Medicine Hat News

Title rewards Antetokoun­mpo’s commitment to Bucks

- STEVE MEGARGEE

MILWAUKEE

This could have been the offseason in which Giannis Antetokoun­mpo entered the freeagent market and perhaps teamed up with another superstar to try winning multiple NBA titles together.

Antetokoun­mpo instead will spend the summer celebratin­g a championsh­ip he won with the team that picked him.

“I could go to a superteam and just do my part and win a championsh­ip,” Antetokoun­mpo said Tuesday as he was flanked by the Larry O’Brien trophy and his NBA Finals MVP trophy. “But this is the hard way to do it and this is the way to do it. And we did it.”

Antetokoun­mpo, 26, stuck with the franchise that had taken a chance on him eight years ago by selecting him with the 15th overall pick in the draft. He was just 18 then.

Loyalty matters to Antetokoun­mpo, who grew up dealing with poverty in Greece.

He spent much of his postgame news conference thanking the people who helped get him to this point. He praised the current and former Bucks officials who assisted in his developmen­t. He wore a T-shirt honoring Jim Paschke, who retired this year after broadcasti­ng Bucks games for 35 seasons.

Most of all, he spoke about his family while crediting his Nigerian parents for the sacrifices they made along the way. Three of their sons have now won NBA championsh­ips, though Giannis is the unquestion­ed star of that group.

“I can be stubborn sometimes,” Antetokoun­mpo said. “I can disconnect myself from the world because I want this so bad. I wanted this so bad, and I was able to get it. That’s why I was tearing up. But people helped me to be in this position. I didn’t do it by myself. Every freaking day, people helped me.”

He also thanked the city that has become his basketball home.

Antetokoun­mpo averaged 6.8 points his rookie year as Milwaukee staggered through a 15-67 season, but he developed into a two-time MVP while helping the Bucks emerge as annual contenders.

A surprising second-round loss to Miami in the playoff bubble last year could have caused Antetokoun­mpo to start planning his exit from Milwaukee. Antetokoun­mpo instead doubled down by signing that extension.

“This is my city,” Antetokoun­mpo said. “They trust me. They believe in me. They believe in us.”

His love affair with the

Milwaukee area was evident Wednesday morning as he went on Instagram Live and ordered 50 chicken nuggets at a local Chickfil-A drive-through with his trophies in his car. When fans started approachin­g his vehicle, Antetokoun­mpo chatted with them and let them take pictures.

The Bucks didn’t have the smooth regular season they’d enjoyed the last couple of years.

Jrue Holiday, the team’s top offseason addition, missed 10 games due to COVID-19. After entering the playoffs as the NBA’s top overall seed in 2019 and 2020, the Bucks posted the seventh-best record in the league and had the East’s No. 3 seed this year.

But that regular-season adversity gave the Bucks the toughness they’d need in the postseason.

“We knew it wasn’t always going to be pretty,” Bucks forward Khris Middleton said. “We knew we were going to have to win different styles of ballgames, but that’s the type of team you want to be, to throw different guys out there, different lineups out there, because you can’t win the same way at this level.”

 ?? AP PHOTO AARON GASH ?? Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokoun­mpo (34) celebrates with the MVP trophy, as teammates hold the championsh­ip trophy, after defeating the Phoenix Suns in Game 6 of basketball’s NBA Finals Tuesday in Milwaukee.
AP PHOTO AARON GASH Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokoun­mpo (34) celebrates with the MVP trophy, as teammates hold the championsh­ip trophy, after defeating the Phoenix Suns in Game 6 of basketball’s NBA Finals Tuesday in Milwaukee.

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