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Yesterday — 23 June 2026Main stream

Can Chicago Bulls trade up from No. 15? A big swing unlikely — but they could snag a sliding player.

The No. 4 pick is drawing all the buzz in Chicago this week.

But for a young Bulls front office, the No. 15 pick could create the biggest stir — especially if new executive vice president of basketball operations Bryson Graham tries to trade up for something better.

The Bulls are widely expected to use the No. 4 pick Tuesday night on whichever of the consensus top-four prospects remains on the board: most likely North Carolina forward Caleb Wilson with an outside chance it is Kansas guard Darryn Peterson or Duke forward Cameron Boozer.

The Bulls also hosted at least 20 players for workouts over the last three weeks, a list that included guards Keaton Wagler of Illinois, Kingston Flemings of Houston and Darius Acuff Jr. of Arkansas. None of those players is expected to be available at No. 15 — and that means the front office might have its sights set higher.

Graham has emphasized the importance of patience and thoroughness as the Bulls dig into a yearslong rebuild under a new regime. But that doesn’t necessarily mean they won’t be aggressive during this transitional period, especially when working with a deep and talented draft class and a wealth of assets.

Could that mean trading up from No. 15 on Tuesday? The answer comes down to the price — and who’s available.

There are two versions of this scenario. The first is a big swing — a predraft trade to move up for a second top-10 pick.

The Bulls do have the draft capital to make such a move work — the No. 15 pick, a pair of second-rounders and future picks — but they don’t have a wealth of desirable and movable players such as Tre Jones who could round out a fair deal. That makes a move into the top 10 both difficult and unlikely, although the market could open in the final hours before the draft.

The Bulls also could bide their time and look to snag a sliding player by moving up only a few spots during the draft. That would require a smaller amount of risk. If the Bulls have targeted a premium target, there’s a high likelihood they would miss out on that player if they don’t move up before the draft. But if they’re interested in a bubble top-10 player such as Tennessee forward Nate Ament or Louisville guard Mikel Brown Jr., they could save some assets with a savvy mid-draft trade.

For Illinois fans in Chicago, any trade talk raises an immediate follow-up question: Is it possible to make Wagler a Bull?

The unheralded high school recruit from Kansas blossomed as an Illini freshman into a top draft prospect. A 6-foot-5 guard with sharp court vision and a pure jump shot, Wagler would be a logical scoring complement to Matas Buzelis and (presumably) Wilson, who would play their best with improved shooting and playmaking around them.

Wagler, though, is projected to come off the board as high as No. 5, and as mentioned, the Bulls probably don’t have the roster strength to pull off moving up 10 spots.

If the Bulls stay put, they still would have plenty of potential investment pieces available at No. 15. Michigan big man Morez Johnson Jr. and Alabama guard Labaron Philon Jr. are intriguing options.

Ultimately, the Bulls should have a variety of strong — and, after the extensive workouts, familiar — options available with their second first-round selection. Whom they pick, and where, will set a tone for how aggressively Graham plans to operate during this rebuild.

Heat land Giannis Antetokounmpo in NBA blockbuster trade

MIAMI — A franchise seemingly adrift at sea for years in hopes of harpooning a whale on the NBA personnel market now has its trophy catch, with the Miami Heat late Monday night reaching an agreement to acquire two-time MVP and 10-time All-Star Giannis Antetokounmpo in a trade with the Milwaukee Bucks.

In search of a big-game move since the franchise’s time early last decade with the Big Three of Dwyane Wade, LeBron James and Chris Bosh, the perseverance of Pat Riley and the Heat’s front office paid off in the form of the 31-year-old Greek superstar.

The cost was significant, with the Heat parting with players Tyler Herro, Kel’el Ware Jaime Jaquez Jr. and Kasparas Jakucionis, as is somewhat of the risk, with Antetokounmpo coming off an injury-limited season and in line for a contract extension that would pay in excess of an average of $71 million per season.

In addition, the Heat sent first-round picks to the Bucks for Tuesday night and 2031 and ’33, as well as first-round swaps in 2030 and ’32. The Heat also sent out their 2033 second-round pick.

The Heat also acquired forward Bobby Portis from the Bucks in the deal.

While the transaction currently is a two-team deal, it could be further expanded before the start of the 2026-27 NBA cap calendar on July 6.

In the wake of the Heat missing the playoffs for the first time in seven seasons, Riley made clear in his season-ending media session that he would push whatever levers necessary to again put his team in position to contend.

That had the Heat seemingly offering anything and everything other than center Bam Adebayo, who shares the same agent as Antetokounmpo, with Adebayo and Antetokounmpo having expressed mutual respect over the years.

The result of the trade leaves the Heat with one of the NBA’s premier power rotations, with Riley and his front-office staff now left to balance out the remainder of the roster.

While the Heat added team leaders such as Goran Dragic and Jimmy Butler since the team’s Big Three era, those rosters proved able only to advance to the NBA Finals, with the Heat’s most recent championship remaining the second of consecutive titles won by the Big Three Heat in 2013.

In Antetokounmpo, the Heat now have a Top 5 player for the first time since James, with Antetokounmpo an All-Star this past season and first-team All-NBA player just a season ago.

Antetokounmpo was named NBA Most Valuable Player in 2021, the same season he led the Bucks to the NBA championship. He also was the league’s MVP in 2019. In addition, he was named Defensive Player of the Year in 2020, a five-time selection to one of the NBA’s All-Defensive teams. He was selected as a member of the NBA’s 75th Anniversary team in 2021.

A member of the Greek national team, he was one of his country’s flag bears for the 2024 Paris Olympics.

The son of Nigerian immigrants, he was born in 1994 in Athens as Giannis Sina Ugo Adetokunbo. He then was granted Greek citizenship on May 9, 2013, with his official Greek name translating into Giannis Sina Ougko Antetokounmpo. He retains Greek and Nigerian citizenship, with Adebayo also of Nigerian ancestry.

Beyond basketball, Antetokounmpo has ownership stakes in both MLB’s Milwaukee Brewers and Major League Soccer’s Nashville SC. This past season, he became a shareholder in Kalshi, the predictive market.

For years in the wake of the Big Three, Riley had spoken of harpooning another “whale,” defining such talents as, “certain types of players that, no matter what, if they come up and they’re available, you make the move that you gotta make to get ’em.”

Such a move again has been made, adding to the lore of a franchise that over Riley’s three decades of franchise stewardship also has included trading for players such as Shaquille O’Neal, Alonzo Mourning and Tim Hardaway, in addition to Dragic and Butler.

The respect for Antetokounmpo has been in place for years, with Heat coach Erik Spoelstra saying of Antetokounmpo’s attacking style before one of his team’s playoff series against the Bucks, “You can’t simulate that in film sessions or even in a walkthrough. It’s the sheer speed and momentum he creates from the perimeter to the paint.”

The relentlessness of Antetokounmpo’s game similarly has impressed Adebayo.

“The thing about him is he doesn’t stop,” the Heat center said. “He doesn’t look at the scoreboard and say, ‘Oh, we’re down 10, let me chill.’ He keeps coming at you at 100 miles per hour every single possession. You have to respect that type of motor.”

Now those motors get to work in tandem.

“Seeing what he does up close, his ability to handle the ball at that size and make the plays he makes, it’s special,” Adebayo previously said. “We’re both guys who try to impact winning in every single column of the stat sheet.”

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