The rumor mill continues to turn for the Lakers.
Reports of their interest in Giannis Antetokounmpo this upcoming offseason have been the highlight of sports talk radio this week, and things took an even more interesting turn Thursday when Sam Amick, senior NBA writer for The Athletic, wrote that the Lakers are planning an “all-out pursuit” of the Bucks superstar this offseason.
The latest NBA Futures odds from Las Vegas give the Lakers a 22-1 shot of landing Giannis, a long shot by nearly all metrics. However, if you study NBA history, you understand that somehow, someway superstars eventually drift toward Los Angeles like planets being pulled by Hollywood gravity.
From Wilt Chamberlain to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, from Shaquille O’Neal to LeBron James, and now Luka Doncic, the franchise has long operated as basketball’s ultimate finishing school for legends.
So, why not “The Greek Freak”?
Antetokounmpo has publicly tethered his future to championship contention. The Lakers and the Bucks have each hoisted one title this decade, but only one of those franchises exists beneath championship banners and celebrity spotlights. Los Angeles doesn’t just sell rings. It sells relevance.
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The real question isn’t desire. It’s cost.
Would the Bucks blink at a package centered around Austin Reaves and multiple first-round picks? Reaves is blossoming, but he’s also eligible for a massive extension. Paying him $241 million feels different than paying Giannis. The Lakers believe that pairing Doncic’s surgical offense with Giannis’ defensive fury and rim pressure would create a two-man earthquake of seismic proportions.
Of course, skepticism lingers. The Rockets, Spurs, Hawks and Thunder all have better young players and more first-round draft picks to include in a package for Giannis. Also, the Knicks, Heat and Warriors were all interested in trading for Giannis at the deadline, and those talks could continue this offseason.
Nothing is for certain, but the truth about Lakers rumors is that they don’t just die quietly, they continue to grow until a trade occurs. If Giannis decides to force his way to Los Angeles, the way Anthony Davis did in 2019, then the Lakers will gladly knock on Milwaukee’s door like a franchise that believes history is on its side — because it usually is.