The Boston Celtics’ clearest path to Giannis Antetokounmpo starts with Jaylen Brown, but that does not mean the Milwaukee Bucks will see the deal the same way.
Boston has the star Milwaukee would require.
The harder question is whether that star gives the Bucks the kind of future they need.
Boston Celtics Giannis trade package starts with Jaylen Brown
The Athletic reported: “The Celtics have gone to great lengths to avoid the elephant in the room here, but Jaylen Brown would need to be part of any deal for Antetokounmpo. And if Boston had its way, it seems, the conversation would start and end there with a one-for-one swap of fellow All-Stars who are still in their respective primes (Antetokounmpo is 31; Brown is 29).”
That would be perfect for Boston. The Celtics already have the guard play and shooting infrastructure to make Antetokounmpo terrifying, with Derrick White, Payton Pritchard, Jayson Tatum, and Sam Hauser able to space the floor around his downhill pressure.
The problem is that the idea works too well for the Celtics. Brown is an All-Star wing, but Antetokounmpo is a champion, two-time MVP, and former Defensive Player of the Year. Boston can reportedly add up to three future first-round picks, and the report says Antetokounmpo would be comfortable signing an extension with the Celtics.

Milwaukee still has little reason to accept Brown alone. If the Bucks rebuild, Brown does not immediately serve their long-term purpose at age 29 and on a massive deal. If they retool, he is a strong piece, but not a clean replacement for a franchise icon.
Giannis or Jaylen Brown would change the Celtics
Antetokounmpo averaged 27.6 points, 9.8 rebounds, and 5.4 assists while shooting 62.4 percent this season. Brown averaged 28.7 points, 6.9 rebounds, and 5.1 assists, giving Boston elite production even before any trade swing.
Keeping Brown means the Celtics open the season with their familiar Tatum and Brown structure and search elsewhere for frontcourt help. That path could include Trey Murphy III, whom league sources have linked to Boston as a fallback target if Antetokounmpo does not land there.
Trading Brown for Antetokounmpo gives Boston a very different identity. The Celtics would lean into size, rim pressure, and kickout threes while letting Tatum operate against weaker defensive attention.
The deal likely needs a third team. Milwaukee would need young players or picks beyond Boston’s draft capital, and Brown may have more value routed elsewhere than as the Bucks’ direct centerpiece.
Boston’s dream is simple. Brown for Giannis, plus picks if needed. Milwaukee’s answer may be far more complicated.
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