The NBA trade deadline is
approaching and Antetokounmpo says no player is exempt from the chaos
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[February 04, 2025]
By TIM REYNOLDS
The list of NBA players that might get traded before the 3 p.m.
Eastern deadline on Thursday is a long one, according to Milwaukee
star Giannis Antetokounmpo.
It includes ... well, basically everybody.
“This is the world we’re living in,” Antetokounmpo said. “It’s a
business. You have to understand this. Nobody’s safe. Nobody’s safe.
After this weekend, he might be right.
It's hard to envision a bigger stunner than the first deal that went
down over the weekend — Luka Doncic is now with the Los Angeles
Lakers and Anthony Davis is now with the Dallas Mavericks, the first
time that two reigning All-NBA players were traded for one another
in-season. That move overshadowed another one that, under normal
circumstances, would have been seismic: De'Aaron Fox leaving
Sacramento for San Antonio to join All-Star Victor Wembanyama, with
Zach LaVine leaving Chicago for the Kings.
Fox was an All-NBA selection two years ago. LaVine is a two-time
All-Star. And when adding in D'Angelo Russell getting moved by the
Lakers to Brooklyn in late December, that's five current or former
All-Stars that have been traded already this season.
“Normally when you trade a star you get a bunch of junk back," Hall
of Famer and NBA analyst Charles Barkley said on NBA TV, reacting to
the Doncic-Davis trade. "This is the first time I can remember when
you’ve got two All-NBA players traded for each other.”
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To Antetokounmpo’s point, if Doncic — the clear face of the Dallas
franchise until now, the player who replaced Dirk Nowitzki in that
role with the Mavericks, someone who took his team to the NBA Finals
last season — can get moved, then yes, it can be argued that any
player can get moved.
The Spurs probably won’t be trading Wembanyama anytime soon,
especially now that they’ve landed Fox to play alongside the French
center. Golden State would only trade a franchise icon like Stephen
Curry if he asked to be moved, which doesn’t seem likely. The
Lakers’ LeBron James and Phoenix’s Bradley Beal have no-trade
clauses, meaning they control their own destinies to a certain
extent.
But for everyone else, getting a middle-of-the-night call from a
general manager — like the ones Dallas' Nico Harrison tried to place
to Doncic in the wee hours of Sunday, all of them going unanswered —
is at least possible.
“At the end of the day, and I’ve said this in the past, you get
evaluated every single day,” Antetokounmpo said. “You don’t take
nothing for granted. Being an All-Star, you don’t take it for
granted. Being able to go out there and put on the jersey and
represent your team, you don’t take that for granted. Being out
there and representing your family, you don’t take that for granted.
Every second that you play an NBA game, I love it. I try to play
with joy.”
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Ryan Safdarinia, left, and Lillian McCall hold signs reacting to the
news that the Dallas Mavericks traded Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles
Lakers outside the American Airlines Center, Sunday, Feb. 2, 2025,
in Dallas. (Elias Valverde II/The Dallas Morning News via AP)
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Speaking of joy, or lack thereof, another past
All-Star and All-NBA selection in Jimmy Butler is still out there
and desperately seeking a way out of Miami. He has as many game
appearances in the last month as he does team suspensions — three
games, three suspensions.
For Butler to get moved, with Phoenix believed to be his preferred
destination, it’s very possible that another All-Star-caliber player
— or at least someone with a big salary — would have to be changing
addresses as well simply to make the contract math work.
“It’s surprising, for sure,” Philadelphia coach Nick Nurse said of
superstar-level players like Doncic and Davis getting traded. “But I
think there’s been a lot of stars moving in recent years that we’ve
all been surprised by and all that kind of stuff.”
More big things could still happen. Some teams that are out of the
playoff hunt, like injury-plagued New Orleans, could make deals to
collect assets and think about the future. Others might add a piece
or two in an effort to win now.
Nobody knows what other surprises might be looming, especially with
a slew of teams that are in the playoff — or play-in — chase
thinking about which players could be acquired to help their
postseason odds.
“The play-in part of it lets the competition last longer," said
Detroit coach J.B. Bickerstaff, whose Pistons are squarely in the
Eastern Conference play-in mix. "And more teams are competing for
those spots longer into the season. The past, what, four or five
years, we’ve had a different champion. So now, everybody feels like
they’ve got a shot at it. They're making moves so that they can go
and get it. I think that’s great for the league.”
___
AP Sports Writer Steve Megargee in Milwaukee and AP freelance writer
Matthew DeGeorge in Philadelphia contributed to this report.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
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