The future of Giannis Antetokounmpo with the Milwaukee Bucks has entered a sensitive new phase, with the franchise navigating both a coaching change and a defined offseason decision window.
Milwaukee officially hired Taylor Jenkins on April 30 and the new head coach is already part of conversations surrounding the team’s direction. Antetokounmpo, speaking to the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, offered a measured endorsement while leaving his own situation open-ended.
“I think he’s an incredible person,” Antetokounmpo said. “Obviously, he’s an incredible coach.”
He referenced his previous connection with Jenkins during their shared time in Milwaukee earlier in his career. “I was able to be with him in 2019 and we made the Eastern Conference finals,” he said. “After that he left, he was one of the first coaches that left the coaching staff and went to Memphis and he had an incredible six years in Memphis. He made them contenders in the West.”
Antetokounmpo emphasized Jenkins’ broader impact beyond wins and losses. “He had incredible culture in Memphis,” he said. “I don’t think Milwaukee is just getting just a good coach, I think they’re getting a good person. And that’s where it starts with. Having a good person around that’s gonna be able to set the tone, that set the culture and what Milwaukee Bucks basketball is all about.”
He then offered a direct assessment of Jenkins’ coaching credentials. “He’s a really good coach.”
However, when asked about the possibility of being coached by Jenkins moving forward, Antetokounmpo kept his response short. “We’ll see.”
The timing of those comments matters, as Milwaukee’s offseason has already been framed around a six-to-seven-week decision window outlined by co-owner Jimmy Haslam. The organization is weighing whether to extend Antetokounmpo long term or explore alternative roster paths after a 32–50 season that ended without a playoff appearance.
Antetokounmpo remains under contract on a three-year, $175 million deal with a player option in the final year. His production continues at an elite level, averaging 27.6 points, 9.8 rebounds, and 5.4 assists while maintaining efficient scoring inside the arc.
Haslam previously confirmed that internal leadership will determine the next step. “Sometime over the next six or seven weeks, we’ll decide whether Giannis is going to sign a max contract and stay with us or he’s going to play somewhere else,” he said. “Jon, Taylor, along with Wes and myself, will make that call.”
NBA insider Marc Stein added further clarity on the urgency of Milwaukee’s planning, noting the team aims to resolve the situation before the NBA Draft while openly acknowledging that Antetokounmpo “may or may not be with us” during the coaching hire process.
For now, Jenkins inherits both opportunity and uncertainty. His success in Milwaukee will likely be tied not only to roster construction but also to how the franchise navigates its most important contract decision in years.
With Antetokounmpo still performing at a peak level but the team coming off a disappointing season, the next few weeks will define whether Milwaukee doubles down on its superstar core or reshapes its future entirely.