The Bucks have made a lot of moves since the 2016-2017 season came to a close. However, there were still nine players that returned to the roster from last season. Giannis Antetokounmpo, Khris Middleton, John Henson, Tony Snell, Malcoldm Brogdon,Thon Maker, Jason Terry, Matthew Dellavedova, and Jabari Parker all made their returns to the Bradley Center floor this year. They had their ups, they had their downs, but here are the grades for each returning Bucks player: Tony Snell: C+ Tony Snell resigned with the Bucks last season for four years, making $46 million over the course of those four years. After the way he performed late in the season and in the playoffs last year, resigning Snell seemed to be a
Off the Court
Who do we want in the first round?
At this point in the late season, the Bucks are pretty much guaranteed a playoff spot in the Eastern Conference for the 2018 NBA Playoffs. They have been flip-flopping between the 6, 7, and 8 seed as the back half of the season has gone on, and every fan is praying that they would just stay in one spot so they can prepare themselves for their projected first-round playoff matchup. However, as this flip-flopping has gone on, there is only one team I want the Bucks playing in the first round of the 2018 playoffs. Here's how the playoffs are looking right now... Current Eastern Conference Playoff Picture: Toronto Raptors (55-22) Boston Celtics (53-24, 2 games back) Cleveland Cavaliers (48-30, 7.5
Grading the Bucks 17-18 Additions
The Bucks have had some serious ups and downs throughout the 2017-2018 NBA Season. They've had coaching changes, player changes, and all of this coming from a front office change in the offseason. They drafted Sterling Brown and D.J. Wilson, traded for Eric Bledsoe and Tyler Zeller during the season, and signed Brandon Jennings and Shabazz Muhammad to contracts for the rest of the season. Some of these moves were somewhat surprising, but some of them turned out to work really well for the Bucks. I want to analyze and grade all of these players the Bucks acquired for the season so here it goes: Sterling Brown: B- Sterling has brought a lot of energy and toughness to the Bucks backcourt set,
What can Shabazz bring to the table?
Last week, the Bucks announced the signing of 6'6" guard/forward Shabazz Muhammad, who had his contract bought out by the Minnesota Timberwolves last week as well. The Bucks made a roster spot for him by releasing shooting guard Sean Kilpatrick. The question is... what can Shabazz Muhammad do for this struggling Milwaukee Bucks team? I remember first hearing about Shabazz Muhammad back in his high school days, because his highlight mixtapes were taking over the internet. There were many talks at the time of Muhammad being "the next big thing" and a future superstar. He went on to play college basketball at UCLA, and played very well there, but analysts could already tell he was not a guaranteed superstar. He was
The 3 Main Reasons the Bucks sit over .500
Your beloved Milwaukee Bucks stand a respectable 32-25 going into the All-Star break. Compare that record to last season when they stood 5 games under .500 going into the yearly, week-long break. Of course, many things have changed since this time last season. John Hammond was the general manager, the team was playing through injuries to Jabari and Middleton, there were a number of roster differences, and perhaps the biggest difference maker: Jason Kidd was the head coach. With that being said, here are my 7 reasons why the Bucks are sitting 7 games over .500 going into the break. 1. Firing Jason Kidd Yes, I'm taking a subtle shot at Jason Kidd here. I mean no disrespect by it. Jason Kidd
Brandon Jennings is back!
With both Malcom Brogdon (torn quad tendon; 5-7 weeks) and Matthew Dellavedova (sprained ankle; 3-4 weeks) out with injuries, the Bucks took a step toward finding themselves a beneficial back-up point guard. That point guard is former Bucks stand-out, Brandon Jennings. Brandon Jennings was picked up off the waivers by the Bucks' G-League Affiliate, the Wisconsin Herd, in Oshkosh. The Bucks selected Brandon Jennings with the 10th pick in the 2009 NBA Draft, where he averaged 15.5 points per game in his first season, and carried the Bucks to a first round playoff matchup with the Atlanta Hawks. Now, if you remember your Bucks history, you'll remember that this is the series where Jennings coined the phrase "Bucks in Six", referring to his