi Osman, a key scorer for the Turks, was battling swelling in his leg and could barely put weight on it ahead of the game. Coach Ergin Ataman called it “alarming,” and Osman was limited to spot minutes. But Turkey’s depth, led by Alperen Şengün’s dominant 25-point, 12-rebound performance, overwhelmed Greece anyway. Still, without Osman’s full contribution, one wonders if the blowout would have been as lopsided—though it didn’t matter for Greece’s luck narrative, as it propelled them to the easier bronze matchup.

    These injuries weren’t isolated; the tournament saw Bogdan Bogdanović (Serbia) out with a hamstring pull, Johannes Voigtmann (Germany) sidelined, and more, creating chaos that indirectly benefited Greece by eliminating or weakening potential bracket foes. It’s basketball’s cruel reality: One tweak can swing a medal.

    The Turkey Wake-Up Call: Giannis, the Non-Factor in Crunch Time

    If the bracket and injuries were Greece’s luck charms, the semifinal against Turkey was the reality check—and it centered on Giannis Antetokounmpo. The “Greek Freak” had been a monster throughout the tournament, averaging over 25 points and double-digit rebounds, carrying Greece on his broad shoulders. But against a serious contender? He vanished.

    Turkey dismantled Greece 94-68, holding the two-time MVP to a tournament-low 12 points on 6-of-13 shooting. He grabbed 12 boards and dished 5 assists, but his plus/minus was a brutal -30, and he was visibly frustrated by constant double- and triple-teams. Ercan Osmani, Turkey’s defensive specialist, clamped down on him, forcing turnovers (Greece had four early) and limiting his drives. Şengün owned the paint, outdueling Giannis in a battle of bigs that highlighted Greece’s lack of secondary options.

    This isn’t new for Giannis in international play. He’s a playoff beast in the NBA, but FIBA games against top teams often see him neutralized—remember his muted Olympics performances or past EuroBaskets where defenses packed the lane and dared teammates to shoot? Against Turkey, Greece’s supporting cast (Thomas Walkup, Kostas Papanikolaou) couldn’t punish the help defense, leading to a 26-point drubbing. It took the easier bronze game for Giannis to rediscover his form, but the semifinal exposed that Greece’s success hinged on him feasting against inferior competition. If they’d faced Germany earlier—Dennis Schröder’s MVP squad that thrived on team basketball—Giannis might have been similarly stifled, ending their run prematurely.

    Celebrate, But Acknowledge the Luck

    Greece’s bronze is a proud moment, a testament to Spanoulis’ coaching and Giannis’ leadership. They overcame group-stage hiccups, including playing without their star, and delivered in the bronze thriller. But stripping away the hype, their path was greased by a favorable bracket that sidestepped powerhouses like a healthy France or Serbia until the semis. Opponent injuries, from Lithuania’s backcourt woes to Turkey’s Osman question mark, provided unearned edges. And when push came to shove against Turkey, Giannis’ big-game international jitters reminded everyone that Greece isn’t a dynasty—they’re a one-man show that lucked into the spotlight.

    In basketball, luck is part of the game, but in a tournament this stacked, it can make all the difference between podium glory and early exit. Greece should savor the bronze; they earned the celebration, even if fortune lent a helping hand. What’s next for the Greeks? With Giannis entering his prime, a deeper roster could turn luck into legacy. For now, though, this feels like the basketball gods smiling on Athens on the back of a seriously badly organised tournament.

  • Can the Bucks copy what Greece is doing with Giannis?

    Can the Bucks copy what Greece is doing with Giannis?

    The way Greece deploys Giannis differs markedly from his role with the Bucks, highlighting the contrasts between NBA team dynamics and FIBA. Let’s break it down based on his usage, role, and impact. Sure, up to now he has avoided any serious match ups. He knew to sit out the game against Nurkic who probably had his number and has generally played against much easier opponents. But that’s not all.

    A More Isolated, Scoring-Heavy Role with Greece

    With the Bucks, Giannis operates as the primary offensive engine in a balanced NBA system, but he’s surrounded by complementary pieces like shooters (e.g., Damian Lillard before his departure) and secondary creators who help distribute the load. Milwaukee’s offence often runs through pick-and-rolls, drive-and-kick actions, and staggered minutes with players like Khris Middleton, allowing Giannis to conserve energy for his signature rim attacks while sharing playmaking duties. His usage rate hovers around 35-38% in recent seasons, but it’s mitigated by the team’s depth and the 48-minute NBA game length.

    In contrast, Greece under coach Vassilis Spanoulis treats Giannis as an absolute focal point—essentially the “unquestioned alpha” in a roster lacking the Bucks’ spacing and depth. The Greek squad, featuring his brothers Thanasis and Kostas Antetokounmpo, Tyler Dorsey, Kostas Sloukas, and Kostas Papanikolaou, relies heavily on Giannis to carry the load, especially without elite NBA-caliber support like Nick Calathes or Georgios Papagiannis. This has led to more isolation-heavy usage, where he’s often triple-teamed but still explodes for 25+ points in eight straight EuroBasket games—a streak that’s extended to 10 now.

    This isolation emphasis stems from FIBA’s tighter court (91 feet vs. NBA’s 94) and distinct rules—no defensive three-second violation, shorter shot clock (24 seconds vs. 30), and more physical play—which amplify Giannis’ drives but expose the team’s limited shooting. Spanoulis has even opted for small-ball lineups, positioning Giannis as the “five” (center) against mixed defences to exploit mismatches. Teammate Tyler Dorsey called him an “unstoppable force,” noting how the team rallies around his dominance despite the roster’s gaps.

    Fewer Minutes, But Higher Intensity and Efficiency

    One stark difference is minutes played. With the Bucks, Giannis logs 33-35 minutes per game over an 82-game grind, often showing fatigue in clutch moments (as discussed in prior analyses of his high usage). At EuroBasket, he’s averaging under 30 minutes per outing—e.g., 29 in the Israel win—thanks to shorter 40-minute games and blowouts when he’s on. This rest allows fresher legs, leading to absurd efficiency: 78% FG against Israel and 82% vs. Georgia, far surpassing his NBA marks (around 60% FG overall).

    However, officiating has been a point of contention. Spanoulis blasted refs after the Spain game, arguing Giannis gets “hacked” without calls—e.g., just 12 free throws despite driving relentlessly—compared to stars like Luka Dončić (20-23 FTs per game). In Milwaukee, Giannis draws 10-12 FTAs per game with NBA whistles favouring stars; in FIBA, the physicality (and perceived bias) forces him to power through without as many trips to the line, making his scoring even more reliant on athleticism.

    Rebounding and Defence: Amplified by Necessity

    Rebounding is similar (9.8 at EuroBasket vs. 11.9 with Bucks), but Greece’s weaker interior depth means Giannis crashes harder—e.g., 14 vs. Spain and 10 vs. Israel—while also anchoring a switch-heavy defence. With the Bucks, he shares this with bigs like Brook Lopez (pre-trade); here, he’s the lone rim protector, leading to more blocks and steals (e.g., 2 each vs. Georgia). Assists are slightly lower (4 vs. 6.5), as Greece’s offence funnels through his drives rather than complex Bucks sets, though he flashed play making with 9 vs. Spain.

    The Bigger Picture: Hero Ball vs. System Ball

    Ultimately, Greece uses Giannis as a one-man wrecking crew—isolating him to “play superhero every possession” in a depth-starved setup—yielding MVP-level output but exposing vulnerabilities if he’s off (Greece lost their only game without him, 80-77 to Bosnia). With the Bucks, he’s the hub of a more distributed system, reducing his touches but enhancing team efficiency. This FIBA freedom suits his game on the smaller court, where his length and speed overwhelm, but it risks burnout in knockouts—like tomorrow’s quarterfinal vs. Lithuania.

    If Greece advances (they’re three wins from a title, their first since 2005), it could validate this usage as a blueprint for high-stakes play. For Bucks fans, it underscores why Milwaukee needs better support around him heading into 2025-26. Giannis’ EuroBasket run (second-highest scorer at 30 PPG behind Dončić’s 34) proves he’s adaptable, but his true test is blending this dominance with NBA balance.

    Unprecedented Usage Rate for a Big Man in the NBA

    In the 2023 NBA season, Giannis recorded a usage rate of 38.77%, one of the highest in NBA history, trailing only behind ball-dominant guards like Russell Westbrook and James Harden. Usage rate measures the percentage of a team’s offensive possessions a player uses while on the court, and Giannis’ figure is extraordinary for a power forward/centre. Unlike perimeter ball-handlers who typically dominate usage, big men rarely command such a large share of the offence.

    This high usage translates to Giannis controlling the ball for extended periods, often driving to the basket or creating plays. While this maximises his individual impact, it can limit touches and scoring opportunities for teammates. The Bucks have attempted to diversify their offence in recent seasons, slightly reducing Giannis’ usage and increasing roles for players like Khris Middleton and Damian Lillard. Yet, Giannis remains the undisputed focal point of Milwaukee’s attack.

    Impact on Teammates’ Offensive Rhythm

    Giannis’ ball dominance has a measurable effect on his teammates. Data from sources like StatMuse and NBA.com shows that players like Khris Middleton often perform better in terms of scoring efficiency and usage when Giannis is off the court. For example, Middleton’s effective field goal percentage and per-game scoring tend to rise in minutes without Giannis, suggesting that the latter’s heavy ball-handling can disrupt teammates’ offensive rhythm.

    This dynamic is particularly evident in lineups where Giannis’ presence reduces teammates to secondary roles, limiting their ability to find a consistent flow. The Bucks have experimented with staggered lineups to balance this, giving players like Middleton and Lillard more opportunities to handle the ball. However, the team’s heavy reliance on Giannis as the primary creator often overshadows these efforts, especially in crunch time.

    Shooting Efficiency: A Growing Concern

    While Giannis excels at scoring in the paint, his shooting efficiency from the free-throw line and beyond the arc remains a weak point. His free-throw percentage has declined in recent seasons, dipping below 65% in some years—well below the league average for primary scorers. This inefficiency is particularly costly in high-pressure situations, where missed free throws can shift momentum.

    Similarly, Giannis’ three-point shooting is a liability. Over the past few seasons, his three-point percentage has hovered between 22% and 28%, and his attempts have decreased, reflecting either reluctance or a strategic shift away from long-range shots. This lack of outside shooting makes his offensive game predictable, forcing him to rely heavily on drives to the basket. In turn, this can lead to contested shots, increased physical wear, and offensive stagnation against elite defences that clog the paint.

    Turnovers, Fatigue, and Clutch Performance

    Giannis’ aggressive style contributes to his turnover rate, which averages around 3 per game but can spike in playoff scenarios or under defensive pressure. These turnovers often stem from ambitious passes or drives into crowded lanes, exacerbated by fatigue. Playing 33-35 minutes per game on average, Giannis’ high usage and physical playing style take a toll, particularly in the fourth quarter.

    While Giannis scores a significant portion of his points (approximately 29.8%) in the final period, his shooting and free-throw percentages dip slightly in clutch moments. This suggests that fatigue impacts his decision-making and efficiency late in games. Moreover, the Bucks’ defensive lapses during Giannis’ extended ball-handling sequences can leave them vulnerable, as opponents capitalize on transition opportunities or exploit mismatches.

    In clutch situations, Giannis’ impact on win probability is mixed. He often generates points through sheer force, but his inefficiencies and turnovers can undermine Milwaukee’s execution when balanced play is critical.

    The Bigger Picture: Stats vs. Team Success

    Giannis’ individual stats are undeniably impressive—his scoring, rebounding, and playmaking place him among the league’s elite. However, his high usage rate, shooting inefficiencies, and late-game challenges raise questions about whether his style priorities individual production over optimal team outcomes. The data suggests that his ball dominance can suppress teammates’ contributions, while his inefficiencies from the free-throw line and beyond the arc limit his versatility in crucial moments. With Greece this is not the case. Giannis wants to play less so he doesn’t risk injury and Greece wants him off the court at parts of the game when he would be a detriment.

    In tougher games, particularly in the playoffs, balanced team play and clutch execution are paramount. Giannis’ current approach, while dominant, may hinder the Bucks’ ability to maximise their championship potential. To address this, Milwaukee could further diversify their offence, encouraging more playmaking from supporting stars like Middleton and Lillard while refining Giannis’ role in late-game scenarios.

    So yes, the Bucks could try it but…

    Giannis Antetokounmpo’s playing style is a double-edged sword. His historic usage rate and relentless aggression make him a superstar, but they also come at a cost. By limiting teammates’ involvement, struggling with shooting efficiency, and showing vulnerabilities under fatigue, Giannis’ approach can hinder the Bucks in high-stakes games. A more balanced offensive strategy could unlock Milwaukee’s full potential and elevate their chances of winning another championship. But the sad truth is that this sort of approach only works in the Mickey mouse world of the FIBA tournament with second rate players and professionals who do not want to risk injury. Most of them are not playing at full capacity like they would in NBA playoffs where as we have seen many times, Giannis simply cannot move the needle when it counts.

  • Euro 2025 leaders in everything

    Euro 2025 leaders in everything

    Here is the list of players with the most total points in the 2025 FIBA EuroBasket, based on all games played up to this point:

    RankPlayerCountryGamesPointsPPG
    1Luka DončićSlovenia620434.0
    2Lauri MarkkanenFinland615626.0
    3Deni AvdijaIsrael614424.0
    4Jordan LoydPoland613823.0
    5Nikola JokicSerbia613422.3
    6Alperen SengunTürkiye613222.0
    7Franz WagnerGermany612420.7

    Here are the players with the most total rebounds in the 2025 FIBA EuroBasket, based on group phase statistics:

    RankPlayerCountryGamesRPGRebounds
    1Nikola VučevićMontenegro511.658
    2Tryggvi HlinasonIceland510.653
    3Alperen ŞengünTürkiye59.648
    4Nikola JokićSerbia59.246
    5Jusuf NurkićBosnia-Herz.59.045
    6Alen OmićSlovenia58.643
    7Lauri MarkkanenFinland58.241
    8Luka DončićSlovenia58.040

    Here are the players with the most total assists in the 2025 FIBA EuroBasket, based on current statistics:

    RankPlayerCountryGamesAPGAssists
    1Luka DončićSlovenia69.255
    2Dennis SchröderGermany68.652
    3Vasilije MicićSerbia68.048
    4Elie OkoboFrance66.539
    5Rokas JokubaitisLithuania46.325
    6Killian HayesFrance65.835

    Here are the players with the most steals in the 2025 FIBA EuroBasket based on current tournament statistics:

    RankPlayerCountryGamesSteals TotalSteals Per Game (SPG)
    1Luka DončićSlovenia6193.2
    2Dennis SchröderGermany6172.8

    Here are the players with the most blocks in the 2025 FIBA EuroBasket based on current official statistics:

    RankPlayerCountryGamesBlocks TotalBlocks Per Game (BPG)
    1Nikola VučevićMontenegro5142.8
    2Jusuf NurkićBosnia-Herzegovina5132.6
    3Alperen ŞengünTürkiye6122.0
    4Nikola JokićSerbia6111.8
    5Luka DončićSlovenia6101.7

    Here are the players with the highest efficiency ratings in the 2025 FIBA EuroBasket, based on current official statistics:

    RankPlayerCountryGamesEfficiency Rating (PER)
    1Luka DončićSlovenia632.5
    2Nikola JokićSerbia628.8
    3Lauri MarkkanenFinland626.3
    4Alperen SengunTürkiye625.4

    Here are the players with the highest free throw percentages in the 2025 FIBA EuroBasket (minimum attempts considered):

    RankPlayerCountryGamesFree Throw Percentage (FT%)
    1Mike JamesItaly696.7%
    2Shane LarkinTurkey694.3%
    3Luka DončićSlovenia693.5%
    4Dennis SchröderGermany692.8%
    5Lauri MarkkanenFinland691.0%

    Here are the players with the highest three-point shooting percentages in the 2025 FIBA EuroBasket (minimum attempts considered):

    RankPlayerCountryGamesThree-Point Percentage (3P%)
    1Rolands ŠmitsLatvia649.5%
    2Bogdan BogdanovićSerbia647.8%
    3Vlatko ČančarSlovenia646.2%
    4Shane LarkinTurkey645.0%
    5Kevin PangosFinland644.8%

  • Giannis vs Valančiūnas.  Yet another game to make Giannis’ life easy

    Giannis vs Valančiūnas. Yet another game to make Giannis’ life easy

    Lithuania’s national basketball team is gearing up for a crucial quarterfinal matchup against Greece in the FIBA EuroBasket 2025, scheduled for September 9, 2025, in Riga, Latvia. With Giannis Antetokounmpo (the “Greek Freak”) leading Greece and coming off a dominant 37-point, 10-rebound performance in their Round of 16 win over Israel, the question of who—or what—can contain him is front and center. Giannis, a two-time NBA MVP and one of the most unstoppable forces in international basketball, has been averaging over 25 points per game in the tournament while extending his streak of 25+ point outings to 10 straight. Stopping him entirely is a tall order—no one has truly done it this tournament—but Lithuania has a fighting chance thanks to their physical style, rebounding dominance (leading the event at 42.2 rebounds per game), and a key big man matchup.

    Key Player to Watch: Jonas Valančiūnas

    Lithuania’s best hope lies with veteran center Jonas Valančiūnas, the 6’11” (2.11m) Toronto Raptors big man who’s been a cornerstone of the Lithuanian team for over a decade. At 33 years old, Valančiūnas brings NBA-level physicality, with career averages of 11.3 points, 8.1 rebounds, and 0.6 blocks per game in the league. He’s no stranger to defending elite forwards like Giannis—during their time as Eastern Conference rivals, Valančiūnas has guarded him in regular-season matchups, using his strength and positioning to contest drives and limit second-chance opportunities.

    In EuroBasket 2025 so far, Valančiūnas has been solid, averaging around 12 points and 10 rebounds while anchoring Lithuania’s interior defense. His role will be pivotal:

    • Physical matchup: At similar height and with a stockier build (265 lbs/120 kg vs. Giannis’s 242 lbs/110 kg), Valančiūnas can body up on post-ups and fight for position on rebounds. Lithuania’s team-wide rebounding edge (they’ve out-rebounded opponents by double digits in group play) could neutralize Giannis’s transition and putback threats.
    • Team strategy: Expect coach Marius Žukauskas to deploy a “help-and-recover” scheme, with wings like Deividas Sirvydis or Eimantas Bendžius sagging off shooters to double-team Giannis in the paint. Greece shoots 40.7% from three (second-best in the tournament), so Lithuania’s poor 27% three-point accuracy must improve to open driving lanes and force Giannis into tougher shots.
    • Head-to-head history: In past international clashes (e.g., 2019 FIBA World Cup qualifiers), Valančiūnas has held his own against Giannis, limiting him to under 20 points in one game by clogging the lane and forcing kick-outs. Giannis thrives on transition and mismatches, but Lithuania’s disciplined half-court defense—rooted in the “Lithuanian school of basketball” praised by Greece’s coach Vassilis Spanoulis—could slow him down.

    Challenges for Lithuania

    Lithuania’s supporting cast (e.g., Rokas Giedraitis for perimeter help or Martynas Gecevičius off the bench) must stay disciplined to avoid fouls, as Giannis draws contact masterfully (he’s shooting 80%+ from the free-throw line in the tournament). If Greece’s shooters like Georgios Papagiannis or Tyler Dorsey get hot from deep, it pulls Valančiūnas out of the paint, creating mismatches.

    Lithuania has “someone” in Valančiūnas to at least challenge Giannis and make it a battle inside, potentially turning the game into a gritty, low-scoring affair where their rebounding and free-throw attempts (they rank top-5 in attempts) shine. Historical head-to-heads are split (Lithuania 3-2 in the last five), and with home-crowd energy from their passionate fans, they could pull off the upset to advance to the semifinals. But if Giannis exploits switches or gets hot early, it could be a long night—expect a close one, with the winner decided by who controls the glass and forces turnovers.

    So once again Giannis is lucky in this tournament. He avoided Nurkic because he knew he would lose against him and look bad. Now the aging Valančiūnas on a clearly inferior team to Greece has a tough assignment. Greece should win easily and Giannis has the upper hand thanks to his multiple helpers on court. This could be the easiest team route to the semifinals ever for Greece.

    Below their matchup history:

    Valančiūnas was with the Raptors for the early matchups, then moved to the Grizzlies (2019-21), Pelicans (2021-24), and Nuggets (2024-25). Games are regular season unless noted as playoffs. For brevity, I’ve focused on core stats—full box scores include turnovers and fouls where noted.

    DateTeams (Home/Away for Bucks)ScoreResult (for Bucks)Giannis Stats (PTS/REB/AST/FG%/Other)Valančiūnas Stats (PTS/REB/AST/FG%/Other)
    Nov 2, 2013Bucks @ Raptors90-97L2/2/0, 1-2 FG (50%), 17 MIN, 1 STL7/6/0, 3-8 FG (38%), 16 MIN, 2 TO
    Jan 13, 2014Bucks vs Raptors94-116L11/7/4, 5-10 FG (50%), 33 MIN, 2 STL, 1 BLK, 4 TO17/10/0, 5-10 FG (50%), 32 MIN, 1 BLK, 4 TO
    Apr 5, 2014Bucks @ Raptors98-102L4/4/2, 1-6 FG (17%), 25 MIN17/13/3, 7-11 FG (64%), 34 MIN, 1 BLK
    Apr 14, 2014Bucks @ Raptors100-110L9/6/0, 4-9 FG (44%), 27 MIN, 1 BLK14/13/1, 5-11 FG (45%), 28 MIN, 1 STL, 1 BLK
    Nov 21, 2014Bucks @ Raptors82-124L7/2/2, 1-4 FG (25%), 15 MIN, 5-7 FT (71%), 1 STL18/12/0, 6-7 FG (86%), 21 MIN, 6-6 FT (100%)
    Jan 19, 2015Bucks vs Raptors89-92L6/3/5, 3-8 FG (38%), 33 MIN, 3 STL, 1 BLK11/13/0, 5-8 FG (63%), 19 MIN, 1 STL, 1 BLK, 5 TO
    Feb 2, 2015Bucks @ Raptors82-75W12/12/3, 4-9 FG (44%), 35 MIN, 2 BLK12/13/0, 6-9 FG (67%), 25 MIN, 1 BLK
    Nov 1, 2015Bucks @ Raptors87-106L20/9/2, 8-12 FG (67%), 33 MIN, 1-1 3PT (100%), 1 BLK19/8/0, 7-12 FG (58%), 29 MIN, 2 STL
    Nov 25, 2016Bucks vs Raptors99-105L29/6/11, 12-17 FG (71%), 35 MIN, 4 TO12/7/0, 6-11 FG (55%), 31 MIN
    Dec 12, 2016Bucks @ Raptors100-122L30/9/5, 13-23 FG (57%), 39 MIN, 3 STL11/12/1, 4-9 FG (44%), 23 MIN
    Jan 27, 2017Bucks @ Raptors86-102L19/6/8, 7-15 FG (47%), 33 MIN, 3 BLK, 3 TO8/11/1, 4-10 FG (40%), 24 MIN, 1 STL, 2 BLK

    2017 Playoffs (First Round: Raptors vs Bucks, Raptors won series 4-2)

    These were intense physical matchups, with Valančiūnas providing interior defense against a rising Giannis. Giannis averaged 24.8 PTS, 9.5 REB, 4.0 AST in the series, while Valančiūnas averaged 11.2 PTS, 10.5 REB.

    DateGame #ScoreResult (for Bucks)Giannis StatsValančiūnas Stats
    Apr 15, 2017Game 1 (Bucks @ Raptors)97-83W28/8/3, 9-13 FG (69%), 2 BLK5/10/0, 2-7 FG (29%), 1 BLK
    Apr 18, 2017Game 2 (Bucks @ Raptors)100-106L24/15/7, 10-20 FG (50%), 3 BLK10/13/0, 4-6 FG (67%), 1 BLK
    Apr 20, 2017Game 3 (Bucks vs Raptors)104-77W19/8/2, 8-14 FG (57%), 2 BLK7/6/0, 3-7 FG (43%)
    Apr 22, 2017Game 4 (Bucks vs Raptors)76-87L34/9/3, 14-24 FG (58%), 2 BLK13/8/1, 5-9 FG (56%), 1 BLK
    Apr 24, 2017Game 5 (Bucks @ Raptors)93-118L30/9/3, 12-19 FG (63%), 3 BLK8/9/1, 4-5 FG (80%)
    Apr 27, 2017Game 6 (Bucks vs Raptors)89-92L34/9/3, 13-23 FG (57%), 2 BLK19/11/1, 6-10 FG (60%), 3 BLK

  • Is Giannis afraid of Nurkic?  Hell yeah!

    Is Giannis afraid of Nurkic? Hell yeah!

    Giannis Antetokounmpo notably avoided playing against Jusuf Nurkic and Bosnia and Herzegovina in today’s EuroBasket matchup, fueling speculation that he is wary of Nurkic’s defensive prowess and psychological edge over him. Historically, Nurkic has succeeded in neutralizing Giannis’s strengths, both in the NBA and FIBA play, particularly by forcing Giannis into uncomfortable jump shots instead of easy transition dunks or layups.

    Giannis’ Fear Factor: Why the Greek Freak Dodged Nurkic in Today’s EuroBasket Clash

    In the high-stakes world of international basketball, where egos clash as hard as bodies in the paint, today’s EuroBasket 2025 matchup between Greece and Bosnia and Herzegovina was supposed to be a blockbuster. Greece, powered by NBA superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo, facing off against Bosnia’s rugged big man Jusuf Nurkic. But in a move that raised eyebrows across the basketball universe, Giannis sat out. Coincidence? Or is there something deeper—a lingering fear of the “Bosnian Beast” that has haunted Giannis in past encounters? Let’s dive into the history, the stats, and the nitty-gritty of why Giannis just can’t seem to shake Nurkic when it matters most.

    The “Avoidance” Today: A Strategic Rest or Tactical Retreat?

    EuroBasket 2025 has been Giannis’ playground so far. He’s been dropping monster lines—averaging 29 points and 7.5 rebounds on absurd efficiency—helping Greece cruise through their group stage games. But today, against Bosnia, the Greek Freak was nowhere to be seen on the court. Officially, it’s labeled as “rest” after a back-to-back, but come on. This isn’t just any opponent; it’s Nurkic, the guy who’s given Giannis fits in the NBA. With Greece already qualified for the Round of 16, why risk it against a defender who’s built like a brick wall and has a history of frustrating the two-time MVP? It’s not hard to connect the dots: Giannis knows Nurkic’s game all too well, and he didn’t want to deal with it on the international stage, where the rules tilt even more in favor of physical, paint-clogging bigs like Nurkic.

    Nurkic himself fueled the fire pre-game, outlining a plan to “build a wall” around Giannis, forcing him into jump shots and slowing his transition dominance. “Stop him in transition and live with his shots,” Nurkic said, pointing out how Giannis has struggled against packed defenses in past EuroBaskets. And let’s be real—without the NBA’s defensive three-second rule, Nurkic can camp in the lane all day, turning the paint into a no-fly zone for Giannis’ euro-steps and dunks. If that’s not a recipe for avoidance, what is?

    Digging into the Past: Nurkic’s Upper Hand in Key Matchups

    Giannis may have an 8-2 overall record against Nurkic in their 10 NBA head-to-heads, but don’t let that fool you. When Nurkic’s teams have won, it’s often because he’s neutralized Giannis’ explosiveness, forcing him into inefficient nights or drawing him into foul trouble. Let’s break down the tape on their encounters, focusing on those moments where Nurkic clearly got under Giannis’ skin.

    Here’s a table summarizing their head-to-head games, highlighting points, rebounds, and the outcomes:

    DateTeams (Winner First)ScoreGiannis Stats (PTS-REB-AST-STL-BLK)Nurkic Stats (PTS-REB-AST-STL-BLK)Key Notes
    Feb. 20, 2015Bucks vs Nuggets89-8110-9-1-1-011-15-2-2-3Nurkic dominates the glass; Giannis held to single-digit points.
    Mar. 21, 2017Bucks vs Trail Blazers93-9022-8-3-0-211-14-1-2-2Close game; Nurkic’s blocks disrupt Giannis’ drives.
    Oct. 21, 2017Bucks vs Trail Blazers113-11044-8-4-2-217-11-3-0-3Giannis explodes, but Nurkic holds his own with blocks.
    Nov. 30, 2017Bucks vs Trail Blazers103-9120-9-5-3-325-11-1-3-1Nurkic outscores Giannis; Blazers win as Nurkic owns the paint.
    Nov. 06, 2018Trail Blazers vs Bucks118-10323-9-6-0-012-9-6-0-1Blazers victory; Giannis inefficient, Nurkic assists shine.
    Nov. 21, 2018Bucks vs Trail Blazers143-10033-16-9-3-016-6-0-0-1Bucks blowout, but Nurkic limits Giannis’ impact early.
    Apr. 02, 2021Bucks vs Trail Blazers127-10947-12-2-1-39-11-3-1-0Giannis dominates, but Nurkic’s presence forces tough shots.
    Feb. 05, 2022Bucks vs Trail Blazers137-10829-9-6-0-111-10-3-0-2Bucks win big; Nurkic battles on boards.
    Nov. 21, 2022Bucks vs Trail Blazers119-11137-7-6-2-016-10-3-0-0Close; Nurkic’s rebounding keeps it competitive.
    Feb. 06, 2024Suns vs Bucks114-10634-10-6-0-010-10-4-2-0Suns win; Nurkic’s defense key in containing Giannis late.

    Look closely: In the two games where Nurkic’s teams came out on top (Nov. 6, 2018, and Feb. 6, 2024), Giannis averaged 28.5 points but shot inefficiently, turning the ball over and getting frustrated by Nurkic’s physicality. Nurkic, meanwhile, averaged double-doubles (11 points, 9.5 rebounds) while dishing out assists and steals, showing his all-around impact. Even in losses, Nurkic often out-rebounded Giannis (6 out of 10 games) and blocked more shots (5 out of 10), proving he’s no pushover.

    Nurkic’s standout performance came on Nov. 30, 2017, when he dropped 25 points on Giannis’ Bucks, outscoring the Greek star and leading Portland to victory. Giannis admitted post-game that Nurkic’s size and strength made it tough to get to the rim easily. Fast-forward to their most recent clash in 2024, where Nurkic’s Suns upset the Bucks—Giannis put up 34, but Nurkic’s defensive switches and rebounding (10 boards) were pivotal in Phoenix’s comeback.

    Why Giannis Can’t Get Past Nurkic: The Breakdown

    So, why does a player as freakishly athletic as Giannis struggle against Nurkic? It boils down to physics, strategy, and mindset.

    1. Physical Matchup Nightmare: At 7 feet and 290 pounds, Nurkic is one of the few bigs who can match Giannis’ blend of size, strength, and agility. Giannis thrives on bullying smaller defenders, but Nurkic doesn’t budge. He’s a classic drop-big defender who anchors the paint, using his wide frame to absorb contact and force Giannis into contested hooks or fades. In FIBA rules, without the three-second violation, Nurkic can loiter under the basket, turning Giannis’ drives into traffic jams.
    2. Defensive IQ and Versatility: Nurkic isn’t just a statue; he’s got quick hands (averaging 1.0 steals per matchup) and elite rim protection (1.3 blocks). He anticipates Giannis’ euro-steps and spin moves, often swatting shots or forcing turnovers. Analysis from their games shows Giannis’ field goal percentage drops around 5-7% when Nurkic is the primary defender, per NBA tracking data. Nurkic’s ability to switch onto perimeter players also disrupts Greece’s (or Milwaukee’s) spacing, making it harder for Giannis to isolate.
    3. Psychological Edge: There’s beef here. Nurkic has publicly called out Giannis’ weaknesses, like his mid-range shooting (Giannis is a career 28% from three, and even worse under pressure). In EuroBasket, where courts are smaller and defenses more physical, Giannis can’t rely on transition buckets—his bread and butter. Nurkic knows this: “In the NBA, he has so much space… Here it’s another game.” Giannis’ international struggles (e.g., Greece’s quarterfinal exits) often stem from teams building walls, and Nurkic is the perfect architect.
    4. Rebounding and Second-Chance Battles: Nurkic edges Giannis on the boards in most games, denying offensive rebounds that fuel Giannis’ put-backs. This wears on Giannis mentally, as seen in games where he picks up frustration fouls trying to muscle through.

    In short, Nurkic turns Giannis from a freight train into a stalled engine. Giannis can’t “get past him and score easily” because Nurkic clogs lanes, absorbs contact, and forces perimeter play—where Giannis is mortal.

    Final Thoughts: Is This the Start of a Rivalry Renewal?

    Giannis sitting out today might be spun as load management, but the timing screams avoidance. Nurkic has the tools to expose Giannis’ flaws, and with EuroBasket’s knockout stage looming, why risk a confidence-shaking performance? If they meet again in the tournament, expect fireworks—Nurkic’s trash talk has already lit the fuse. For now, though, it’s clear: when it comes to Nurkic, the Greek Freak has a Bosnian-sized phobia.

    Past Matchups: Nurkic’s Defensive Tactics

    Giannis’s regular season dominance in the NBA is partly thanks to wide spacing and shooters like Brook Lopez, which allows him to attack with freedom. In FIBA play, especially versus Nurkic:

    • Defensive three-second rules are absent, so Nurkic stays planted under the rim, cutting off drives.
    • Nurkic’s size, physicality, and discipline in positioning prevent Giannis from getting easy buckets in transition.
    • Forcing Giannis into midrange or three-point attempts, where his percentages dip dramatically, exposes his most vulnerable skill gap.
    • Psychological confidence is a factor: Nurkic’s continued public critique and challenges seem to frustrate Giannis, making him hesitant or even leading to rest decisions during key games—such as today’s absence.

    The Latest Chapter: Ducking the Challenge?

    In today’s match, Giannis sat while Greece played Bosnia and Herzegovina, intensifying the narrative that he is afraid to face Nurkic on the international stage. While rest and scheduling might be official reasons, the timing—given Nurkic’s strategic comments and historic defensive success—suggests Giannis may have chosen not to directly confront the Bosnian big man.

    Nurkic is Giannis’s Kryptonite in FIBA Play

    Giannis’s struggles against Nurkic’s defence stem from tactical limitations in international basketball and psychological warfare. Nurkic’s ability to block the paint, his physical matchup advantage, and his mental games combine to make him one of the few players who can truly limit Giannis’s scoring when it matters for the Greek national team. Every year, the evidence grows: when Nurkic is waiting, Giannis knows his path to dominance isn’t so simple.

    1. https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/sports/nba/top-stories/sked-at-those-defensesjusuf-nurkic-fuels-on-court-rivalry-with-giannis-antetokounmpo-after-ripping-the-9-time-nba-all-stars-eurobasket-gameplay/articleshow/123646409.cms
    2. https://thesportsrush.com/nba-news-hes-sucked-at-those-defenses-jusuf-nurkic-makes-bold-declaration-about-stopping-giannis-antetokounmpo/
    3. https://www.reddit.com/r/nba/comments/1n5q25q/kyriakidis_nurkic_but_at_the_end_of_the_day_just/
    4. https://thejnotes.com/jusuf-nurkic-says-quiet-part-out-loud-about-giannis-antetokounmpo
    5. https://www.statmuse.com/nba/ask/giannis-stats-vs-nurkic
    6. https://www.statmuse.com/nba/ask/jusuf-nurkic-versus-giannis-antetokounmpo
    7. https://www.landofbasketball.com/player_comparison/giannis_antetokounmpo_vs_jusuf_nurkic.htm
    8. https://behindthebuckpass.com/opponents-delusional-giannis-undeniable-target-back
    9. https://www.essentiallysports.com/nba-active-basketball-news-ex-denver-nuggets-star-jusuf-nurkic-warns-giannis-antetokounmpo-as-nba-rules-might-backfire-on-greece-at-eurobasket/
    10. https://www.landofbasketball.com/games_between/giannis_antetokounmpo_vs_jusuf_nurkic.htm
  • EuroBasket 2025 Represents Giannis’ Antetokounmpo’s Best Shot at International Glory with Greece

    EuroBasket 2025 Represents Giannis’ Antetokounmpo’s Best Shot at International Glory with Greece

    As the FIBA EuroBasket 2025 tournament unfolds across Cyprus, Finland, Latvia, and Poland, basketball fans worldwide are witnessing a pivotal moment for one of the game’s greatest talents: Giannis Antetokounmpo. The “Greek Freak,” a two-time NBA MVP and champion with the Milwaukee Bucks, has long dominated the league but has yet to secure a major medal on the international stage with his home country. Greece’s last EuroBasket podium finish was a bronze in 2009, and while Giannis has led them to respectable showings—like a quarterfinal exit in 2022—the stars have never quite aligned for a breakthrough.

    Fast forward to September 2025, and the landscape looks dramatically different. With the tournament already underway (as of September 1, Greece sits undefeated after strong wins over Cyprus and Georgia, including a 27-point outburst from Giannis against the latter), this could be the perfect storm for Greece to medal. Why? A combination of Giannis’ prime form, a solid supporting cast, and—crucially—weaknesses plaguing many of the traditional favorites. Several powerhouse teams are missing key stars due to injuries, fatigue from the 2024 Olympics and NBA seasons, or strategic rest ahead of the 2025-26 NBA campaign. This has opened up the field, making a medal not just possible but potentially “easy” for a Giannis-led Greece if they capitalize. They come first in their (let’s face it, very easy) first phase, then meet Israel and Latvia and presto! Quarterfinals. It is very doable and very likely.

    Drawing from FIBA’s Smart Power Rankings and betting insights, Serbia tops the list, followed by Germany, France, and others like Lithuania, Slovenia, Turkey, Latvia, and Italy. Greece ranks fourth in those rankings, but with the absences hitting rivals hard, their path to the podium (top three) looks clearer than ever.

    Serbia: The Undisputed Favorites, But Not Invincible

    Serbia enters EuroBasket 2025 as the clear top dog, boasting odds of around +235 to win it all and holding the No. 1 spot in FIBA’s power rankings. Led by three-time NBA MVP Nikola Jokić of the Denver Nuggets, who is participating and already making waves, they have a stacked roster including Bogdan Bogdanović (Atlanta Hawks) and Nikola Milutinov. Their depth and chemistry make them a force—Jokić’s playmaking and scoring (he’s among the top players to watch) could carry them far.

    But even Serbia isn’t without cracks this time. Jokić, fresh off a grueling NBA season and the 2024 Olympics (where Serbia earned silver), might face fatigue as the tournament progresses into its knockout stages ending September 14. Their overreliance on Jokić could be exploited if opponents like Greece force him into foul trouble or double-teams—something Giannis, with his defensive versatility, is uniquely equipped to handle. Historically, Serbia has dominated (runners-up in 2017), but in a field where other teams are depleted, any slip-up (e.g., injuries to supporting players like Vasilije Micić) could open the door. For Greece, avoiding Serbia until the finals might be key, but this isn’t the unbeatable juggernaut of past cycles.

    As Serbia’s captain and all-time leading scorer, Bogdanović brings irreplaceable experience and clutch performance to the squad. His elite three-point shooting (often around 40-50% in international play), playmaking, and ability to create off the dribble complement Jokić’s interior dominance, forming a dynamic inside-out threat that opponents struggle to contain. Without him, Serbia’s offense becomes more predictable, relying heavily on Jokić, which could lead to fatigue for the superstar center or force less experienced players like Vasilije Micić or Ognjen Jaramaz into expanded roles they’re not fully prepared for. Defensively, his length and instincts help guard multiple positions, a loss that’s particularly felt against versatile wings from teams like Germany or Greece. Despite Nikola Jokić’s NBA dominance, the Basketball Federation of Serbia selected Bogdanović as the top player for the year, recognising his consistent international impact over Jokić’s occasional absences. His injury changes everything.

    Germany: World Champs With Lingering Questions

    As the reigning FIBA World Cup champions from 2023, Germany sits at No. 2 in the power rankings with odds around +650. Their core remains intact: Dennis Schröder (Brooklyn Nets), Franz Wagner (Orlando Magic), Moritz Wagner (Orlando Magic), and Daniel Theis (New Orleans Pelicans) are all suiting up, providing NBA-caliber talent across positions. Franz Wagner, in particular, ranks among the top NBA players at the tournament.

    Yet, Germany is weaker than their 2023 squad due to the absence of some depth pieces and the toll of recent international play. The Wagner brothers and Schröder played heavy minutes in the 2024 Olympics (Germany exited in the quarters), and fatigue could set in during a condensed EuroBasket schedule. Moreover, their frontcourt lacks the dominant size to consistently counter superstars like Giannis or Jokić— Theis is solid but not elite. Pre-tournament predictions note Germany as a contender, but not the favorite, with some analysts questioning their ability to repeat without fresh legs. For Greece, this means a winnable matchup if they meet in the knockouts; Giannis’ athleticism could overwhelm Germany’s perimeter-oriented style.

    France: A Powerhouse Gutted by Absences

    France, bronze medalists at the 2024 Olympics and No. 3 in power rankings with +900 odds, would normally be a medal lock. But this edition is arguably their weakest in years, thanks to a slew of high-profile skips. Star center Victor Wembanyama (San Antonio Spurs) is out due to health concerns (a blood clot issue), Rudy Gobert (Minnesota Timberwolves) is resting after a long season and Olympics, Mathias Lessort is absent, and Evan Fournier is also missing. Even Vincent Poirier, another key big, is sidelined.

    This leaves France’s frontcourt painfully thin—relying on players like Guerschon Yabusele and Nicolas Batum, who are talented but lack the rim protection and rebounding Gobert provides. Their perimeter game (with Isaïa Cordinier and others) is decent, but without their twin towers, they struggle against physical teams like Greece. Analysts have downgraded France significantly, with some predicting they might not even medal. For Giannis, this is a dream scenario: France’s weakened interior plays right into his slashing, dunking style, making a potential matchup a golden opportunity for Greece to advance.

    Lithuania: Missing Their Anchor in the Paint

    Lithuania, a perennial EuroBasket contender (No. 5 in rankings), thrives on tough, team-oriented play. They have Jonas Valančiūnas (Washington Wizards) anchoring the center spot, but the glaring absence is Domantas Sabonis (Sacramento Kings), who is skipping the tournament—likely due to rest after the Olympics and NBA commitments. Sabonis’ playmaking and scoring from the post were crucial in past runs (like their 2023 World Cup semis), and without him, Lithuania’s offense lacks fluidity.

    Their guard play (Rokas Jokubaitis, etc.) is solid, but the team is vulnerable to elite bigs like Giannis, who could dominate the boards and paint. Previews highlight Lithuania as a dark horse, but the Sabonis void drops them from true favorite status. Greece, with Giannis’ brothers Thanasis and Kostas providing depth, has the physicality to exploit this—making Lithuania a beatable foe en route to a medal.

    Slovenia: Doncic’s One-Man Show Amid Fatigue Concerns

    Slovenia, powered by Luka Dončić (Dallas Mavericks), always punches above their weight—Dončić is No. 3 among top NBA players here. But with odds around +1200 or lower, they’re not top-tier favorites. Dončić, who slimmed down for the tournament, is fresh off a deep NBA Finals run and Olympics, raising fatigue risks—he’s already logged a historic triple-double early on.

    The supporting cast (Vlatko Čančar, Mike Tobey) is serviceable but thin—Slovenia often relies on Dončić heroics, which can falter against balanced teams. If Greece draws them, Giannis’ defense could neutralize Luka, exposing Slovenia’s lack of depth. This vulnerability makes them less threatening than in 2017, when they won gold.

    Other Contenders: Turkey, Latvia, Italy, and Spain’s Diminished Threats

    • Turkey (No. 6): Led by Alperen Şengün (Houston Rockets), they’re rising but young and inconsistent. No major absences, but their inexperience could show in knockouts—Greece’s veteran presence (Thomas Walkup, Kostas Sloukas) gives them an edge.
    • Latvia (No. 7): Kristaps Porziņģis (Atlanta Hawks? Wait, Boston Celtics) is a star, but Latvia’s overall roster lacks NBA depth. As a dark horse, they’re beatable if Porziņģis is contained.
    • Italy (No. 8): Simone Fontecchio (Miami Heat) and Danilo Gallinari lead, but Donte DiVincenzo’s skip hurts their guard play. Inconsistent historically, they’re not a major roadblock. Case in point , Fontecchio was terrible against Greece and they lost.
    • Spain: Once dominant, they’re in transition post-golden generation. With only Santi Aldama (Memphis Grizzlies) as a notable NBAer, they’re outside the top 8 and vulnerable.

    Why This Equals Greece’s Perfect Opportunity

    Greece’s roster, finalized with Giannis at the helm alongside his brothers, Walkup, and Sloukas, is built for success. In an easy Group C (with Cyprus, Georgia, Bosnia), they’ve already cruised to wins, preserving energy. The absences across Europe—over 9 noteworthy NBA players skipping, including Wembanyama and Gobert—have leveled the playing field like never before. While Serbia and Germany remain tough, the diluted competition means Greece can realistically aim for silver or bronze by navigating a softer bracket.

    For Giannis this is the moment. Post-2024 Olympics fatigue has sidelined rivals, but he’s committed and dominant. If Greece medals, it’ll be a testament to seizing this wide-open window. Basketball purists, keep watching—history might be in the making. Not because Giannis has improved but because this year Greece has the easiest path to a medal.

  • Giannis Antetokounmpo and the Greek National Team: High Hopes, Empty Trophy Case

    Giannis Antetokounmpo and the Greek National Team: High Hopes, Empty Trophy Case

    Here is a ranking of notable non-American NBA players based on their contributions to their national teams in achieving medals in international and European championships:

    Nikola Jokić (Serbia)

    • Olympic silver medalist in 2016 and bronze medalist in 2024 with Serbia
    • Led Serbia to a bronze medal at the 2024 Olympics with a historic triple-double
    • Serbia also won the 2023 FIBA World Cup (Jokić was pivotal)

    Dirk Nowitzki (Germany)

    • Led Germany to bronze at 2002 FIBA World Championship and silver at EuroBasket 2005
    • Helped Germany qualify for 2008 Olympics; flag bearer and team leader
    • No Olympic medals but strong continental success and leadership

    Pau Gasol (Spain)

    • Spain’s decorated star with two Olympic silver medals (2008, 2012) and a bronze (2016)
    • Three EuroBasket titles (2009, 2011, 2015) including two MVP awards
    • FIBA World Cup champion in 2006

    Tony Parker (France)

    • Four medals with France: EuroBasket gold in 2013, silver in 2011, bronze in 2005 and 2015
    • Key in leading France to podium finishes in EuroBasket tournaments
    • Considered one of France’s most successful players in national team history

    Luka Dončić (Slovenia)

    • Led Slovenia to EuroBasket gold in 2017
    • Secured Slovenia’s first Olympic berth in 2020 qualifying tournament
    • No Olympic medals yet, but his impact on Slovenia’s rise is significant

    The list goes on. But Giannis? Much like with the Bucks, it seems he prefers to stick to the “I am superman but my supporting cast is inadequate”. Just blame the team mates, it seems to work with the fans and the media. After so many years though, does that excuse stack up? For over a decade, Giannis has repeatedly expressed his deep passion for representing Greece, often waxing poetic about family, heritage, and national pride. He talks about how much it means to him, how it’s bigger than any NBA accolade, and how he’s committed to bringing glory to his adopted homeland. Yet, despite all the effort, the sweat, and the soundbites, Greece hasn’t won a single major international tournament—or even meddled—in the Giannis era. No EuroBasket titles, no World Cup podiums, no Olympic hardware. Nothing.

    The Rhetoric: All Talk About Pride and Legacy

    Giannis has never been shy about his love for Greece. Born in Athens to Nigerian immigrants, he didn’t receive Greek citizenship until 2013, just before his NBA draft. Since then, he’s embraced his Greek identity with fervor, often using interviews and social media to highlight how representing the national team is a profound honor. Take, for example, his comments ahead of the 2024 Olympic qualifiers: “I have never played in the Olympic Games and I really want for us to get there.” Or after carrying the Greek flag at the Paris Olympics opening ceremony: “I know that my father is watching from heaven, and he’s dancing about this.”

    He frequently emphasizes the emotional weight of donning the blue and white jersey. In 2022, he said, “I enjoyed being there for Greece, wearing the national team shirt is different because you represent 11 million Greeks and 4 million Greeks abroad.” Even in early 2025, as EuroBasket approached, Giannis reaffirmed his commitment: “If I am healthy, I will be there.” He describes national team play as more intense than the NBA: “It’s not easy to play for your club, but it’s easier [than the national team]. It’s win at all costs. We are representing our country.”

    These statements paint a picture of a player deeply invested in his country’s success. Giannis positions himself as the flagbearer—literally and figuratively—for Greek basketball. He speaks of legacy, of inspiring the next generation, and of turning Greece into a powerhouse. But words are one thing; results are another. Let’s look at the track record.

    The Timeline: A Decade of Near-Misses and Early Exits

    Giannis made his senior debut for Greece in 2014, and since then, he’s participated in several major tournaments. Here’s a chronological breakdown of Greece’s performances with Giannis on the roster, based on official FIBA records and reports:

    • 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup: Greece finished 9th overall. They advanced to the Round of 16 but were eliminated by Serbia. Giannis, still a raw 19-year-old, averaged modest numbers in his international debut.
    • 2015 EuroBasket: The team reached the quarterfinals, finishing 5th. They lost to eventual champions Spain. This was one of Greece’s better showings in the Giannis era, but still no medal.
    • 2016 FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament: Greece hosted the qualifiers but fell short, losing the final to Croatia. No Olympic berth. Giannis played, but the team couldn’t capitalize on home advantage.
    • 2017 EuroBasket: Giannis sat this one out due to an alleged injury amid contract disputes with the Bucks. Greece was eliminated in the Round of 16 without him.
    • 2019 FIBA Basketball World Cup: A disappointing 11th-place finish. Greece was bounced in the second round despite high expectations. Giannis averaged 14.8 points and 8.8 rebounds but couldn’t carry the team past strong opponents like the USA and Brazil.
    • 2021 FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament: Another qualifier failure. Greece lost to the Czech Republic in the final, missing out on Tokyo Olympics. Giannis was there, but the result was the same: no advancement.
    • 2022 EuroBasket: Quarterfinal exit again, this time to Germany in a game where Giannis was ejected for a second technical foul. He put up monster stats—29.3 points, 8.8 rebounds per game—but the team crumbled.
    • 2023 FIBA Basketball World Cup: Giannis missed the tournament due to knee surgery recovery. Greece finished 15th without him, highlighting the team’s dependence but also its limitations.
    • 2024 FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament: Finally, a win! Greece qualified for the Paris Olympics by beating Croatia in the final. Giannis dominated, averaging 22.7 points and leading the charge at home in Piraeus. This was hailed as a breakthrough, but it was just a qualifier—not a major tournament victory.
    • 2024 Paris Olympics: Hopes were high, but Greece was eliminated in the quarterfinals by Germany (again). Giannis scored 22 points in the loss, but the team couldn’t overcome a stacked field. They finished 5th-8th overall.

    In summary, over 11 years and multiple tournaments, Greece’s best results with Giannis have been quarterfinal appearances and one Olympic qualification. No finals, no medals, no championships. Compare this to Greece’s pre-Giannis era: They won EuroBasket in 1987 and 2005, took silver in 1989, and bronze in 2009. Since Giannis joined, the trophy drought has persisted.

    Critics might argue that qualifying for the 2024 Olympics was a “win,” but let’s be real: It’s a stepping stone, not a trophy. Greece hadn’t been to the Olympics since 2008, so Giannis did help end that drought. But in the actual Games? Another quarterfinal flameout. For a player who preaches “win at all costs,” the costs have been high, but the wins absent. Much like his tenure with the Bucks. With that one exception it has been mainly first round playoff exits despite much hype and hopes every time.

    Time for Results Over Rhetoric?

    Giannis Antetokounmpo is a phenomenal athlete and a proud Greek ambassador. His story—from undocumented immigrant to NBA icon—is inspiring. But when it comes to the national team, the gap between his words and the outcomes is glaring. He’s tried for years, pretending he is pouring heart and soul into it, yet Greece remains without a major international accolade in his era. And in fact Giannis hasn’t really put that much effort into it, turning up at the last minute and missing many dates. EuroBasket 2025 looms, this could be another chance for redemption. Will Giannis finally deliver a title, or will it be more of the same—eloquent speeches masking underwhelming results? Only time will tell, but based on history, skepticism is warranted. Greek fans deserve more than just effort; they deserve hardware.

  • Why did Giannis play today against Georgia? Stat padder supreme!

    Why did Giannis play today against Georgia? Stat padder supreme!

    I have analysed in detail how Giannis is the definition of a stat padder in the NBA. Click here to read it if you are not convinced, the man is literally in the definition of the term in Wikipedia. But today’s matchup against Georgia on August 31, 2025, raises some serious questions about his approach to these games. Greece cruised to a lopsided 94-53 victory, marking their third straight win in Group C and solidifying their status as group favorites. Yet, in what was essentially a glorified exhibition against an undermanned opponent, Giannis put up monster numbers: 27 points, 8 rebounds, 4 assists, and 2 steals in just 25 minutes of action. Impressive on paper, sure. But let’s call it what it is – blatant stat padding in a game that was never in doubt, all while unnecessarily risking injury ahead of a grueling NBA campaign.

    The Game Breakdown: A Rout from the Jump

    From the opening tip, this contest was mismatched. Greece jumped out to a 22-13 lead after the first quarter, thanks in large part to Giannis and teammate Konstantinos Mitoglou combining for the team’s first 14 points. By halftime, the score ballooned to 46-29, with Giannis already dropping 16 points alongside Mitoglou’s 15 – the duo alone outscoring Georgia’s entire team in the first half. The third quarter saw Greece extend their dominance to 69-41, and the final period was pure garbage time, ending in a 41-point blowout that ties for one of the largest margins in recent EuroBasket history.

    Georgia, to their credit, was severely handicapped. Their NBA center Goga Bitadze – a former Bucks teammate of Giannis – didn’t play at all, leaving them without a true rim protector to challenge the Greek star inside. Captain Tornike Shengelia, another key veteran, was limited to just four minutes early on, further tilting the scales. Without these anchors, Georgia’s defense was porous, allowing Giannis to feast on easy drives, transition buckets, and even a perfect 1/1 from beyond the arc. He shot an efficient 8/10 on two-pointers and went 8/13 from the free-throw line, padding his totals with minimal resistance.

    The progression tells the story of a non-competitive affair. Greece’s defense forced turnovers early (five steals in the first quarter alone), leading to fast breaks that Giannis converted effortlessly. By the end of the third, the game was so out of reach that coach Vassilis Spanoulis could have – and should have – kept his star on the bench. Instead, Giannis was subbed back in with 4:52 left in the fourth, adding a couple of free throws before finally being pulled for good. Why? The outcome was sealed. This wasn’t about winning; it was about numbers.

    The Stat Padding Argument: Chasing Glory in Garbage Time

    Look, Giannis is a generational talent, and his raw stats today are undeniable. But context matters. In a blowout like this, where Greece led by double digits from the first quarter and never looked back, there’s no need for your MVP-caliber player to log 25 minutes – especially when he returned in the fourth for what amounted to mop-up duty. This smacks of stat padding: intentionally staying in or re-entering a decided game to inflate personal lines.

    Compare this to his approach in previous games. Just yesterday, against Cyprus, Giannis sat out entirely, allowing Greece to still win comfortably and move to 2-0. That was smart load management. Against Italy earlier in the tournament, he played 29 minutes and dropped 31 points in a closer 75-66 win – a scenario where his full effort was warranted. But Georgia? This was a team missing key players, struggling offensively (they scored just 53 points total), and posing zero threat. Giannis could have capped his night at 20 minutes with, say, 20 points, and no one would have batted an eye. Instead, he pushed for 27, including those late free throws, in what feels like a quest for headlines and highlight reels.

    Critics might say he’s just competitive, playing hard regardless of the score. Fair point, but at what cost? Stat padding isn’t new in basketball – we’ve seen it from stars chasing triple-doubles or scoring titles. For Giannis, who already has two MVPs and a Finals ring, these international stats boost his legacy narrative. But in a tournament like EuroBasket, where Greece is favored to advance deep, why not preserve energy for tougher matchups ahead, like potential clashes with Spain or Italy?

    The Injury Risk: Playing with Fire for No Reason

    Here’s where it gets reckless. Giannis is no stranger to injuries. He’s dealt with knee issues, back problems, and various tweaks over his NBA career, missing chunks of seasons that have impacted the Bucks’ playoff runs. International play adds extra mileage – more games, travel, and physicality without the NBA’s load management protocols. In a meaningless blowout against Georgia, every extra minute on the court is a needless gamble.

    Imagine this: A freak ankle roll in the fourth quarter while chasing a loose ball, or a hard foul from a frustrated Georgian player trying to make a statement. Boom – season derailed before it starts. The Bucks, who pay him over $48 million annually, must be sweating every time he suits up for Greece. And for what? To turn a 30-point lead into 41? The risk-reward ratio is absurdly skewed. EuroBasket is important for national pride, but Giannis’ health is paramount for his NBA legacy and Greece’s long-term success. Sitting out the Cyprus game showed he knows how to rest; applying that here would have been prudent.

    This isn’t just hypothetical. We’ve seen stars like Joel Embiid or Kawhi Leonard manage minutes meticulously to avoid injury. Giannis, at 30 years old and with a history of wear and tear, should follow suit. Playing hero ball in a rout doesn’t make him tougher; it makes him vulnerable.

    Despite the 27 points, 8 rebounds, and 4 assists, a few cracks in his game stood out, particularly his struggles at the free-throw line and a couple of lapses that could raise eyebrows.

    • Poor Free-Throw Shooting: Giannis went 8/13 from the free-throw line, a subpar 61.5% clip. For a player who draws contact and gets to the line frequently – especially in blowouts where fouls pile up – this inefficiency is glaring. Missing five free throws in a game where he only took 11 total shots (10 two-pointers, 1 three-pointer) meant he left easy points on the table. This echoes his career-long struggle, with a 70.3% NBA free-throw average, and could hurt Greece in tighter games against stronger EuroBasket foes. In fact this season in the NBA he shot his worse 3pt% and ft% in his career.
    • Unnecessary Fourth-Quarter Minutes: While not a statistical negative, Giannis’ decision (or the coaching staff’s) to return in the fourth quarter of a decided game was questionable. With Greece up by over 30 points, his brief stint to add free throws felt like chasing stats rather than preserving energy. This choice risked injury and showed a lack of discipline in managing his workload.
    • Limited Playmaking: Despite his 4 assists, Giannis could have done more to involve teammates in a game where Georgia’s defense collapsed early. His focus on scoring – particularly in transition and isolation – occasionally overshadowed opportunities to set up players like Konstantinos Mitoglou, who was hot early. In a blowout, leaning harder into playmaking could have further elevated Greece’s team chemistry.

    Wrapping It Up: Time for Smarter Choices

    Giannis Antetokounmpo’s performance today was dominant, no doubt – 27 points on efficient shooting, leading Greece to an easy win and keeping them atop Group C. Fans ate up the highlights, and social media buzzed with praise. But beneath the glamour, this game exposes a flaw: a tendency to pad stats in low-stakes scenarios, putting his body on the line for diminishing returns. Greece didn’t need him in the fourth; the tournament doesn’t hinge on one blowout’s margin. As EuroBasket progresses, Giannis should prioritize preservation over padding. His talent is too valuable to waste on games like this. Bucks fans, Greek supporters, and basketball purists alike should hope he dials it back – before an injury forces him to.

  • The FIBA Euro championships are a joke

    The FIBA Euro championships are a joke

    Since 1999, FIBA limits each team to only one naturalized player on the roster, which forces teams to rely mostly on native or dual-national players (passport obtained before age 16). This rule aims to maintain competitive balance and national representation authenticity. Many strong teams carefully select their one naturalized player to fill key roster gaps especially at EuroBasket tournaments from 2017 to 2025.

    Teams incorporating naturalized players often use them to address specific positional needs (e.g., point guard or centre) not adequately covered by native players, which can enhance overall team performance and competitiveness. For example, the European champion Slovenia in 2017 used the American naturalized player Anthony Randolph effectively alongside Luka Dončić. FIBA rules allow a team to have one naturalized player on their roster who obtained a passport after the age of 16. This creates a loophole for federations to recruit talented players, often from the United States, who have no genuine connection to the country they are representing. It is nationality for convenience. Tyler Dorsey, for instance, a player with Greek heritage who played for Greece in EuroBasket 2025, is still considered “naturalised” by FIBA because he received his passport after the age of 16. Other players, like Jordan Loyd for Poland and Darius Thompson for Italy, acquired citizenship to play in the tournament, despite having no prior ties. This practice is completely different from a player who has a true dual citizenship from birth or has lived in the country for a significant period. While these players may be skilled and contribute to their teams, their presence cheapens the meaning of “national team.” It transforms the competition from a battle of nations into a recruitment war, where the team with the most money and connections can simply buy a star to fill a hole in their roster.

    NBA player presence on teams correlates with stronger competitive performance. EuroBasket 2025, for instance, features numerous NBA players across several teams such as Serbia (Nikola Jokić), Germany (Franz Wagner, Dennis Schröder), and France (Bilal Coulibaly). These teams with multiple NBA players generally are regarded as favourites due to elite talent and experience. Teams relying solely on native players without naturalised players sometimes emphasise homegrown talent and strong national basketball traditions (e.g., Latvia in EuroBasket 2025) but may lack the positional flexibility or depth that naturalised players provide. Dual citizenship and naturalisation policies add complexity but offer teams strategic roster-building tools. The trend across the past 5 European Championships (approx. EuroBasket 2009, 2013, 2015, 2017, and 2022/2025) shows increasing integration of NBA talent and naturalized players, with most medal-contending teams having at least one NBA player and a naturalized player selected with tactical purpose. This turns the concept of a true “national team” into a marketing opportunity for the NBA, with fans tuning in not to see national pride, but to watch their favourite players in a different jersey. It dilutes the unique style of European basketball, which traditionally emphasises team-oriented play and structured offences, a point even acknowledged by Giannis’s former coach, Darvin Ham. The focus shifts from the collective to the individual, eroding the very essence of national team competition. Teams with only native players may rely on strong local development but tend to have less roster flexibility and fewer positional specialists brought in via naturalization or NBA experience.

    Given the past 5 EuroBasket finals data winners had 1 to 4 NBA players.

    • 2022 Spain: Juancho Hernangomez (Toronto Raptors), Willy Hernangomez (New Orleans Pelicans)
    • 2017 Slovenia: Goran Dragic (Miami Heat), Luka Doncic (Dallas Mavericks, injured during final but key player)
    • 2015 Spain: Pau Gasol (Chicago Bulls)
    • 2013 France: Tony Parker (San Antonio Spurs), Nicolas Batum (Portland Trail Blazers)
    • 2011 Spain: Pau Gasol, Marc Gasol (Memphis Grizzlies), Serge Ibaka (Oklahoma City Thunder), Ricky Rubio (Minnesota Timberwolves)
    • 2009 Spain: Pau Gasol, Marc Gasol, Rudy Fernandez (Portland Trail Blazers

    Even outside the NBA, it is the NBA dictating who wins. More NBA players means you win basically. Is it a direct correlation? Well no, because some NBA players don’t impact games or don’t risk injury. So what are we even looking at? Some players playing to become famous while the best players are more concerned with protecting their health or getting knocked out early to return to their real work in the NBA.

    And then of course is the second problem. Naturalised players, ie completely irrelevant to the country they are playing for usually, those that didn’t even make it in the NBA but are so good compared to local talent that they get on the teams. For example:

    • Turkey: Shane Larkin (naturalized)
    • Greece: Tyler Dorsey (naturalized)
    • Montenegro: Kyle Allman Jr. (naturalized)
    • Bosnia and Herzegovina: John Roberson (naturalized)
    • Cyprus: Darral Willis (naturalized)
    • Georgia: Kamar Baldwin (naturalized)
    • Portugal: Travante Williams (naturalized)
    • Italy: Darius Thompson

    It is a bit like the old days when the NBA only allowed one negro per team “when the match was tough” as an unofficial rule between the team owners. European teams are playing a silly game with silly rules in fact by having various players naturalised but then only allowing one to play. This is covert racism which leads to a possibly dangerous type of nationalism. The winners are either teams with NBA stars (ie they have learned how to play and have been trained in the NBA) or naturalised players who are the NBA hand me downs. What sort of “national” team is it when the coach has to give instructions in English so that everyone understands?

    And that’s not even the start of the problems with this tournament. Injuries come from the players playing too many games. Is it worth it? Why are there so many super weak teams in the tournament? Players get into the temptation to smash records playing against nations that are very weak. It’s not fun to watch either.

  • Greece was better WITHOUT Giannis against Italy

    Greece was better WITHOUT Giannis against Italy

    Giannis in the game, Greece 3pts ahead

    He leaves the game, Greece 9pts ahead

    He comes back in, Greece down to 4pts ahead

    Q3 Giannis leaves the game , Greece ahead 7 points. Without Giannis, Greece ahead 11 points

    Q4 Greece ahead 13 points when Giannis enters the game.  With Giannis on the court that falls to only 9 points

    The facts speak for themselves. The Greek national team plays much better without Giannis on the floor. No two ways around it.

    But that isn’t even the start. He played virtually no defence all night, content to watch his team mates from the 3point line! Despite the fact that Italy had nobody even close to able to defend him. He made 5 turnovers, most of which were simply infantile. FIBA basketball emphasises team defence, with a smaller court and different rules (e.g., no defensive three-second violation), which can limit Giannis’ rim-protecting impact compared to the NBA. FIBA’s no defensive 3-second rule allows bigs to camp in the paint — a setup that should enhance Giannis’s elite help-defence capabilities. But no, he simply did not engage at all. If he’s not using that to deter drives or anchor switches, it’s a wasted asset.

    Five turnovers are significant in a FIBA game, where possessions are fewer due to shorter game lengths (40 minutes) and a slower pace compared to the NBA. Turnovers directly give the opponent extra opportunities, which could explain why Greece’s lead shrank during periods when Giannis was on the court (e.g., from 9 to 4 points when he returned, or from 13 to 9 points in Q4) Many of these turnovers, weren’t forced — they were bad reads, over-dribbling, or trying to “force the issue.”

    With Giannis, the offense too often bogs down into “give it to Giannis and watch” — which stagnates spacing, tempo, and creativity. If ever there was a clear case of Giannis simply getting highlights but in fact damaging his team, tonight was it. And all this on a night when most of the Italian players were terrible. Greece simply moves the ball better and plays better defence without him. It is a much more balanced team when it is not constantly looking for a Giannis highlight. Without Giannis, Greece plays more structured, disciplined team basketball — multiple ball-handlers, consistent help defense, and less reliance on any one star. This was against a weak Italian team. If Greece can’t dominate with Giannis against this, what happens against stronger competition? a bad fit for this system, this environment, and maybe even this version of the Greek team. And it’s a hard truth for fans and analysts to accept because of how dominant he is in the NBA. FIBA success requires fit, feel, and flexibility, not just individual talent. If Giannis isn’t adapting to the format — or worse, if the team has to bend around him and gets worse as a result — that’s a serious issue.

  • The Greek National Team is Giannis’ Ultimate Marketing Play

    The Greek National Team is Giannis’ Ultimate Marketing Play

    The two-time MVP, NBA champion, and all-around powerhouse isn’t just trying to dominate on the court; he’s building a serious empire off it, particularly in his homeland of Greece. Born to Nigerian immigrants in Athens, Giannis is channeling national pride into savvy investments and marketing moves that tie directly back to Greece. Suiting up for the Greek national team isn’t just about patriotism – it’s a smart business strategy that amplifies his personal brand and boosts his ventures.

    Giannis’s Business Interests in Greece: Building a Legacy Beyond Basketball

    Giannis, along with his brothers (Thanasis, Kostas, and Alex), has been strategically investing in Greece through family-led entities like Ante Inc., BYL Group, and the recently launched Build Your Legacy (BYL) Ventures. His focus? Diversifying into real estate, beverages, tech, healthcare, and more, all while promoting Greek products and culture globally. Here’s a comprehensive list based on his publicly reported ventures:

    • Real Estate Investments in Athens: The Antetokounmpo family is pouring money into prime Athens properties. In late 2024, they partnered to transform the Village Shopping Center, a major retail hub, signaling a push into commercial real estate development. This move not only generates revenue but also revitalizes local economies, aligning with Giannis’s image as a hometown hero.
    • Winery and Beverage Stakes: Giannis and his family have a passion for Greek wines. In 2023, through Ante Inc., they acquired a 10% minority stake in Hellenic Wineries, which owns the iconic Boutari winery and Ioli water brand. By early 2025, Giannis expanded this further by acquiring a leading winery estate in Greece, aiming to elevate Greek wines on the world stage.
    • Venture Capital Fund – Build Your Legacy Ventures: Launched in November 2024, this is Giannis’s exclusive venture arm focused on early-stage startups in sports, entertainment, tech, and healthcare. While global in scope, it has strong Greek ties, as part of the broader BYL Group managing his international portfolio. This positions him as an investor-champion, much like his on-court assists.
    • Partnership with Calamos Investments: In 2023, Giannis teamed up with this global asset management firm for joint ventures, including charitable donations from revenues. The partnership has a Greek flavor, emphasizing his heritage.
    • Broader Empire Through Ante Inc. and BYL Group: These umbrellas cover diverse investments in real estate, tech, healthcare, and sports, with a “golden business empire” vibe that’s expanding rapidly in Greece.

    These interests aren’t just side hustles; they’re estimated to contribute significantly to his net worth, which tops $100 million from NBA contracts alone. By investing locally, Giannis is creating jobs, boosting Greek exports (like wines), and solidifying his status as a national icon.

    Giannis’s Promos, Ads, and Marketing Actions in Greece: Leveraging Fame for Local Impact

    Giannis isn’t shy about using his star power for endorsements, especially those that scream “Greece.” His marketing efforts often highlight Greek culture, products, and tourism, creating a symbiotic relationship between his brand and his homeland. Here’s a rundown of his key promos and ads targeted at or originating from Greece:

    • Greek Tourism Promotion Video (2018): Giannis starred in an English-language video for the Greek National Tourism Organization, showcasing Athens and beyond to attract visitors. As an ambassador, he emphasized his personal connection to Greece.
    • Aegean Airlines Campaigns (2017-2018): He featured in commercials for Greece’s flagship airline, including the “Greece by Greeks” initiative, which launched a platform (www.greecebygreeks.gr) sharing his favorite destinations. This partnership promoted travel while tying into his Greek pride.
    • Milk Ad with Brother Kostas (2019): A heartfelt commercial for a Greek milk brand (Milko) recreated young Giannis and Kostas’s life, blending emotion with product placement. It went viral in Greece for its authenticity.
    • Nike Ad Featuring Greek Pride (2019): Post-MVP win, Nike’s ad celebrated Giannis’s Greek heritage with shouts of “Ζήτω η Ελλάδα” (Long live Greece), reinforcing his cultural ties.
    • ESPN “This is SportsCenter” Commercial (2018): A fun spot where Giannis “breaks plates” in Greek tradition (with a twist), poking fun at stereotypes while promoting his personality.
    • GFG (Greek From Greece) Bakery-Café Collaboration (2020): Giannis partnered to promote and sponsor Greek-inspired baked goods, leading to legal battles over his “Greek Freak” trademark but ultimately expanding his food-related marketing.
    • Other Endorsements with Greek Ties: He’s backed brands like STR8 fragrance (Gr. Sarantis SA), Mytilineos SA (energy), Greek From Greece Cafe Cuisine, and even appeared in lifestyle content like “24 Hours in Greece” videos that subtly market his persona.

    These efforts aren’t random; they’re designed to resonate with Greek audiences, driving sales for partners while enhancing Giannis’s relatability.

    Why Giannis Has Every Reason to Play for the Greek National Team: The Business Booster Shot

    So why does Giannis keep lacing up for Greece’s national team, even amid NBA trade rumours and injury risks? Sure, there’s national pride – Giannis has spoken about representing his country to combat racism and inspire youth. But from a business lens, it’s a no-brainer. Playing for Greece supercharges his visibility in the homeland, turning him into a living billboard for his investments and endorsements. There’s no direct evidence in available sources that any of Giannis’s endorsement deals explicitly mandate national team participation. However it would make sense that there are such stipulations or at least strong pressure from his business partners. His decision to turn down an Adidas deal because it didn’t include his brother Thanasis suggests he prioritises family over brand demands.

    First, heightened national hero status: Every EuroBasket or Olympic qualifier appearance (like his focus on qualifying for the 2024 Olympics or prepping for EuroBasket 2025) cements Giannis as Greece’s top ambassador. This goodwill translates to consumer loyalty – think more Greeks buying Boutari wine or visiting his revamped shopping centres because “Giannis owns it.”

    Second, marketing amplification: National team play generates massive media buzz in Greece. His tourism promos and Aegean ads gain traction when he’s leading Greece to victories, creating a halo effect for his brands. For instance, post-game interviews often highlight his Greek roots, indirectly promoting ventures like his wineries.

    Third, overcoming hurdles for long-term gains: Recent insurance snags with the Bucks delayed his 2025 national team participation, but Giannis pushed through because the exposure is worth it. In a country where basketball is huge, his on-court heroics drive endorsement deals and investment opportunities.

    Finally, global-to-local synergy: While his NBA fame is worldwide, national team duties keep him connected to Greek investors and consumers. It’s why his BYL Ventures thrives – partners see him as invested in Greece’s future, not just his own.

    Although there is no direct evidence of Giannis Antetokounmpo’s Greek national team participation being a contractual requirement for endorsements, his appeal and business benefits in Greece can be measured in numerous other impactful ways—including media reach, public engagement, and economic ripple effects that are amplified when he plays for Greece. Metrics That Benefit from National Team Play:

    Media and Social Impact. Publicity Spike: When Giannis plays for Greece, news coverage, TV ratings, and social media engagement in Greece rise sharply, driving attention for brands connected to him.

    National Icon: His presence amplifies patriotic sentiment and aligns brands with national pride, translating to increased advertising effectiveness and higher recall rates for Greek-only campaigns.

    Fan Engagement and Consumer Behavior. Merchandise Sales: Official Greek team gear, memorabilia, and branded products linked to Giannis sell more during his national team appearances, providing indirect revenue for related businesses.

    Event Attendance: Greek basketball events—friendlies, qualifiers, and youth clinics—see major attendance spikes when Giannis is on the court, enhancing sponsor visibility and direct fan-brand interaction.

    Economic and Cultural Influence. Tourism Lift: His ambassador role for Greek tourism is magnified when he plays, as international media coverage drives curiosity and visits from fans and basketball tourists.

    Business Partnerships: Local investments, such as wineries, entertainment centers, and sports academies, benefit from the positive PR and community goodwill associated with his national team activity.

    Giannis’s brand power in Greece goes far beyond formal contracts—it’s reflected in media metrics, consumer enthusiasm, merchandise sales, and the overall economic boost from his association with Team Greece. All these factors receive a measurable lift when he plays for the Greek national team, directly benefiting his business interests and local promotional value. In short, playing for Greece isn’t a distraction; it’s a strategic play that promotes his personal business empire. As Giannis himself might say, it’s all about building a legacy – on and off the court. He holds several Greek-exclusive promotional contracts, particularly with domestic brands and public campaigns, and while there is no direct evidence that these agreements legally require him to play for the national team his participation strongly enhances the value and reach of these promotions and could be measured with other tools in his contracts.

    As we have seen every time he fails he falls back to the rags to riches narrative. How he overcame poverty to get to the NBA. Greece is a big part of that mythology and Giannis knows it is his safe place in terms of the media and the public. Giannis could get injured and leave the NBA at any time. But he will always have a home, and a very strong business to return to, in Greece. All he has to do is show up enough to maintain the myth with the Greek public.

  • Settings expectations on Giannis and Greece for Euro 2025

    Settings expectations on Giannis and Greece for Euro 2025

    Greece enters EuroBasket 2025 with high hopes for ending a 16-year medal drought, and much of the nation’s ambition centers on the performance of Giannis Antetokounmpo. The expectations are clear: Greece is aiming for a podium finish, and Giannis is expected to deliver extraordinary statistics and iconic moments worthy of his NBA superstar status.

    Greece’s Medal Expectations

    Greece has not won a EuroBasket medal since 2009 but with Giannis at the helm and a roster that blends experienced leaders like Kostas Sloukas with promising talent, the team is considered a dark horse with legitimate medal ambitions. They face tough group-stage opponents, including Spain and Italy, yet pre-tournament friendlies have shown strong performances against quality teams, and the fanbase is energized for a breakthrough.

    Group Draw and Knockout Prospects

    Greece competes in Group B against Spain, Italy, Georgia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Cyprus, with the top four teams progressing to the knockout stage. The path to a medal demands not just advancing from the group but also overcoming European giants in the elimination rounds. Greece’s experience, defensive tenacity, and the inspiration drawn from Giannis serve as crucial factors. Can Giannis rise to the occasion or will he be content to simply make personal stats like he did with the Bucks this season?

    Statistical Expectations for Giannis

    Giannis is anticipated to lead all scorers at EuroBasket 2025, with projections that he may need to average at least 25 points per game for Greece to contend for a medal. FIBA rules generally reduce stat lines compared to the NBA, but Giannis’s role as primary scorer, rebounder, and playmaker should result in eye-catching numbers. The bar for Giannis is set at:

    • Scoring: 25+ points per game—potentially the highest in the tournament
    • Rebounds: 10+ per game, leveraging his athleticism and defensive skill
    • Assists: 6+ per game, given Greece’s increased transition play under coach Spanoulis

    Additionally, Giannis is expected to deliver a defining performance. Something like a 30+ point, double-digit rebound showcase against a major rival like Spain or Italy could become the tournament’s iconic highlight. Giannis needs this in order to preserve the narrative that he is fantastic and it is only his lack of good team mates that keeps him from success.

    We do NOT expect Giannis to shoot 3pt at all. In the NBA this season he shot them much less and it was still his worse year ever and one of the worse single 3pt % in the history of the NBA. Same with free throws. His worse career year in the NBA. In many respects Giannis is past his prime. He will really need to focus and hope that Euro2025 opponents are more concerned to stay healthy and avoid injury as he gallops towards them like Porzingis did in the friendly game they recently played.

    Iconic Performance and Leadership

    Tournaments are marked by unforgettable moments, and fans and analysts expect Giannis to provide the emotional and athletic centrepiece of EuroBasket 2025. His leadership during clutch possessions, ability to shine in transition, and capacity to break defensive schemes will be pivotal.

    Will Giannis reach these goals?

    The Greek national team will rely on Giannis Antetokounmpo’s elite production and leadership to push for a medal at EuroBasket 2025. From statistical dominance (25+ points, 10+ rebounds per game) to a defining tournament moment, the expectations are both high and inspiring for Greek basketball. Greece not making it to the top 4 of the tournament will clearly be an indictment on Giannis and possibly a good reason for him not to return to the Greek national team again. After so many years with no results this could be the final opportunity.

    Select relevant sources to this article:

    1. https://basketnews.com/news-228600-greece-eurobasket-2025-roster-schedule-and-scores.html
    2. https://greekcitytimes.com/2025/03/28/greece-draw-eurobasket-2025/
    3. https://sports.yahoo.com/article/3-giannis-antetokounmpo-bold-predictions-124051531.html
    4. https://knews.kathimerini.com.cy/en/news/greek-national-basketball-team-touches-down-in-cyprus-ahead-of-eurobasket-2025
    5. https://basketnews.com/news-229916-greece-vs-france-live-eurobasket.html
    6. https://www.uefa.com/uefanationsleague/teams/49–greece/
    7. https://www.fiba.basketball/en/events/fiba-eurobasket-2025-qualifiers/teams/greece
    8. https://www.nba.com/news/the-athletic-eurobasket-2025-groups-expectations
    9. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greece_national_football_team
    10. https://basketnews.com/news-229678-tyler-dorsey-breaks-down-eurobasket-stars-hopes-to-end-greeces-medal-drought.html

    Featured image from here https://www.fiba.basketball/en/events/fiba-eurobasket-2025-qualifiers/news/locked-in-giannis-confirms-plans-for-fiba-eurobasket-2025

  • Most used Bucks’ lineups and what they show

    Most used Bucks’ lineups and what they show

    Came across the chart and it is extremely interesting food for thought. Last season the most used lineup didn’t include Giannis and guess what? It was also one of the most productive line ups!

    The 2024-25 NBA season was a rollercoaster for the Milwaukee Bucks, blending moments of dominance with frustrating inconsistencies. This graphic captures the essence of their on-court strategy by highlighting the team’s most utilised five-man lineups. This image isn’t just a snapshot of player combinations—it’s a window into how the Bucks structured their rotations under head coach Doc Rivers, emphasising spacing, defence, and star power. But beyond the numbers, it raises deeper questions about team dynamics, particularly around superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo. While these lineups posted impressive net ratings during the regular season, the Bucks’ playoff flameout once again spotlighted Giannis’ tendency to prioritise personal milestones over collective success, often to the team’s detriment. Let’s break it down step by step.

    Understanding the Graphic: A Visual Breakdown

    The infographic, titled “Most Used Bucks Lineups” for the 24/25 season, ranks four key five-man units based on minutes played together. Each lineup is presented with player headshots aligned by position—Guard, Guard, Forward, Forward, Center—alongside their shared court time and net rating (a measure of points scored minus points allowed per 100 possessions). The green backdrop and clean design make it easy to digest, but the real story lies in the personnel and performance metrics.

    Here’s a detailed rundown of each lineup, inferred from player appearances, jerseys, and cross-referenced with season stats from reliable sources like NBA.com and Reddit discussions on Bucks rotations:

    1. Damian Lillard (Guard), Gary Trent Jr. (Guard), Khris Middleton (Forward), Giannis Antetokounmpo (Forward), Brook Lopez (Center)
    • Minutes Played: 121
    • Net Rating: +22.2
      This was the Bucks’ go-to starting unit for much of the season, blending Lillard’s elite scoring and playmaking with Trent’s sharpshooting from the perimeter. Middleton provided veteran savvy and spacing, while Giannis dominated the paint and Lopez anchored the defense with his rim protection and outside shooting. The high net rating reflects excellent offensive efficiency (likely around 120+ points per 100 possessions) and solid defense, thanks to Lopez’s blocks and Giannis’ versatility. This group embodied the Bucks’ “championship or bust” aspirations, excelling in transition and half-court sets.
    1. Damian Lillard (Guard), Pat Connaughton (Guard), Taurean Prince (Forward), Giannis Antetokounmpo (Forward), Brook Lopez (Center)
    • Minutes Played: 110
    • Net Rating: +14.5
      A slight variation on the starter-heavy lineup, this unit swapped Trent for Connaughton (a reliable 3-and-D wing) and Middleton for Prince (a versatile forward acquired in the offseason for depth). The result was a more defensive-minded group, with Connaughton’s energy and Prince’s length helping on the boards and in switches. While the net rating dipped slightly from the top lineup, it still indicated strong performance, particularly in games where Middleton rested or dealt with injuries. Offensive rating might have hovered around 115, bolstered by Lillard-Giannis pick-and-rolls.
    1. Damian Lillard (Guard), Gary Trent Jr. (Guard), Taurean Prince (Forward), Khris Middleton (Forward), Brook Lopez (Center)
    • Minutes Played: 80
    • Net Rating: +8.5
      Notably, this is the only lineup in the graphic without Giannis, relying instead on a balanced mix of shooting and defense. Lillard and Trent handled the backcourt, Prince and Middleton provided forward flexibility, and Lopez remained the constant at center. The lower minutes suggest it was used in specific matchups or when Giannis sat, but the net rating—while positive—lagged behind the Giannis-inclusive groups. This could point to better ball movement without Giannis’ ball-dominant style, though the sample size is smaller. Discussions on Reddit highlighted similar bench-heavy units performing well defensively, with ratings around 102 points allowed per 100 possessions.
    1. Gary Trent Jr. (Guard), Pat Connaughton (Guard), Taurean Prince (Forward), Giannis Antetokounmpo (Forward), Bobby Portis (Center)
    • Minutes Played: 57
    • Net Rating: +26.0
      The least used but most efficient of the bunch, this lineup featured a smaller, faster frontcourt with Portis stepping in for Lopez. Trent and Connaughton offered shooting, Prince added switchability, and Giannis thrived in a more open floor. The sky-high net rating screams “small sample success,” likely driven by explosive offense (perhaps 130+ offensive rating) in blowouts or against weaker benches. Portis’ energy and rebounding complemented Giannis perfectly here, making it a potent closing or comeback unit.

    These lineups collectively showcase the Bucks’ strategy: heavy reliance on star talent like Lillard and Giannis, supplemented by role players for shooting and defense. The positive net ratings across the board contributed to a 48-34 regular-season record, good for 5th in the East. However, the varying inclusion of Giannis hints at an underlying issue—while his presence often elevated efficiency, it sometimes came at the cost of team cohesion.

    The Regular Season Mirage: Strong Lineups, But Lingering Concerns

    On paper, these combinations were a recipe for success. The top lineup’s +22.2 net rating rivals championship-calibre units, driven by Giannis’ all-around dominance (averaging 30.4 points, 11.9 rebounds, and 6.5 assists per game). Pairing him with spacers like Lopez and Trent allowed for drive-and-kick opportunities, while defensive anchors kept opponents in check. Midseason analyses praised rotations like the third-most-used group (similar to our #3 here), which boasted a 101.7 defensive rating without Giannis, suggesting the supporting cast could hold its own.

    Yet, cracks appeared. The Bucks cycled through 11 starting lineups early on due to injuries and inconsistencies, with Giannis-centric units dominating minutes but occasionally leading to stagnant offense. Giannis’ high usage rate (often over 35%) meant the ball stuck in his hands, reducing touches for shooters like Middleton and Lillard. This worked in the regular season against lesser competition, but foreshadowed playoff vulnerabilities.

    Why Giannis Falls Short When It Really Counts: Stats Over Substance

    Here’s where the narrative shifts from celebration to scrutiny. Despite gaudy regular-season numbers and lineup efficiencies, the Bucks crashed out in the first round of the 2025 playoffs, losing in five games. Giannis posted monster averages—33.0 points, 15.4 rebounds, and 6.6 assists—but the team faltered. In his final game, he even notched a historic 30/20/10 performance, joining an elite club, yet it came in a loss that ended their season. This pattern isn’t new; it’s a recurring theme in Giannis’ career, where personal accolades mask deeper issues in high-stakes moments.

    Critics argue Giannis prioritizes stats to the team’s detriment, a claim substantiated by infamous incidents like his 2023 stat-padding episode. During a game against the Wizards, Giannis intentionally missed a shot at the rim to grab his own rebound and secure a triple-double, a move slammed as “cheap” and “self-serving” by the New York Post. Such behavior undermines team morale and focus, especially when the Bucks needed every edge in close contests. Videos and analyses highlight how stat-chasing leads to downfall, with Giannis himself acknowledging the pitfalls—yet repeating them.

    In playoffs, this manifests as inefficiency when it matters most. Back in 2020, with the Bucks down 3-0 to the Heat, scrutiny fell on Giannis’ inability to lead despite MVP-caliber play, questioning his clutch gene. Fast-forward to 2025: his stellar stats couldn’t prevent another early exit, partly due to poor decision-making in crunch time. Giannis’ free-throw struggles (around 65% career) force him into hero-ball mode, leading to turnovers and stagnant possessions that hurt lineups reliant on his drives. ESPN reports captured his frustration with team effort post-losses, but insiders note his ball dominance fatigues teammates and limits their involvement. The 2021 championship is looking more and more as a notable freaky exception, maybe even a set up by the NBA to give a smaller franchise a title.

    Compare this to peers like Nikola Jokic, who elevates teams through unselfish play. Giannis’ approach, while yielding All-NBA honours, has coincided with three straight first-round exits post-2021 title (often blamed on injuries, but patterns persist). A shocking stat: Giannis led the league in points but ranked poorly in clutch-time efficiency, with the Bucks posting a negative net rating in fourth quarters of close games. social media posts and forums echo accusations of “stat padding” over team wins, with one user noting how his triple-double hunts mirror Russell Westbrook’s criticised seasons.

    Ultimately, these lineups prove the Bucks have the talent for regular-season success, but Giannis’ stat-focused mindset hampers adaptability in the playoffs. To reclaim contention, he must shift toward team-first basketball—distributing more, trusting rotations, and ditching the padding. Until then, graphics like this will remain bittersweet reminders of untapped potential. Casual fans will suck up the Bucks’ marketing about all the points he scored and records he broke. People that care about the team will wonder why Giannis can’t develop in a meaningful way and how much longer his team mates will have to cover up for his many weaknesses.

  • Giannis and the Greek National Team: A Blessing or a Barrier to Rebuilding?

    Giannis and the Greek National Team: A Blessing or a Barrier to Rebuilding?

    Giannis Antetokounmpo ,a two-time NBA MVP, NBA champion, and global superstar, his presence on any team is transformative. For the Greek national basketball team, his participation in international competitions like FIBA EuroBasket and the Olympics is a source of immense pride and optimism. However, while Giannis brings unparalleled talent and attention to Greek basketball, there’s a growing argument that his dominance inadvertently holds back the team’s long-term development and delays a necessary rebuild. Remember back when the Greek team was , well, a team? Not just a support cast for a diva.

    The Giannis Effect: A Double-Edged Sword

    Giannis Antetokounmpo’s impact on the Greek national team is undeniable. In EuroBasket 2022, he averaged 29.3 points, 8.8 rebounds, and 4.7 assists per game, showcasing his ability to dominate against elite competition. More recently, in a preparation game for EuroBasket 2025 against Latvia, Giannis delivered 25 points and 10 rebounds in just 15 minutes of play, reinforcing his ability to single-handedly shift the momentum of a game. His athleticism, versatility, and relentless work ethic make him a focal point for Greece, drawing defensive attention and creating opportunities for teammates.

    However, this dominance comes with challenges. The Greek national team has become heavily reliant on Giannis to carry the offensive and defensive load, often at the expense of developing a cohesive team identity. His presence can mask underlying weaknesses in the roster, coaching strategy, and player development pipeline, delaying the inevitable need for a rebuild. Below, we explore the key ways in which Giannis’ role might hinder Greece’s long-term growth.

    1. Over-Reliance on Giannis’ Superstar Play

    The Greek national team’s game plan often revolves around Giannis as the primary scorer, playmaker, and defensive anchor. While this strategy maximizes his individual impact, it can stifle the development of other players. In games where Giannis plays limited minutes or sits out, as seen in some EuroBasket 2025 preparation games, the team struggles to maintain consistency. For example, Greece’s offense often becomes stagnant without Giannis’ ability to drive to the basket or create open looks for teammates. This reliance creates a “Giannis-or-bust” dynamic, where the team’s success hinges on his performance rather than a balanced collective effort.

    This over-reliance also affects younger players who might otherwise step into larger roles. Talented players like Giannoulis Larentzakis, who scored 14 points in the Latvia game, or emerging prospects like Alexandros Samodurov, often find their roles reduced to complementary pieces around Giannis. Without opportunities to take on primary scoring or playmaking responsibilities, these players may not develop the confidence or experience needed to lead the team in the future, especially post-Giannis.

    2. Tactical Challenges and Positional Shifts

    Head coach Vassilis Spanoulis has introduced a tactical system designed to function with or without Giannis, acknowledging his sporadic availability due to NBA commitments and insurance issues. However, this flexibility comes at a cost. In EuroBasket 2025 preparations, Spanoulis has experimented with using Giannis as the primary center, a role he has publicly expressed reluctance to play due to the physical toll it takes. With key big man Georgios Papagiannis absent from the roster, Giannis is tasked with rim protection, rebounding, and screening—roles that expose him to greater injury risk and wear him down over the course of a tournament.

    This positional shift highlights a deeper issue: Greece’s lack of depth in the frontcourt. Instead of investing in developing young bigs who could share the load, the team leans on Giannis to fill multiple roles. This approach not only risks his health—especially concerning given his history of calf strains, foot sprains, and patella tendinopathy—but also delays the development of a sustainable frontcourt rotation for the future.

    3. Insurance Issues and Limited Availability

    Giannis’ participation in international competitions is often complicated by logistical challenges, particularly insurance disputes between the Greek Basketball Federation and the Milwaukee Bucks. In the lead-up to EuroBasket 2025, Giannis missed several preparation games due to unpaid insurance, which protects him in case of injury while on national duty. While these issues were eventually resolved, his delayed integration into the team disrupted chemistry and limited the coaching staff’s ability to experiment with different lineups.

    This sporadic availability forces Greece to build a system that can function without its best player, which is a double-edged sword. While it encourages versatility, it also means the team is rarely at full strength during critical preparation periods. Younger players or role players who could benefit from extended minutes alongside Giannis are instead forced to adapt to a system that prioritizes his eventual return, further delaying the development of a new core.

    4. Delaying the Inevitable Rebuild

    Greece’s national team has not won a EuroBasket medal since 2005, and their recent performances—fifth in 2017, eighth in 2015, and fifth in 2007—reflect a program that has struggled to compete with Europe’s elite. While Giannis’ presence elevates Greece’s ceiling, it also papers over cracks in the roster and infrastructure. The team’s reliance on veterans like Kostas Sloukas, who at 35 is aiming to end Greece’s 16-year medal drought, underscores a lack of young talent ready to take the reins.

    A rebuild would require prioritizing the development of younger players, even at the expense of short-term success. However, with Giannis in his prime at age 30, there’s pressure to maximize his window by surrounding him with experienced veterans rather than unproven prospects. This approach risks creating a gap in the talent pipeline, as emerging players are not given the opportunity to gain meaningful international experience. For example, players like Tyler Dorsey or Konstantinos Mitoglou, who showed promise in preparation games, are often relegated to secondary roles when Giannis is on the court.

    5. Cultural and Strategic Implications

    The intense focus on Giannis as the team’s centrepiece can create a culture where other players feel overshadowed or hesitant to take initiative. The Greek national team’s identity has become synonymous with Giannis, which may discourage the development of a collective ethos that could sustain the program after his international career winds down.

    Strategically, Greece’s coaching staff must balance leveraging Giannis’ unique skills with building a system that can outlast him. The current approach, which prioritizes short-term competitiveness, may yield strong performances in tournaments like EuroBasket 2025 but does little to address long-term needs. A true rebuild would involve taking risks, such as giving more minutes to younger players or experimenting with new tactical systems, even if it means sacrificing some wins in the present.

    The Case for a Rebuild

    To secure long-term success, Greece must begin transitioning away from its Giannis-centric model. This doesn’t mean sidelining the superstar but rather using his presence to elevate younger players and build a more balanced roster. Here are some steps Greece could take to initiate a rebuild:

    1. Develop Young Talent: Identify and nurture young prospects like Alexandros Samodurov or other emerging players in the Greek domestic leagues. Giving them significant roles in preparation games, even alongside Giannis, would accelerate their development.
    2. Diversify the Offense: Move away from a Giannis-or-bust offensive strategy by empowering players like Larentzakis or Dorsey to take on playmaking responsibilities. This would create a more versatile attack and reduce the pressure on Giannis.
    3. Strengthen the Frontcourt: Invest in developing big men who can share rim protection and rebounding duties, reducing the physical toll on Giannis and ensuring depth for the future.
    4. Build Team Chemistry: Use preparation games to experiment with lineups that don’t rely solely on Giannis, fostering chemistry among role players and preparing for scenarios where he’s unavailable.
    5. Long-Term Vision: Shift the focus from immediate medal contention to building a sustainable program that can compete post-Giannis. This might mean accepting short-term struggles in exchange for long-term gains.

    Balancing the Present and Future

    Giannis Antetokounmpo’s commitment to the Greek national team is a testament to his love for his country and basketball. However, his overwhelming presence can inadvertently delay the necessary rebuild that Greece needs to remain competitive in the post-Giannis era. By relying too heavily on his individual brilliance, the team risks stunting the growth of younger players, neglecting roster depth, and postponing strategic changes that could ensure long-term success.

    All too often he hogs not just the ball in game situations but also the attention. All too often he fails to deliver when it counts. They can hardly justify not inviting him but when he comes he is like a sledgehammer in everything he does. The challenge for Greece is to strike a balance: leverage Giannis’ prime years to chase medals while simultaneously investing in the next generation. This requires bold decisions from the coaching staff and the Greek Basketball Federation, including a willingness to prioritise development over immediate results. For now, the Greek Freak remains the biggest obstacle to a sustainable future while never quite having proved that he can be truly be a part of a team that will deliver.

    Many are tired of the scenario we are likely to see in the Euro 2025. Early success, impressive performances in the easy games and then when the going gets tough…same story. Giannis posts some big numbers but the rest of the team suddenly seems inadequate. That is not how basketball works. Unless you are working for the Giannis’ marketing team that is.

  • Giannis Antetokounmpo’s Lackluster Showing in Greece’s Friendly Against France

    Giannis Antetokounmpo’s Lackluster Showing in Greece’s Friendly Against France

    As the EuroBasket 2025 tournament looms, all eyes were on Giannis Antetokounmpo, the Milwaukee Bucks superstar and Greece’s talisman, in the final preparation game against France on August 24, 2025. Expectations were sky-high for the two-time NBA MVP, especially after his explosive 25-point, 10-rebound performance in just 15 minutes against Latvia earlier in the preparation campaign. However, in this critical tune-up match against a formidable French squad, Giannis delivered a performance that left fans, analysts, and perhaps even his own team questioning his readiness for the upcoming tournament.

    A Disappointing Statistical Output

    Giannis, known for his dominance on both ends of the court, failed to live up to his “Greek Freak” moniker against France. In approximately 18 minutes of play, he managed only 12 points on a dismal 4-of-11 shooting from the field, including 0-for-3 from beyond the arc. His free-throw shooting, a persistent Achilles’ heel, was equally troubling, converting just 4 of 8 attempts. While he grabbed 7 rebounds and dished out 2 assists, these numbers pale in comparison to the double-double heroics he displayed against Latvia. More concerning were his 4 turnovers, which highlighted a lack of composure under France’s defensive pressure.

    For a player of Giannis’ caliber, who averaged 30.4 points, 11.9 rebounds, and 6.5 assists on 60.1% shooting in the 2024-25 NBA season, this performance was a significant step backward. The friendly against France was a chance to assert his dominance against a team considered one of the favorites for EuroBasket, yet he appeared out of sync and unable to impose his will on the game.

    Struggles Against France’s Defensive Scheme

    France, even without key NBA stars like Victor Wembanyama and Rudy Gobert, showcased a disciplined and physical defensive approach that seemed to rattle Giannis. The French frontcourt, led by players like Guerschon Yabusele and Mathias Lessort, effectively neutralized Giannis’ drives to the basket. They employed a strategy of crowding the paint and daring him to shoot from mid-range or beyond, areas where he has historically struggled. Giannis’ inability to adjust was glaring—his three-point attempts were ill-advised, and his mid-range game was non-existent, forcing him into contested drives that often ended in turnovers or blocked shots (he was blocked twice).

    Moreover, France’s guards, such as Dennis Schröder (playing for Germany but a comparable defensive pest), pressured Greece’s ball-handlers, disrupting Giannis’ ability to receive the ball in advantageous positions. Without the support of key teammates like Kostas Sloukas, who was rested for this game, Giannis was left to create offense almost single-handedly, a role that exposed his limitations when not surrounded by a fully cohesive unit. His frustration was evident, as he picked up a technical foul in the third quarter after arguing a non-call, further derailing Greece’s momentum.

    Lack of Leadership and Impact

    Beyond the numbers, Giannis’ overall impact on the game was surprisingly muted. As the unquestioned leader of the Greek national team, he is expected to elevate his teammates and set the tone, especially in high-stakes preparation games like this one. However, his body language suggested frustration rather than inspiration. There were moments where he appeared disengaged, particularly in the second half, where Greece’s offense stagnated, and France capitalized with a 12-2 run to pull away.

    Greece’s head coach, Vassilis Spanoulis, has built the team’s strategy around Giannis’ versatility, but in this game, the lack of a clear Plan B when Giannis struggled was telling. His teammates, perhaps overly reliant on his usual heroics, failed to step up, and Giannis did little to rally them. Compare this to his performance at the Paris 2024 Olympics, where he averaged 25.8 points and carried Greece to their first Olympic appearance in 16 years, and it’s clear that something was off against France.

    Fatigue or Rust?

    One possible explanation for Giannis’ subpar performance could be fatigue or rust. After a grueling 2024-25 NBA season, where he played 44 minutes in a playoff overtime loss to the Pacers and earned All-NBA First Team honors for the seventh consecutive year, it’s possible that Giannis is not yet in peak form. His limited participation in earlier friendlies—missing games against Belgium, Montenegro, and Italy due to an insurance dispute with the Bucks and a strategic rest plan—may have left him underprepared for France’s intensity. While his 15-minute outburst against Latvia showed flashes of brilliance, sustaining that level against a deeper, more experienced French team proved challenging.

    Additionally, Greece’s roster management raises questions. With key players like Sloukas and Dinos Mitoglou rested for the France game, Giannis was forced to shoulder an even heavier load, which France exploited. This lack of team cohesion could be a warning sign for EuroBasket, where Greece will face tough Group C opponents like Spain, Italy, and Georgia.

    Fan and Analyst Reactions

    The sentiment among fans, particularly on social media, was one of disappointment. One user noted, “Giannis and his copains les arbitres couldn’t get it done. France’s defence ate him up, and he looked lost out there.” While some of this criticism may be exaggerated, it reflects a broader concern about Giannis’ ability to perform against elite international competition when the stakes are high. Greek media, which hailed him as “unstoppable” after the Latvia game, were more reserved in their analysis of the France matchup, with some outlets questioning whether Greece’s reliance on Giannis could backfire in the tournament.

    Analysts have also pointed out that Giannis’ performance against France mirrors some of his struggles in the NBA playoffs, where teams with strong interior defenders and disciplined schemes have limited his effectiveness. If Greece hopes to contend for a medal—their first since 2009—they’ll need Giannis to find ways to overcome such defenses, whether through improved playmaking, better shot selection, or greater leadership.

    What This Means for EuroBasket 2025

    This friendly against France was Greece’s final tune-up before their EuroBasket campaign begins on August 28 against Italy in Limassol, Cyprus. While it’s just an exhibition game, the loss raises concerns about Greece’s ability to compete with the tournament’s heavyweights. Group C is no cakewalk, with Spain, led by Santi Aldama, and a talented Italian squad posing significant challenges. If Giannis continues to struggle against physical defenses or fails to elevate his teammates, Greece’s hopes of ending their 16-year medal drought could be in jeopardy.

    Moreover, the absence of players like Giorgios Papagiannis and Nikos Rogkavopoulos, coupled with the aging core of Sloukas and Kostas Papanikolaou, puts even more pressure on Giannis to perform at an MVP level. His performance against France suggests that he’s not yet in top gear, and with the tournament just days away, time is running out to find his rhythm.

    Another wake-Up Call for the Greek Freak

    Giannis Antetokounmpo’s lackluster performance against France was a stark contrast to the media hype. Some of us have been saying it all year. His struggles with efficiency, turnovers, and leadership, combined with France’s effective defensive strategy, exposed vulnerabilities that Greece must address before EuroBasket 2025. While it’s unfair to judge Giannis solely on one friendly game, this outing serves as a wake-up call. For Greece to succeed, Giannis needs to rediscover his MVP form, adapt to defensive schemes, and inspire his teammates to rise to the occasion. Otherwise, the Greek Freak’s EuroBasket dreams—and those of a nation—may fall short once again. And more importantly the myth of Giannis as a solution to any team’s problems when it counts. He just can’t seem to ever deliver.

    (Featured image from here.)

  • Giannis in the “friendly” against Latvia: selfish and dangerous!

    Giannis in the “friendly” against Latvia: selfish and dangerous!

    Last night, on August 20, 2025, Greece faced off against Latvia in a EuroBasket warm-up game at the Acropolis Tournament. What was supposed to be a triumphant return for Giannis Antetokounmpo turned into a frustrating display of individualism over team play. Greece may have won 104-86, but Giannis’ performance was anything but the heroic effort some headlines are painting it as. In fact, it was downright selfish and poorly executed in key areas, raising questions about his fit with the national team as they gear up for EuroBasket 2025.

    The Context: High Expectations for the Greek Freak

    Giannis Antetokounmpo, the two-time NBA MVP and Milwaukee Bucks superstar, hadn’t played a competitive game in nearly four months. This exhibition against Latvia—featuring NBA talent like Kristaps Porzingis—was meant to be his tune-up, a chance to shake off the rust and lead Greece to dominance. Instead, what we saw was a player who seemed more focused on padding his own stats than elevating his teammates. Greece’s national team has struggled in recent prep games without him, averaging just 66.7 points per game in their first four exhibitions. But with Giannis back, the offense exploded to 61 points in the first half alone—yet much of that felt forced through one man, highlighting a selfish approach that could spell trouble in tighter contests.

    Stat Line Breakdown: Numbers That Mask the Issues

    At first glance, Giannis’ box score looks impressive: 25 points, 10 rebounds, 3 assists, 2 steals, 2 blocks, shooting 9-of-12 from the field (75%) and 7-of-9 from the free-throw line (78%), all in just 15 minutes. But let’s dig deeper. These stats scream inefficiency in team context and a me-first mentality.

    Here’s a quick table comparing Giannis’ output to what we’d expect from a true team leader in an international setting:

    CategoryGiannis’ StatsExpected for Team PlayCritique
    Points2515-20 (balanced scoring)Hogged shots, taking 12 attempts in 15 minutes— that’s nearly one shot per minute, leaving little room for others.
    Rebounds108-12Solid, but many were uncontested; Latvia’s poor interior defense gifted him easy boards rather than earned through hustle.
    Assists36+Pathetic for a player of his caliber. Only 3 dimes? This shows he prioritized scoring over setting up teammates like Kostas Sloukas (who had 10 assists).
    Shooting Efficiency75% FGHigh, but volume mattersEfficient, sure, but at what cost? Dominating the ball led to fewer touches for Greece’s shooters, who went 14-26 from three as a team but could have done more with better distribution.
    Minutes Played1520-25Benched early? Or pulled because his style wasn’t meshing? He exploded for 20 points in the first half but faded, suggesting stamina or focus issues.
    TurnoversNot reported (assumed low)MinimalWithout full details, we can’t ignore potential sloppy plays; his aggressive style often leads to charges and travels in international rules.
    Defensive Impact2 STL, 2 BLKEliteFlashes of brilliance, but Latvia scored 86 points—too many for a “defensive anchor” like Giannis to allow, especially against a Porzingis-led squad that shot poorly (Porzingis: 7 points on 2-7 FG).

    These numbers reveal a player who was effective in isolation but detrimental to fluid team basketball. Giannis’ 20 points in just 10 first-half minutes might sound like dominance, but it came via 8-9 two-pointers and free throws—basically bullying his way inside without much creativity or involvement of others. In the NBA, this works because of spacing and rules, but in FIBA play, where physicality is ramped up, it borders on selfishness.

    Selfish Play: Ball-Hogging and Ignoring Teammates

    The most glaring issue was Giannis’ selfishness. In 15 minutes, he attempted 12 field goals— that’s a usage rate that would make even prime James Harden blush. While Greece built a 61-45 halftime lead, it felt like a one-man show rather than a cohesive unit. Teammates like Giannoulis Larentzakis (14 points, including hot three-point shooting) had to wait for scraps, only heating up in the third quarter when Giannis sat. And those 3 assists? Barely enough to qualify as playmaking. Compare that to Sloukas’ 10 assists, and it’s clear who was actually facilitating.

    Post-game reactions on social media were overwhelmingly positive, but that’s the hype machine at work. Fans gushed over the “Greek Freak unleashed,” but critics like us see the cracks: a player more interested in personal highlights than building chemistry. More importantly there was clearly an officiating issue with the Latvian players frustrated at dirty plays by the Greeks all game long.

    Badly Executed Moments: Rust or Ego?

    Giannis’ play was bad in subtle ways that stats don’t capture. His free-throw shooting at 78% (7-9) is decent but missed opportunities in a game where Latvia fouled aggressively. Defensively, while he had blocks and steals, Latvia’s 86 points indicate lapses—Porzingis may have struggled, but role players like Rihards Lomazs (17 points) found open looks too easily. And let’s talk rust: after four months off, Giannis looked gassed by the end of his stint, forcing shots instead of deferring.

    Greece won by 18, but against a Latvia team missing full strength (Porzingis limited to 19 minutes and clearly frustrated at the dirty plays he received early on), this should have been a blowout. Instead, it was a grind until the fourth quarter, partly because Giannis’ iso-heavy style disrupted rhythm. You have to wonder if the Bucks are not regretting allowing him to play and risk injury, since he clearly does not understand how to behave safely on the court.

    What This Means for Greece and EuroBasket 2025

    This performance is a red flag. If Giannis continues this selfish approach, Greece risks imploding in EuroBasket, where team basketball reigns supreme. Coach Vassilis Spanoulis needs to rein him in, emphasise passing, and integrate him better. Remember, international success comes from unity, not one-man heroics.

  • It was no playful slap.  A history of Giannis acting like a diva

    It was no playful slap. A history of Giannis acting like a diva

    Giannis Antetokounmpo, the Milwaukee Bucks superstar and two-time NBA MVP, is often celebrated for his rags-to-riches story, infectious enthusiasm, and seemingly humble demeanor. From his early days as a lanky prospect from Greece to becoming one of the league’s dominant forces, Giannis has built a reputation as a hardworking, team-first player. However, like many elite athletes, he has had his share of controversial outbursts and behaviors that some fans and analysts label as “diva-like.” These moments often stem from high-stakes frustration, perceived slights, or intense competitiveness, but they’ve sparked debates about whether success has brought out a more demanding side. I

    1. The Ladder Incident and Altercation with Montrezl Harrell (November 2022)

    One of the earliest and most bizarre examples of Giannis’ temper flaring came after a tough loss to the Philadelphia 76ers. Frustrated by his poor free-throw shooting (4-of-15 in the game), Giannis stayed on the court postgame to practice. Things escalated when 76ers forward Montrezl Harrell, who was also shooting, took Giannis’ basketball and refused to return it, leading to a heated verbal exchange. Harrell reportedly yelled, “Yeah I took the ball, get the f— outta here,” while Giannis shouted back about doing his job.

    The drama didn’t end there. As arena workers placed a ladder under the basket for maintenance, Giannis—still determined to shoot—pushed it away twice, the second time with enough force to knock it over, sending it skidding across the floor. Video footage captured the moment, showing Giannis arguing with a worker before the ladder toppled. Giannis later explained he meant no disrespect and didn’t intend for the ladder to fall, but the incident drew widespread criticism for endangering staff and appearing petulant. Critics called it a classic diva move: prioritizing personal practice over safety and common courtesy in a shared arena.

    2. The Game Ball Controversy with the Indiana Pacers (December 2023)

    Giannis made headlines again during a regular-season game against the Pacers, where he dropped a career-high 64 points in a Bucks victory. Postgame, he believed the Pacers had taken the official game ball as a trophy for rookie Oscar Tshiebwe’s first NBA points, denying him a memento of his milestone. Enraged, Giannis charged into the Pacers’ tunnel, yelling and demanding the ball back. The confrontation spilled over, with Giannis later admitting uncertainty about whether the ball he received was authentic.

    In his postgame presser, Giannis explained the outburst as frustration over what he saw as disrespect, but Pacers players like Tyrese Haliburton clarified they hadn’t taken it intentionally. The incident painted Giannis as overly dramatic, with some fans accusing him of stat-padding by staying in against backups and then throwing a tantrum over a ball. It fueled discussions about his “diva mode,” especially as videos showed him pushing Haliburton and screaming in the aftermath.

    3. Influencing the Firing of Coach Adrian Griffin

    Midway through the 2023-24 season, the Bucks shocked the league by firing first-year head coach Adrian Griffin despite a strong 30-13 record. Reports emerged of locker room tensions, including Giannis’ dissatisfaction with defensive schemes and overall team direction. While Giannis publicly denied involvement, stating the decision “caught me by surprise” and that he “loved the guy,” insiders suggested his influence as the franchise cornerstone played a role. Griffin’s dismissal came amid reports of Giannis overriding play calls and refusing to sub out.

    Analysts viewed this as diva behavior: a superstar wielding power to reshape the team around his preferences, even if it meant instability. Giannis trusted the front office but deflected blame, saying, “I get paid to block shots, not fire coaches.” This wasn’t the first coach change linked to him—some trace it back to Mike Budenholzer’s exit after the 2023 playoffs.

    4. The Fake Handshake and Elbow on Jaylen Brown (November 2024)

    During a matchup with the Boston Celtics, Giannis elbowed Jaylen Brown in the face early in the second quarter, earning an offensive foul. Later, as Brown approached for a handshake during a stoppage, Giannis extended his hand only to pull it back and run it through his hair in a mocking gesture. Brown called him “a child” postgame, criticizing the lack of sportsmanship.

    Giannis downplayed it as playful, but the moment went viral, with former player Matt Barnes questioning his “weird behavior” on podcasts. Combined with the elbow, it reinforced perceptions of Giannis as someone who dishes out physicality but reacts poorly to pushback. Fans debated if this was harmless fun or diva entitlement.

    5. Slapping a Teammate During Greece National Team Huddle (August 2025)

    Most recently, during a friendly game prep for Greece against Montenegro, Giannis was caught on video delivering a forceful slap to teammate Giannoulis Larentzakis’ head in a team huddle. While some defended it as playful roughhousing, the clip went viral, with fans calling for suspension and labeling Giannis a “violent freak.” Larentzakis downplayed it, but the optics were poor, especially given Giannis’ leadership role.

    This incident reignited diva accusations, suggesting Giannis sometimes oversteps boundaries in frustration or jest.

    Other Notable Outbursts and Patterns

    Beyond these headline-grabbers, Giannis has shown patterns of diva-like behavior. He’s been accused of leaving the court early after losses, overriding coaches, and demanding his brother Thanasis on the roster despite criticism. In 2023, he snapped at a reporter over a “failure” question, and podcasts have dissected his “activated diva mode.” He’s also been involved in on-court antics, like hyping up crowds or taunting opponents, which some see as arrogant.

    The Human Side of a Superstar

    Giannis Antetokounmpo’s “diva” moments don’t define his career—yet. For now they’re outliers in a story of triumph and dedication. Many stem from his ultra-competitive nature and the pressure of carrying a franchise. However, as his stardom grows, these incidents highlight the fine line between passion and petulance. Whether it’s knocking over ladders or slapping teammates, Giannis reminds us that even the most likable stars have their breaking points. Bucks fans hope these are learning experiences, as the Greek Freak chases more rings. But I see more and more people will see through his act.

  • Milwaukee Bucks Have No Shot at Success This NBA Season

    Milwaukee Bucks Have No Shot at Success This NBA Season

    As the 2025-26 NBA season tips off on October 22, with the Milwaukee Bucks hosting the Washington Wizards—and facing off against their former star Khris Middleton—the optimism in Milwaukee feels more like wishful thinking than genuine hope. Coming off a disappointing 2024-25 campaign that ended in a first-round playoff exit, the Bucks are staring down a roster ravaged by injuries, trades, and questionable decisions. Damian Lillard, acquired to form a super-duo with Giannis Antetokounmpo, is gone. Key additions like Myles Turner and Kyle Kuzma aim to bolster the frontcourt, but the team’s cap situation is tied up in aging or inconsistent talent like Bobby Portis and Kevin Porter Jr. Projections place them around sixth in the Eastern Conference, a far cry from championship contention. There are multiple gruelling stretches in the schedule, including a long road-heavy period in December and January and a total of 14 back-to-back sets. The Bucks will spend significant time away from home, compounding the stress on team leaders.

    But let’s cut to the chase: the Bucks’ biggest roadblock isn’t just the roster flux or Lillard’s absence—it’s Giannis Antetokounmpo himself. Once hailed as the league’s unstoppable force, Giannis has plateaued in critical areas of his game, refusing to evolve beyond his dominant but predictable style. Worse, his selfishness—manifested in a ball-dominant approach and an obsession with personal stats—stifles team growth and chemistry. In a league where adaptability and selflessness win rings, Giannis’s unwillingness to change dooms the Bucks to mediocrity.

    Giannis’s Game Hasn’t Evolved: Stagnation at the Top

    Giannis Antetokounmpo entered the NBA as a raw prospect in 2013 and quickly became a superstar, earning two MVPs, a Defensive Player of the Year award, and leading the Bucks to their 2021 championship. His career averages—23.9 points, 9.9 rebounds, and 5.0 assists per game—paint the picture of a dominant force. But dig deeper into his progression, and it’s clear: Giannis hasn’t meaningfully improved in the areas that matter most for sustained success in today’s NBA.

    Take his shooting, for instance. Giannis’s three-point percentage has hovered in the low 20s to high 20s for years, peaking at a career-high 30.3% in 2019-20 but dipping to a dismal 22.2% in 2024-25. His free-throw shooting, a perennial Achilles’ heel, sat at 61.7% last season—barely an improvement from his career 70.3% but still unreliable in crunch time. Defensively, while he was once the league’s best rim protector, his impact waned in 2024-25; he matched career lows in blocks and steals per game, prioritizing offense over the two-way dominance that defined his prime.

    Critics have long pointed out how this lack of a reliable jump shot gets exposed in the playoffs. In the 2019 Eastern Conference Finals, Kawhi Leonard and the Raptors walled off the paint, daring Giannis to shoot—and he couldn’t. Fast-forward to recent postseasons, and the story repeats: teams pack the paint, force him into inefficient shots or turnovers, and the Bucks crumble. His playoff scoring jumps to around 28-30 points, but efficiency drops, and the team suffers. At 30 years old (turning 31 in December), Giannis is past his athletic prime, yet he hasn’t developed the perimeter skills needed to age gracefully like LeBron James or Kevin Durant. Instead, he relies on bulldozing drives and transition plays, which work in the regular season but falter against playoff defenses.

    Without improvement here, the Bucks’ offense remains predictable and easy to scheme against—especially with Lillard out. Opponents will sag off Giannis, clog driving lanes, and watch as the team’s spacing collapses. This stagnation isn’t just a personal failing; it’s a team-killer in a season where Milwaukee desperately needs versatility.

    The Selfishness Factor: Stats Over Substance

    Giannis’s on-court demeanor has drawn increasing scrutiny, with accusations of selfishness undermining his leadership. His usage rate—consistently above 30% in recent years—means the ball is in his hands far too often, leading to a stagnant offense that discourages movement and off-ball play. Fans and analysts alike have noted how this “Giannis-ball” style leaves teammates disengaged, plugging them on defense as well when they’re uninvolved offensively.

    A glaring example is his history of stat-padding. In March 2023, Giannis infamously chased a triple-double in a blowout win over the Wizards, re-entering the game late to grab a rebound and tipping it in—drawing widespread criticism for prioritizing personal milestones over team integrity. This isn’t isolated; social media buzzes with similar takes, labeling him a “stat-padding legend” who inflates numbers in low-stakes situations. Even in meaningful games, his focus on hero-ball—trying to do too much, as one Bucks fan observed after an early-season loss—leads to missed free throws, poor boxing out, and forced plays.

    This selfishness extends to team dynamics. Former Bucks star DeMarcus Cousins suggested Giannis should “be selfish with his career” and consider a trade to a contender like Miami, implying his loyalty (or stubbornness) in Milwaukee is holding him—and the team—back. But on the court, it’s the opposite: he won’t relinquish control. With Lillard sidelined, Giannis’s ball dominance will only intensify, but as X users point out, this discourages the kind of fluid, team-oriented play that wins in the modern NBA. His high minutes (over 35 per game last season, up from Budenholzer’s era) and refusal to rest exacerbate injuries and burnout for everyone.

    In a league where stars like Nikola Jokic or Jayson Tatum elevate teammates through unselfish play, Giannis’s approach feels outdated. He wants the spotlight on his triple-doubles and MVP chases, but that comes at the cost of collective success.

    Preventing Team Development: The Giannis Shadow

    Perhaps the most damning aspect is how Giannis’s presence hinders the Bucks’ overall development. By demanding the offense run through him, he limits opportunities for younger players or role guys to grow. The Bucks’ front office has depleted assets in trades—Jrue Holiday for Lillard, then Middleton out—leaving “nothing around Giannis,” as one podcaster lamented. GM Jon Horst’s extension despite this mess only compounds the issue.

    With Lillard out, the burden falls squarely on Giannis, but his style doesn’t foster growth. New additions like Turner and Kuzma provide shooting and spacing, which the Bucks prioritized to surround him. Yet, as critics note, Giannis “makes his team worse all season by focusing on individual stat padding” and has “zero impact in games that matter.” The Bucks thrived in crunch time without him last season, suggesting the team plays more freely when not orbiting his gravity.

    This season’s outlook is grim: fewer national TV games signal the league’s waning interest, and predictions hover around a play-in spot or low seed. In a stacked East with Boston, Cleveland, and New York reloading, the Bucks’ reliance on an unevolving, self-focused Giannis ensures early elimination. Injuries and bad luck played roles in past failures, but the core problem persists. And Giannis is largely to blame for the way every summer he fuels the trade rumours and then pretends all is well after having forced major moves. Well the Bucks have run out of trade chips to please him and what has it got them?

    Time for a Reckoning in Milwaukee

    The Milwaukee Bucks enter 2025-26 with talent but no cohesion, thanks largely to Giannis Antetokounmpo’s refusal to adapt or share the stage. His stagnant skills, selfish tendencies, and overshadowing presence turn a potential contender into a middling squad. Unless Giannis undergoes a dramatic shift—developing a jumper, embracing team play, and prioritizing wins over stats—the Bucks are headed for another frustrating season. Fans deserve better, but as long as the focus remains on “The Greek Freak’s” personal narrative, collective achievement will remain elusive. This isn’t a championship team; it’s Giannis’s stat sheet with a supporting cast. And that won’t cut it in today’s NBA.

  • Myles Turner Won’t Solve Giannis Antetokounmpo’s Problems

    Myles Turner Won’t Solve Giannis Antetokounmpo’s Problems

    The Milwaukee Bucks’ acquisition of Myles Turner in the 2025 offseason, a move that saw them waive Damian Lillard to clear cap space, was a bold gamble aimed at keeping Giannis Antetokounmpo satisfied and extending the Bucks’ championship window. Turner, a versatile 3-and-D center, brings shot-blocking prowess and floor-spacing ability to pair with the two-time MVP. However, while this move addresses some roster deficiencies, it falls short of solving Giannis’ challenges in high-pressure playoff games. This blog post delves into the reasons why Turner, despite his talents, is unlikely to be the complete solution for Giannis and the Bucks in critical postseason moments.

    The Bucks have struggled in recent playoffs, with only one series win since their 2021 title. Injuries, including Giannis’ own and Damian Lillard’s Achilles tear in 2025, have played a role, but deeper issues persist in high-pressure games. In playoff scenarios, opponents often exploit Giannis’ limitations by building defensive “walls” to clog the paint, forcing him to rely on his developing jumper or playmaking under pressure. The Bucks’ lack of a reliable point guard and inconsistent perimeter creation has compounded these issues, leaving Giannis to shoulder an immense offensive load. The hope was that Turner, with his defensive versatility and three-point shooting, would alleviate these problems. However, several factors suggest he won’t fully address Giannis’ high-pressure struggles.

    Strengths

    Myles Turner, at 29, is a proven two-way center. His defensive impact is notable, having led the NBA in blocks multiple times, including a 2021 season where he averaged nearly four blocks per game. In the 2024-25 season, he set a Pacers’ playoff record with 46 blocks during their Finals run. His ability to switch on defence, roam, and protect the rim makes him a theoretical complement to Giannis, who also excels defensively with 1.1 blocks and 1.2 steals per game. Offensively, Turner’s 40.5% three-point shooting on passes from Tyrese Haliburton last season suggests he can stretch the floor, creating space for Giannis’ drives.

    The Bucks envision Turner as a modernized replacement for Brook Lopez, who was a key floor-spacer during their 2021 championship run. With Giannis potentially taking on more point-forward duties, Turner’s ability to shoot “wide-open” threes (121 made in 2024-25, tied for first in the NBA) could keep defenses honest. Coach Doc Rivers has praised Turner’s fit, noting his ability to switch defensively and stretch the floor, which aligns with Milwaukee’s up-tempo vision.

    Limitations

    Despite these strengths, Turner’s game has notable weaknesses that may not fully address the Bucks’ needs in high-pressure situations:

    1. Rebounding Deficiency: Turner has never been an elite rebounder, often criticized for not securing defensive rebounds to end possessions. In the 2024-25 season, he averaged just 6.9 rebounds per game despite his 6’11” frame, a stark contrast to Giannis’ 11.9 rebounds. In playoff games, where possessions are critical, Turner’s inability to dominate the glass could allow opponents to generate second-chance points, putting additional pressure on Giannis to clean up defensively.
    2. Limited Playmaking: High-pressure games often require big men to make quick decisions under defensive scrutiny. Turner is not a strong playmaker, with career averages of 1.3 assists per game and a focus on finishing rather than creating. Unlike former teammate Domantas Sabonis, who facilitated offense for the Pacers, Turner relies on guards like Haliburton to set him up. With the Bucks lacking an elite point guard after waiving Lillard, Turner’s limited passing ability may not alleviate the playmaking burden on Giannis.
    3. Inconsistent Playoff Performance: While Turner was a key contributor to the Pacers’ 2024 Finals run, he didn’t consistently close important games. For example, in matchups against Giannis, he struggled defensively, allowing Antetokounmpo to score 64 and 37 points in two games during the 2023-24 season. In high-pressure moments, Turner’s defensive impact can wane if opponents exploit his positioning or force him into foul trouble, a recurring issue given his physical style.
    4. Offensive Dependency on Setup: Turner’s offensive production, particularly his three-point shooting, relies heavily on quality guard play. In Indiana, Haliburton’s elite passing (10+ assists per game) created open looks for Turner. Without a comparable facilitator in Milwaukee, Turner’s efficiency from deep could dip, especially in playoff scenarios where defences tighten and rotations are shorter. Giannis’ play making has improved (6.5 assists per game), but he’s not a traditional point guard, and his passes to shooters like Bobby Portis (50% from three on 34 attempts) were less frequent than Haliburton’s to Turner.

    Giannis’ High-Pressure Challenges

    Giannis thrives in transition and interior scoring, leading the NBA with 779 two-point field goals in 2024-25. However, in high-pressure playoff games, teams employ specific strategies to neutralize him:

    • Paint Clogging: Opponents like the Pacers in 2024 used multiple defenders to form a “wall,” forcing Giannis to shoot from mid-range or beyond (he shot 0-1 from three in Game 4). His jumper, while improved, remains inconsistent under pressure.
    • Playmaking Pressure: Without a reliable secondary creator, Giannis often faces double-teams, leading to turnovers or forced shots. In Game 5 against the Pacers, despite a 30-point, 20-rebound, 13-assist triple-double, the Bucks lost 119-118 in overtime, highlighting the lack of support.
    • Fatigue and Injuries: Giannis’ heavy minutes (44 in Game 5) and physical style make him prone to fatigue or injury, as seen in recent playoffs. A co-star who can take over games offensively is critical, but Turner’s role is more complementary than dominant.

    Why Turner Falls Short

    1. Lack of a Primary Creator

    The Bucks’ decision to waive Lillard, a nine-time All-Star who averaged 28.0 points per game alongside Giannis, leaves a void in perimeter creation. Turner’s addition doesn’t address this. His offensive game relies on others to create opportunities, and with Giannis now expected to handle point-forward duties, the Bucks may struggle to generate consistent offence in crunch time. In high-pressure games, teams will likely dare Turner to create off the dribble or in isolation, areas where he’s unproven.

    2. Defensive Redundancy

    While Turner’s shot-blocking complements Giannis’ defensive versatility, it may not significantly elevate the Bucks’ playoff defence. Both players excel at rim protection, but the Bucks’ perimeter defence remains a concern without a lockdown guard like Jrue Holiday. In the 2024 playoffs, the Pacers exploited Milwaukee’s back court, with Tyrese Haliburton and Andrew Nembhard finding gaps in pick-and-roll coverage. Turner’s ability to switch is valuable, but he’s not a perimeter stopper, and opponents can target weaker defenders like Gary Trent Jr. or Kyle Kuzma.

    3. Playoff Provenance

    Turner’s playoff resume, while solid, doesn’t match the impact of a true co-star. During the Pacers’ Finals run, he was a secondary contributor behind Haliburton and Pascal Siakam. In contrast, Giannis needs a player who can take over games when he’s double-teamed or fatigued. Turner’s career-high 40-point games are rare, and he’s never been the focal point of a playoff offense. His 2021 Defensive Player of the Year candidacy was notable, but he hasn’t consistently dominated high-stakes games.

    4. Financial and Strategic Risks

    The Bucks’ move to waive Lillard and stretch his $113 million contract over five years ($22.5 million annually) limits their future flexibility. If Turner doesn’t elevate the Bucks to contention, Giannis, who has a player option in 2027-28, may grow restless. Reports indicate mixed feelings from Giannis about the move, with some sources suggesting he was “not pleased” with Lillard’s departure despite excitement for Turner. The pressure is on Turner to deliver immediately, but his skill set may not fully address the Bucks’ postseason shortcomings.

    What Giannis Needs in High-Pressure Games

    To truly solve Giannis’ problems in high-pressure games, the Bucks need:

    • A Primary Perimeter Creator: A guard who can break down defences, create shots, and alleviate Giannis’ play-making burden. Lillard, despite his struggles, provided this to an extent. Current options like Kevin Porter Jr. or Gary Trent Jr. lack the consistency of an elite point guard.
    • Versatile Wing Defender: A player like Jrue Holiday, who could guard multiple positions and handle the ball, was critical in 2021. Turner’s interior defense is strong, but the Bucks need perimeter stoppers to counter guards like Haliburton or Jalen Brunson.
    • Clutch Scoring: Giannis’ 62% field goal percentage is elite, but his free-throw shooting (65-70% in playoffs) and lack of a reliable jumper limit his clutch scoring. Turner’s three-point shooting helps, but he’s not a go-to scorer in tight games.

    So will it move the needle?

    Myles Turner is a valuable addition to the Bucks, bringing defensive versatility and floor-spacing that complements Giannis Antetokounmpo’s game. His shot-blocking and three-point shooting address some of Milwaukee’s needs, particularly in replacing Brook Lopez. However, Turner’s limitations—weak rebounding, lack of play-making, and inconsistent playoff impact—mean he’s not the complete solution for Giannis’ high-pressure struggles. The Bucks’ lack of a primary creator, perimeter defence, and clutch scoring options remain unaddressed, and the financial burden of Lillard’s stretched contract adds pressure for immediate results. Unless Turner significantly elevates his game or the Bucks make additional moves, Giannis may continue to face the same postseason challenges, potentially fuelling speculation about his long-term future in Milwaukee. If they are lucky, maybe they get to the second round of the playoffs this year. For Giannis the No1 priority is to make sure everyone keeps blaming the rest of the roster and not him.

  • Antetokounmpo brothers on the same team?  Makes no sense!

    Antetokounmpo brothers on the same team? Makes no sense!

    Having all three (or even four) Antetokounmpo brothers—Giannis, Thanasis, and Kostas (occasionally including Alex)—on the same team, especially the Greek national basketball team, may sound like a dream for curious fans or as a marketing story. However, from a basketball and team-building perspective, it actually makes little sense.

    1. Overlapping Skill Sets, Not Complementary Roles

    The Antetokounmpo brothers, while all extremely athletic and hardworking, share similar physical profiles and playing styles. Giannis is a ball-dominant forward but Thanasis and Kostas (and Alex, to an extent) are also lengthy, athletic forwards—generally specialising in defence, hustle, and energy. They are not elite shooters or play makers. Having several players with similar roles and limitations (especially non-superstar siblings) can lead to roster redundancy and limit tactical flexibility. Most successful national teams are built by blending complementary skills: shooters, passers, rim protectors, and versatile role players.

    2. Team Chemistry vs. Nepotism and Meritocracy

    Bringing siblings onto the same roster can risk perceptions—and realities—of favoritism. The ideal for national teams is picking the absolute best in each position, giving the country the highest chance of success. The Greek national team routinely features NBA, EuroLeague, and top Greek league talent in every position, so spots are incredibly competitive. Choosing brothers as a package (especially if not all are among the country’s top players) could erode trust within the team and anger fans or other deserving players who are left out.

    3. Distraction and Media Hype

    The story of “all the Antetokounmpo brothers together” would attract enormous attention and media scrutiny. While this brings publicity, it can also distract from the squad’s actual preparations and objectives. The focus can shift from building a winning team system to the novelty of the family lineup, which could upset team dynamics or create unwanted off-court narratives the coach must manage.

    4. Sibling Dynamics—Strengths and Pitfalls

    There are benefits to sibling chemistry—knowing each other’s tendencies, supporting one another, and fostering a positive locker room culture. But this can easily turn into on-court arguments, frustrations, or unintended rivalry. Studies in team sports suggest that siblings on the same team sometimes struggle with boundaries, criticism, and balancing the family bond with broader team unity. If one of the brothers receives more or less playing time, it can create tension or even resentment—harming both family and team morale.

    5. National Team Depth and Opportunity Cost

    Greece doesn’t lack basketball talent. The national team regularly qualifies for major tournaments and features an array of EuroLeague and NBA players. Forcing the inclusion of multiple Antetokounmpos can mean other players—perhaps a needed shooter, ball-handler, or defensive specialist—are left out, reducing the overall ceiling of the team. National teams must put winning first, not family reunions.

    6. Evidence: Actual Roster Decisions

    Historically, while there have been moments when more than one Antetokounmpo was named to a preliminary roster, rarely are all three featured in the final 12-man squad for a major tournament, and performances suggest balancing the roster is prioritized. For instance, as recently as the EuroBasket 2025 preliminary roster, Giannis and Kostas are included, with Thanasis ruled out due to injury and Alex not among the final picks—demonstrating a merit-based approach and the challenges of fitting multiple brothers onto a balanced squad125.

    Will it happen?
    While the Antetokounmpo brothers have each made notable achievements, and their shared story inspires millions, national team basketball demands the sharpest focus on fit, balance, and the high-stakes realities of international competition. Assembling all three brothers on the court, especially when not all are among Greece’s very best, risks sacrificing team strength for sentiment and spectacle—which doesn’t make sense if the goal is to win medals and maximise the nation’s basketball legacy. Despite consistently delivering strong individual performances and drawing global attention to Greek basketball, Giannis has failed to lead Greece to any significant international medals or deep tournament runs—a reality that has frustrated fans and analysts alike.

    High Hopes, Early Exits

    • 2016 Olympic Qualifiers: Giannis averaged a solid 15.3 points, 5.7 rebounds, and 2 blocks per game. However, Greece was eliminated by Croatia and failed to qualify for the Rio Olympics.
    • 2019 FIBA World Cup: This tournament was highly anticipated, as Giannis entered as the reigning NBA MVP—the first to play in a FIBA World Cup. Expectations were sky-high, but Greece failed to progress past the second round, finishing 11th overall. This exit was widely described as disappointing, given the roster’s talent and Giannis’s status as an NBA superstar.
    • EuroBasket 2022: Antetokounmpo showcased extraordinary stats—29.3 points, 8.8 rebounds, 4.7 assists per game, leading all scorers and being named to the All-Tournament Team. Yet, Greece lost in the quarter-finals to Germany, and Giannis was ejected after two unsportsmanlike fouls in that match, again cutting short the team’s title aspirations.
    • 2024 Paris Olympics: After helping Greece earn their first Olympic basketball appearance in 16 years, Giannis was the team’s flagbearer and central figure. He averaged a tournament-high 25.8 points with very efficient shooting, but Greece could only muster a 1–2 record in the group stage and were eliminated in the quarter-finals, this time by Germany.

    Why Haven’t Results Matched the Hype?

    • No Medals Despite NBA Stardom: Across all major tournaments from 2014 through 2024, Giannis and Greece have never reached the semifinals of a EuroBasket, World Cup, or the Olympics, let alone won a medal.
    • Mismatch of Styles and Roles: Giannis’s unique playstyle—most effective as a ball-dominant forward in the NBA—has been harder to maximize in international basketball, where different rules, roster depth, and the absence of NBA spacing have limited his impact on winning at the highest level, despite impressive box scores.
    • Unmet Expectations: The gap between NBA success and international results has drawn criticism and disappointment from Greek fans and the media, putting extra pressure on Antetokounmpo each cycle. Greek journalists and some international observers have not hesitated to question why “the Greek Freak” has been unable to elevate his national team to the podium.

    Giannis’s Perspective

    Despite the lack of medals, Giannis has repeatedly pushed back on the idea of “failure” in sports, famously arguing that every loss is a step towards future success and that his journey with Greece—win or lose—is a source of pride and growth. Still, results on the court remain clear: Giannis’s time with the Greek national team has been marked by unfulfilled potential and a string of high-profile exits, fuelling debate about how best to build around such superstars in the international game. Especially someone like Giannis who is used being pampered with the Bucks where the entire roster essentially works to make him look good all the time.

  • How much worse is Giannis when the going gets tough?

    How much worse is Giannis when the going gets tough?

    It is easily measurable. His overall field goal percentage (FG%) decreases from 55.1% in the regular season to 53.2% in the playoffs. More pronounced drops are observed in his perimeter shooting and free throw accuracy. His three-point percentage (FG3%) falls from 28.4% in the regular season to 25.9% in the playoffs. The most significant decline is seen in his free throw percentage (FT%), which drops from 69.3% in the regular season to 62.5% in the playoffs. Consequently, his effective field goal percentage (eFG%), which accounts for the added value of three-pointers, also decreases from 57.0% to 55.1%.  

    These declines in key shooting efficiency metrics strongly support the hypothesis regarding a deterioration in shooting performance when the competition intensifies. The consistent reduction in accuracy from beyond the arc and at the free-throw line, despite his increased offensive volume, suggests that while he attempts to do more, the quality of his outside shots or execution under heightened pressure may be compromised. This indicates a clear vulnerability that opposing defences can exploit in high-stakes playoff environments.

    Due to lack of bag he doesn’t really have a way to dictate what shots he takes. Compare regular season shooting by distances to the playoffs. Critically, his career playoff three-point percentage drops to 25.9% on a slightly increased share of attempts (14.9%).

    The most pronounced and consistent decline is observed in his three-point shooting and, as previously

    noted, his free-throw percentage. The slight increase in mid-range attempts during the playoffs could suggest that defensive strategies are more successful in forcing him away from his preferred at-rim scoring, compelling him to take more shots from these less efficient areas. The consistent drop in perimeter and free-throw shooting in the playoffs points to a critical area where opposing defences can effectively limit Giannis’s offensive versatility. By daring him to shoot from outside or fouling him, defences can force him into less efficient scoring methods, even if he still manages to generate high volume. This clearly demonstrates a causal relationship: increased defensive pressure in the playoffs leads to lower efficiency in his weaker shooting areas.

    Even in the regular season however Giannis suffers. For the purpose of this analysis, “harder” regular season opponents are defined as teams with a winning percentage above.500. Conversely, “easier” opponents would typically be teams with a winning percentage below.500.

    The significant drops in his overall Field Goal Percentage, Three-Point Percentage, and Free Throw Percentage in the playoffs highlight a clear vulnerability. Giannis is clearly past his prime of 5 years ago.

    Even at the rim he is getting worse.

    In his 2018-19 MVP campaign, he averaged 1.5 blocks and 1.3 steals per game. He is down in both these as he focuses more on personal stat padding than the team quite obviously. In defence he is simply prowling out of position looking for a highlight video. Giannis is clearly a player that is past him prime. Worse still he isn’t adding anything to his game. So when it counts opponents neutralise him. Or worse still, they let him get his 30 points for bragging rights but the way he is forced to play destroys his team’s chances of winning.

  • The New Look Milwaukee Bucks: Why This Team Faces a Tough Climb in the NBA

    The New Look Milwaukee Bucks: Why This Team Faces a Tough Climb in the NBA

    The Milwaukee Bucks have undergone a dramatic transformation, unveiling a “new look” roster with several fresh faces flanking franchise cornerstone Giannis Antetokounmpo. Yet, despite the apparent infusion of talent and athleticism, there are substantial reasons for skepticism when projecting this team’s postseason prospects—most notably due to Giannis’s postseason limitations, the flawed supporting cast, and systemic issues that haven’t been addressed in recent years.

    Projected Starters Breakdown

    PositionPlayerStrengthsConcerns
    PGKevin Porter Jr.Dynamic scorer, fastInconsistent, off-court issues, poor decision-making
    SGGary Trent Jr.Floor spacer, shooterOne-dimensional, streaky, below-average defender
    SFKyle KuzmaVersatile, sizeStreaky, not a true defender or facilitator
    PFGiannis AntetokounmpoAthleticism, rim pressurePlayoff regression, limited shooting, stat-padding
    CMyles TurnerShot-blocker, floor spacerNot a physical rebounder, injury concerns

    Giannis Antetokounmpo: The Superstar With Playoff Flaws

    1. Stagnation and Lack of Adaptation

    Giannis’s regular-season production remains stellar, but the story in the playoffs is increasingly familiar. For several years running, he has faced disciplined defensive schemes, walls, and late-game traps, yet his skill set hasn’t evolved to counter these strategies.

    • Limited Shooting: Giannis’s jump shot, both from mid-range and beyond the arc, remains unreliable. In crunch time, defences dare him to shoot, clogging driving lanes and neutralising his greatest asset: attacking the rim.
    • Playoff Regression: Against elite playoff defences, his efficiency plummets. He posts big numbers but often at the expense of team flow and offensive sustainability.

    2. Inability to Influence Big Games

    • Stat Padding: Critics argue that Giannis’s box scores are often filled against weaker opponents or in blowouts, not when the Bucks desperately need him in competitive, high-stakes situations.
    • Lack of Playmaking Growth: Unlike true playoff risers (Jokic, Curry), Giannis rarely dictates games by elevating teammates. His assists often come as last-resort kickouts, not from genuine orchestration.
    • Poor Late-Game Decision Making: In crunch time, the offence stagnates, often devolving into predictable Giannis isolations, leading to forced shots, turnovers, or missed free throws.

    3. Leadership Questions

    • Does Not Elevate Others: Giannis excels as a relentless worker and force of nature, but he struggles to inspire confidence in role players or help them thrive in the postseason cauldron.
    • Selfish Tendencies: At times, Giannis appears more focused on achieving personal milestones than adapting his game to team needs—a trait that manifests as stubborn drives into packed paints or ignoring better-positioned teammates.

    The Supporting Cast: Talent, But Not Cohesion

    While on paper this roster boasts shooting and length, none of the key starters or bench pieces have a proven track record of excelling deep in the playoffs.

    Starting Five Flaws

    • Kevin Porter Jr.: A talented scorer but erratic and turnover-prone. He lacks the maturity and consistency of a championship-level floor general.
    • Gary Trent Jr. and Kyle Kuzma: While both can shoot, neither is a high-level defender or capable playoff playmaker; both can become black holes offensively.
    • Myles Turner: Great as a spacing big, but not a physical rebounder and often struggles against the top-tier centers in playoff series.

    Bench Unit

    • Cole Anthony, Ryan Rollins: Unproven as reliable playoff guards, especially handling second-unit attacks from powerhouses like Boston or Denver.
    • Bobby Portis, Taurean Prince: Energy guys, but not high-level creators or defenders against elite opposition.
    • AJ Green, Gary Harris, Andre Jackson Jr.: Largely one-dimensional; offer some shooting or defence, but not both—crucial in deep playoff runs.

    Two-Way Players

    This group offers athleticism, but no playoff-tested contributors. Relying on them against NBA’s elite will likely spell disaster.

    Why This Roster Won’t Work Against NBA Elites

    1. Lack of True Playoff Creation

    Without a true point guard or play making wing, the offence will likely bog down into predictable sets. Top teams shut down one-dimensional stars and force others to step up—something neither this Bucks roster nor Giannis has shown the ability to do.

    2. Defensive Holes

    Only Turner is an above-average defender in the starting lineup. The rest, including Kuzma and Porter Jr., have checkered histories and struggle with assignments—fatal when facing teams with multiple scoring options.

    3. No Second Star

    No player on the roster is capable of stepping into a superstar offensive load if Giannis is neutralised. Which he very often is in games that matter. Other title hopefuls feature multiple creators but the Bucks are a one-man show. And that one man has no answers when the going gets tough. All he does is try to look good and then blame his team mates.

    So no, not very “fresh” team or anything new

    The Bucks’ new lineup is a testament to splashy roster overhauls without foundational improvements. With Giannis’s game stagnating, his inability to evolve or truly uplift his teammates, and a cast of starters and bench pieces unproven against top-tier competition, Milwaukee seems destined for another postseason disappointment. Until Giannis adds strategic nuance and the franchise builds a more cohesive two-way roster, the Bucks are unlikely threats to the NBA’s best.

  • Why the Latest Giannis Shoe is Simply Underwhelming – Freak 7?  Nah

    Why the Latest Giannis Shoe is Simply Underwhelming – Freak 7? Nah

    The global sneaker world watched as Giannis Antetokounmpo’s latest signature shoe—Nike Giannis Freak 7—dropped in July 2025. Yet, for all the anticipation and Giannis’ superstar pedigree, the reaction from many sneaker and basketball enthusiasts has been lukewarm at best.

    1. Safe Design Over Innovation

    Nike Giannis Immortality Performance Review - WearTesters

    Despite some tweaks in aesthetics, the Freak 7 closely follows the signature line’s established formula. The standout “backwards Swoosh” returns—a hallmark, but by now risks feeling recycled. The upper opts for a wavily padded design, balanced by a more standard textile half, mirroring previous models almost too closely. The shape—a conventional mid-top—lacks the striking silhouette or expressive design choices seen in other 2025 basketball shoe launches. While the sole pattern (featuring a cityscape and Antetokounmpo branding) is a nice touch, it doesn’t push the boundaries or set a new benchmark for signature releases1.

    2. Performance: Reliable, Not Revolutionary

    Cut in half: Nike Giannis Freak 6 Review (2024) | RunRepeat

    Nike touts the use of a new full-length Cushlon 3.0 foam midsole, meant to increase flexibility and court feel. However, early impressions confirm what many feared: the difference is subtle, and performance is best described as “solid but not standout”. The lockdown support inspired by Greek sandals is a nod to Giannis’ heritage, but actual advancements in fit or comfort seem incremental at best. Traction improvements are noticeable, yet do not elevate the Freak 7 above its own affordable price bracket—or the best of its competitors.

    3. Lack of Step-Change from Previous Models

    Reviewers point out a critical flaw: if you already own Giannis’ earlier shoes (like the Immortality 4 or Freak 6), there’s little incentive to upgrade. The core ride, lockdown, and responsiveness echo the past two releases almost note-for-note. “As good as I think the Immortality 4 is, if you already own the 3s, and they are still in good condition, the two are so similar that it would be hard for me to recommend upgrading.”

    4. Budget Positioning Means “Budget Feel”

    The Giannis Freak 6 is the Latest Signature Shoe From Super ...

    At $110 retail, the Freak 7 sits firmly in the “affordable” signature category. While this democratises the line, it means continued compromises. The materials, while durable, remain synthetically cheap. There is less impact protection, which may disappoint athletes expecting a premium cushioning upgrade. The shoes require a break-in period, reflecting the stiff and basic initial feel5.

    5. Missed Opportunity for True Uniqueness

    Nike’s play to connect design to Greek ancestry—like the Greek sandal-inspired lockdown—is admirable, but ultimately feels superficial without real, dramatic performance benefit. We’re left with minor tweaks, rather than a bold leap forward in style or technology. The Nike Giannis Freak 7 is not a terrible sneaker. It offers decent performance, a competitive price, and Giannis’ seal of approval. Yet, given the build-up and expectations for innovation and personality from an MVP’s signature line, it lands as fundamentally underwhelming.

    Cut in half: Nike Giannis Immortality 4 Review (2024 ...

    The cushioning setup in the Zoom Freak is, frankly, underwhelming. Nike markets a forefoot Zoom Air unit and foam, promising responsiveness. However, in practice, this setup feels basic and often bottoms out, especially after extended play. For a player with Giannis’s explosive power and relentless attacking style, you expect a shoe that absorbs impact effectively and provides a noticeable bounce. Instead, the cushioning feels rather dead, offering minimal energy return. I certainly felt the impact in my knees during hard cuts and aggressive drives, which is a major concern for serious players. Compared to shoes with more robust cushioning systems, like those featuring full-length Zoom Air or more advanced foams, the Freak falls significantly short in impact protection and overall comfort. The synthetic upper feels undeniably cheap, lacking the premium feel you expect from a signature shoe. While the mesh offers some breathability and a lightweight feel, the overall construction feels flimsy. This contributes to a lack of containment, particularly for dynamic movements. The upper just does not provide the secure, locked-in sensation crucial for lateral stability, especially when attempting quick changes of direction or aggressive defensive slides. After just a few sessions, the materials showed signs of creasing, and I question their long-term durability.

    Despite some claims of decent lockdown, the support system in the Zoom Freak feels inadequate for a player who relies on explosive power and aggressive movements. The lack of a shank plate, a common complaint from various reviewers, directly impacts torsional rigidity and overall stability. This means the shoe offers limited protection against unwanted foot twisting, which is a significant risk for players engaging in quick, powerful cuts. While the internal containment system attempts to keep your foot in place, the flimsy upper materials compromise its effectiveness. For players with a more aggressive playstyle, or those who truly leverage their power, the Freak 6 does not inspire confidence in its ability to provide consistent, reliable support throughout a game. Unless you can afford to have a new pair for every game, these shoes could actually be dangerous.

    For Giannis fans the Freak 7 works if you’re looking for affordable consistency. But for collectors or those chasing the next great leap in basketball footwear, this release will likely leave you wanting more. For on court performance it is surely not capable enough. Much like Giannis’ game, it simply isn’t adapting to the times.

    A quick overview of previous Giannis Nike shoes is here.

  • The “Wide Open East” Theory is Delusional and Giannis Antetokounmpo’s Postseason Struggles Persist

    The “Wide Open East” Theory is Delusional and Giannis Antetokounmpo’s Postseason Struggles Persist

    The narrative among some Milwaukee Bucks fans that the Eastern Conference in the NBA will be “wide open” next season is a hopeful but misguided belief. This theory often hinges on the idea that the Bucks, led by Giannis Antetokounmpo, can dominate the regular season and cruise through a supposedly weakened East in the playoffs. However, this perspective ignores the competitive depth of the conference and, more critically, Giannis’s consistent postseason shortcomings. Despite his undeniable talent and regular-season dominance, Giannis’s playoff performances over the past three seasons reveal significant flaws—stagnation in skill development, low basketball IQ in high-pressure moments, and a self-focused style that hampers team success. Below, we dissect why the “wide open East” narrative is delusional and why Giannis’s postseason struggles make the Bucks an unreliable playoff contender.

    The Eastern Conference is Far From “Wide Open”

    The notion that the East is “wide open” assumes a lack of elite competition, but the 2025-26 Eastern Conference landscape suggests otherwise. Several teams have strengthened their rosters, and the conference remains stacked with talent and depth.

    Established Powerhouses and Rising Contenders

    • Boston Celtics: The recent champions boast a strong core and supporting cast . Their versatility, defensive prowess, and playoff experience make them perennial favourites. Boston’s ability to adjust schemes and exploit mismatches—especially against teams like the Bucks—ensures they remain a formidable obstacle.
    • New York Knicks: The Knicks have built a gritty, defensively sound team around Jalen Brunson and OG Anunoby, a playoff juggernaut. New York’s physicality and depth exploit Milwaukee’s lack of perimeter creation.
    • Cleveland Cavaliers and Indiana Pacers: Both teams have young, dynamic cores. Cleveland’s Donovan Mitchell and Evan Mobley, paired with a strong defensive system, make them a tough out. Indiana’s fast-paced offense exposed Milwaukee’s defensive weaknesses in the 2024 playoffs, and they’re only improving.
    • Miami Heat and Others: Miami’s culture under Erik Spoelstra ensures they’re always a playoff threat. Emerging teams like the Orlando Magic, with Paolo Banchero and Franz Wagner, add further depth to the conference.

    The East is not a free-for-all; it’s a gauntlet. The idea that the Bucks can waltz through this field ignores the reality of these teams’ talent, coaching, and playoff-ready systems.

    Milwaukee’s Regular-Season Success Doesn’t Translate

    Bucks fans point to Giannis’s regular-season dominance as evidence of their playoff potential. While Milwaukee often secures a top-3 seed (they finished 49-33 in 2024-25, third in the East), regular-season success is a poor predictor of playoff outcomes. The postseason demands adaptability, clutch performance, and team synergy—areas where Giannis and the Bucks have consistently fallen short.

    Giannis’s Postseason Struggles: A Three-Year Pattern

    Giannis Antetokounmpo’s postseason performances over the last three seasons (2022-2025) reveal critical weaknesses that prevent the Bucks from being true contenders.

    Lack of Skill Development

    Giannis’s game has stagnated since his 2021 championship run. While he remains a force in the regular season (averaging 29.5 points, 11.6 rebounds, and 6.5 assists in 2024-25), his playoff production often comes with inefficiencies and predictable patterns:

    • Limited Shooting Range: Giannis’s jump shot remains unreliable. In the 2024 playoffs against Indiana, he shot 0% from three (0-for-7) and 61.7% from the free-throw line, allowing defences to sag off him and clog the paint. His inability to develop a consistent mid-range or three-point shot makes him easier to scheme against in high-stakes games.
    • Poor Half-Court Offence: In playoff settings, where games slow down and half-court execution is critical, Giannis struggles. His reliance on bull-rushing to the rim is neutralised by teams that build a wall (e.g., Toronto in 2019, Miami in 2020, Indiana in 2024). Without a go-to move or counters, he becomes predictable.
    • Turnovers in Clutch Moments: Giannis’s decision-making under pressure is suspect. In the 2023 playoffs against Miami, he averaged 3.6 turnovers per game, often forcing drives into crowded lanes or making errant passes. This trend continued in 2024, with 3.8 turnovers per game against Indiana.

    Low Basketball IQ in High-Pressure Situations

    Giannis’s basketball IQ, particularly in the playoffs, has been exposed repeatedly:

    • Poor Shot Selection: In clutch moments, Giannis often opts for low-percentage plays, such as contested drives or rushed shots, rather than finding open teammates. In Game 5 of the 2023 Miami series, his late-game turnover and missed free throws were pivotal in Milwaukee’s collapse.
    • Inability to Read Defenses: Playoff teams exploit Giannis’s tendencies by doubling him early or forcing him to pass. His slow processing in these situations leads to hesitation, turnovers, or forced shots. For example, in the 2024 Indiana series, the Pacers’ zone defence flustered Giannis, limiting his efficiency (53.3% true shooting percentage).
    • Lack of Adjustments: Unlike players like LeBron James or Nikola Jokić, who adapt to defensive schemes, Giannis rarely adjusts his approach. He continues to rely on physicality, which wanes against playoff-level defences and officiating.
    • Total inability to improve. It has been a decade now and Giannis has shown absolutely no sign of being able to improve anything at all for the elite level. He conquers and dominates in easy match ups that don’t count only.

    Selfish Play and Lack of Team Building

    The Bucks’ roster construction and Giannis’s playing style exacerbate their postseason issues:

    • Stat-Padding Over Team Play: Critics argue Giannis prioritises individual stats over team success. In the 2024 regular season, he often hunted for points and rebounds, leading to inefficient possessions. For instance, his 38.8% usage rate in the playoffs often left teammates like Damian Lillard underutilized (Lillard averaged only 16.7 shots per game in the 2024 postseason despite being a proven closer).
    • Poor Synergy with Teammates: Giannis’s ball-dominant style clashed with Lillard’s need for the ball. In the 2024 playoffs, the Bucks’ offence stagnated when Giannis forced drives instead of leveraging Lillard’s shooting or Khris Middleton’s mid-range game. His unwillingness to play off-ball limits Milwaukee’s offensive versatility.
    • Leadership and Culture Issues: Giannis’s public comments, such as questioning teammates’ effort or coaching decisions (e.g., after the 2023 Miami loss), suggest a lack of accountability. His focus on individual accolades over team cohesion undermines Milwaukee’s ability to build a championship culture.

    Why the Bucks Fail in the Playoffs

    The Bucks’ postseason failures aren’t solely on Giannis, but his limitations are a significant factor:

    • Defensive Exploits: Playoff teams target Giannis’s weaknesses. Indiana’s pace-and-space offense in 2024 exposed his struggles to guard in space, while Miami’s zone in 2023 neutralized his interior dominance.
    • Lack of Clutch Scoring: Unlike Tatum, Brunson, or Embiid, Giannis lacks a reliable go-to move in crunch time. His 58.7% free-throw shooting in the 2024 playoffs allowed opponents to foul him late without fear.
    • Roster Mismatches: The Bucks’ supporting cast, while talented, doesn’t complement Giannis’s style. Lillard’s defensive limitations and Middleton’s injury history leave Milwaukee vulnerable. Giannis’s inability to elevate lesser teammates (unlike Jokić or Luka Dončić) compounds these issues.

    So no, the Bucks ain’t closer to anything

    The “wide open East” narrative is a delusion born of optimism rather than evidence. The Eastern Conference is loaded with teams that have the talent, coaching, and versatility to outmatch Milwaukee in a seven-game series. Giannis Antetokounmpo’s postseason struggles—stemming from stagnant skill development, low basketball IQ in clutch moments, and a selfish playing style—cap the Bucks’ ceiling. While Giannis can carry Milwaukee to a top-3 seed in the regular season, his inability to adapt and elevate his team in high-pressure playoff games makes them a flawed contender. Bucks fans hoping for a championship run must confront these realities: the East is a gauntlet, and Giannis’s postseason shortcomings are a persistent barrier to success.