The Portland Trail Blazers have quietly emerged as a critical swing team in any potential blockbuster involving Giannis Antetokounmpo. While Portland is not viewed as a direct destination for the two-time MVP, league sources increasingly see the Blazers as a realistic third-team partner capable of unlocking a complex Knicks-Bucks trade framework.
That idea gained traction this week after NBA insider Jake Fischer, writing in Marc Stein’s Substack, identified Portland as a team to monitor if Milwaukee seriously explores an Antetokounmpo deal.
“Portland is definitely a team to track here when it comes to eventual Antetokounmpo outcomes,” Fischer wrote. “No one is suggesting that a trade to the Trail Blazers is a scenario that the Giannis camp would push for, but Portland still controls Milwaukee’s draft capital in 2028, 2029, and 2030 thanks to the teams’ Jrue Holiday-for-Damian Lillard swap. And I’m told Blazers officials have always viewed Antetokounmpo’s potential Milwaukee exit as a chance to improve their own roster by jumping into a multi-team deal.”
That draft control matters. Any Giannis trade begins and ends with future flexibility, and Portland’s ownership of key Bucks picks gives it leverage few teams can match. It also positions the Blazers as a natural facilitator if the New York Knicks and Milwaukee Bucks struggle to align value directly.
MORE: JJ Redick Makes LeBron James All-Star Case Amidst Lakers Drama
Mikal Bridges as the Pivot Point
If Portland enters the equation, Mikal Bridges appears to be the most realistic target. Bridges remains a versatile two-way forward, capable of defending multiple positions while spacing the floor. Through 45 games, he is averaging 15.6 points, 4.4 rebounds, 4.2 assists, and 1.6 steals while shooting 49.5 percent from the field and 38.9 percent from three.
Still, context matters. That scoring average is his lowest since the 2021-22 season. After a hot October in which he averaged 19.0 points per game on 48.1 percent shooting from deep, Bridges’ production has dipped. In January, he is scoring 14.3 points per game while shooting just 34.8 percent from three.
Those numbers have fueled external questions, even as the Knicks publicly maintain confidence in Bridges following the steep acquisition cost they paid last summer. New York surrendered five first-round picks, a swap, and rotation pieces to land him from Brooklyn. Trading him now would be aggressive, but timing often dictates championship decisions. It was hard for the Boston Celtics to trade Marcus Smart but it led to landing Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis who played pivotal roles in there 2024 NBA championship run. This would be the Knicks version of that move.
MORE: Rich Paul Pushes Back on Anthony Davis Trade Demand Rumors
Why Portland Makes This Real
This is where Portland’s motivation aligns with league logic. Fischer reports that the Blazers are viewed as active buyers ahead of the deadline, with internal belief that the roster can make a legitimate playoff push. Absorbing Bridges while redirecting draft equity toward Milwaukee could help all three teams address competing priorities.
Giannis Antetokounmpo remains the wild card. His long-term future in Milwaukee feels increasingly uncertain, and New York has been consistently linked as a preferred destination. Adding Portland’s draft capital and flexibility makes a previously theoretical scenario far more actionable.
If Giannis moves, the Trail Blazers may not headline the deal, but they could be the reason it happens.
Read the full article here
