Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

» Hammond leaving: Milwaukee Bucks general manager John Hammond is leaving his position to take the GM job with the Orlando Magic.

General manager takes five-year deal with Orlando

- MATT VELAZQUEZ

Milwaukee Bucks general manager John Hammond is leaving his position to take the GM job with the Orlando Magic.

“We are very excited to join Jeff (Weltman) and be part of the team in Orlando,” Hammond said in a release from the Magic on Tuesday afternoon. “The Magic are a first-class organizati­on all the way around and we look forward to this tremendous opportunit­y. I want to thank the ownership in Milwaukee, Wes Edens, Marc Lasry and Jamie Dinan, for their support and I certainly wish them well.”

Hammond will receive a five-year contract with the Magic, The Vertical’s Adrian Wojnarowsk­i reported.

Hammond’s hiring came on the heels of Orlando’s announceme­nt Tuesday morning that it had hired Weltman as its president of basketball operations, a position that Hammond also had applied for according to multiple reports. Weltman and Hammond worked together in Detroit for a year before Hammond took the GM job in Milwaukee in 2008 and brought Weltman with him as his assistant general manager.

“John brings tremendous experience and is a great talent evaluator,” Weltman said in a release. “He has experience in everything from dayto-day operations to player developmen­t. He built a great team in Milwaukee and won a championsh­ip

while in Detroit. We are very fortunate to have him as part of the Magic family.”

Hammond’s contract with the Bucks ran through the 2017-’18 season, though a succession plan was already in place.

It was widely known that Hammond, if he stayed in Milwaukee, would remain as the general manager for this upcoming season before moving into a consulting role. Assistant general manager Justin Zanik, who was brought in last summer as the heir apparent, would then shift into the general manager role.

That plan likely will get put into motion a year ahead of schedule.

“John Hammond has been an incredible asset to the Bucks organizati­on these last nine years and a true profession­al in every sense of the word,” Bucks ownership said in a release. “His keen eye for talent and relentless drive to build one of the finest teams in the league has helped the Bucks become a championsh­ip-caliber organizati­on on and off the court. We wish John and his family nothing but the best in Orlando.

“We remain very excited about the prospects of our team and anticipate further announceme­nts about the front office staff to be made in the near future.”

In an interview with the media earlier in the off-season, Hammond, 62, spoke glowingly about the future of the Bucks and shared his excitement about being part of the organizati­on. He also implied he still has plenty to give as a general manager and is not anywhere close to retiring.

“I think those of us that have had these opportunit­ies, I don’t think we ever look at it that way,” Hammond said when asked if there might come a time he gets tired of his job. “I think we know how lucky we are, how fortunate we are and you appreciate every single day.”

Hammond’s move to join Weltman in Orlando gives the pair nearly a month to prepare for the NBA draft on June 22. The Magic owns pick Nos. 6, 25, 33 and 35. It also gives the Bucks a month to adjust to Zanik taking over as general manager. Since arriving last summer, Zanik has been fully involved in all of the Bucks’ front-office activities, including preparatio­ns for the draft.

It is not known whether any members of the Bucks staff will follow Hammond to Orlando, something that could impact Milwaukee’s preparatio­ns for the draft.

Hammond has served as the Bucks general manager since April 2008, when he replaced Larry Harris. The Bucks have reached the playoffs four times during Hammond’s tenure and he was named the NBA’s executive of the year after the 2009-’10 season.

When it comes to personnel, Hammond was in charge of rebuilding the Bucks following a bottoming-out in 2013-’14 when the team went 15-67. During that time he assembled a strong, young core featuring Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, Jabari Parker, Khris Middleton and promising rookies Malcolm Brogdon and Thon Maker.

Antetokoun­mpo represents one of Hammond’s most successful personnel moves. Early in 2013, Hammond and Weltman went to Greece to watch Antetokoun­mpo play and were impressed. A few months later, the Bucks took him with the 15th pick in the draft, knowing that he had immense potential but not realizing he would ascend to stardom as quickly as he has.

This season, Antetokoun­mpo started in the all-star game and earned a spot on the all-NBA second team, both firsts for the organizati­on since Sidney Moncrief accomplish­ed both feats in 1986.

Zanik was hired by the Bucks last June after serving three seasons as assistant general manager with the Utah Jazz. He was a certified player agent before joining the Jazz and served as vice president of ASM Sports. He also worked for Priority Sports & Entertainm­ent from 1998 to 2002 and managed European player contract negotiatio­ns.

Zanik graduated from Northweste­rn University in 1998 with a degree in economics.

“I think we know how lucky we are, how fortunate we are and you appreciate every single day.” JOHN HAMMOND, NEW MAGIC GM

 ?? JOURNAL SENTINEL FILES ?? John Hammond, 62, became general manager of the Milwaukee Bucks in 2008.
JOURNAL SENTINEL FILES John Hammond, 62, became general manager of the Milwaukee Bucks in 2008.
 ?? JOURNAL SENTINEL FILES ?? John Hammond (right) selected Giannis Antetokoun­mpo from Greece (center) and traded for Nate Wolters (left) during the 2013 NBA draft.
JOURNAL SENTINEL FILES John Hammond (right) selected Giannis Antetokoun­mpo from Greece (center) and traded for Nate Wolters (left) during the 2013 NBA draft.

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