Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Bucks sign Leonard for rest of the season

- Jim Owczarski

PHOENIX – Meyers Leonard grabbed his backpack and his guitar and headed to the Milwaukee Bucks' bus leaving the Golden 1 Center on Monday night in Sacramento, California, wondering aloud if he'd be headed home to Los Angeles or staying with the team on its way to Phoenix as his second 10-day contract was expiring.

He woke up in Phoenix still unsure. But by the afternoon, the answer was that Leonard was not only going to finish out the road trip, but the regular season and playoffs. The Bucks signed the 31-year-old center to a standard contract for the rest of this season officially on Tuesday before the game against the Suns.

According to a league source, Meyers' minimum salary will cost the Bucks roughly $1.2 million due to their placement in the luxury tax. They could have waited a little longer to sign him and save some money, as April 9 is the deadline for players to be eligible for the playoffs, but general manager Jon Horst chose to make the move to fill out their 15th and final guaranteed roster spot now.

“I get through my first 10-day and I'm feeling pretty good, they offered me a second 10-day and I'm wondering what's going to happen after this," he told the Journal Sentinel. "We're talking about the number one team in the league.

"I feel like I've connected really well across the whole organizati­on, from the players to the (physical training) staff, front office, even the fans. I always try to stop after every game in Milwaukee, sign every autograph, take pictures, because that's who I am.

"I texted Jon. I'm hoping to talk to (team governor) Marc (Lasry) at some point at length, or a little bit more intimately I guess, to say thank you. They changed my life. They really did. This is going to be hard for me not to get emotional right now. It's honestly hard to describe what this feeling feels like.”

The Bucks signed the 7-footer to his first 10-day deal on Feb. 22, just after the all-star break when Giannis Antetokoun­mpo's status was uncertain with a sprained right wrist. It was Leonard's first contract since 2020-21, when several injuries and his use of an antisemiti­c slur on a video game live stream had kept him out of the game.

“For them to believe in me matters a lot. I'm so grateful," Leonard reiterated on Tuesday. "My wife is. One day I'll be able to tell my son hey, these are the people who believed in me, gave me a second chance. That changed, literally, my life. I love basketball, I do, but they changed my life. And it helped me in some way put the incident behind me.”

Leonard has appeared in five games thus far for the Bucks and showed he could still make three-pointers as a stretch big, hitting 44% of his shots from behind the three-point line in just under seven minutes per game.

“I fit what the Bucks do," he said. "I can play in drop coverage on the defensive end. I use my voice very well. I try to help direct traffic. On the other end I can set big screens to get these guys open and I space the floor. I can be physical in the playoffs. Say they need eight minutes, 10 minutes, 12 minutes, that matters. Every little bit matters in the playoffs. And so for them to have that belief in me also as a basketball player, it makes me feel really good.”

Leonard has 28 games of playoff experience across stints in Portland and Miami, and was a part of the Heat's NBA Finals team in 2019-20.

“That's always been a little bit of a spot; we gotta try and find that true backup five that brings some of the things that Brook brings and the size and shot-blocking and still be able to make threes," Bucks head coach Mike Budenholze­r said. "It's a unique position. And sometimes we shift down and go other directions and so the guy may not play a ton, but the value is very real, very important to us.

"We feel he can help us in a playoff series, playoff games. We still have 14, 15 games left. Jon just does an amazing job with the roster and I just think the fit and the need was just (there). We feel really fortunate to have Meyers. He's been phenomenal since we've had him.”

 ?? MARK HOFFMAN/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Center Meyers Leonard has appeared in five games thus far for the Bucks and he has hit 44% of his shots from behind the three-point line.
MARK HOFFMAN/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Center Meyers Leonard has appeared in five games thus far for the Bucks and he has hit 44% of his shots from behind the three-point line.

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