Bucks bank on lottery draft picks to open rebuild
Bucks first round draft picks Nate Ament, center, and Brayden Burries greet boys at a Boys and Girls club in Milwaukee on Thursday. (AP photo)
MILWAUKEE — Milwaukee Bucks lottery picks Brayden Burries and Nate Ament got their first bit of tough love from their new coach well before discovering they’d be playing for him.
During their introductory news conference Thursday, Ament discussed a predraft meeting with Taylor Jenkins in which the new Bucks coach went over the Tennessee forward’s five worst plays in college.
“He did the same thing with me,” said Burries, a 6-foot-4 guard from Arizona.
Burries and Ament can look forward to many more of those types of sessions as the Bucks count on them to fill vital roles in their rebuilding process now that two-time MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo is heading out of town.
Jenkins believes they’re up for the challenge. Jenkins praised their competitiveness and unselfishness Thursday while noting that the 20-year-old Burries and 19-year-old Ament have plenty of untapped potential.
“They’ve got room to grow,” Jenkins said. “I’m going to remind them of that. We can all get better, for sure.”
Milwaukee’s selections of Burries with the draft’s 10th pick and Ament at No. 13 were the first moves the Bucks made after agreeing to trade Antetokounmpo to the Miami Heat.
The No. 13 pick that the Bucks used on Ament was part of the package they got in return. The Bucks also are getting Tyler Herro, Jaime Jaquez Jr., Kel’el Ware and Kasparas Jakucionis, a first-round pick swap in 2030, first-round picks in 2031 and 2033 and a 2033 second-rounder in exchange for Antetokounmpo and forward Bobby Portis.
The progress of Burries and Ament is pivotal to the rebuilding process of a franchise that hasn’t gotten much production from the draft since striking gold by taking Antetokounmpo with the 15th pick in 2013.
For example, the Bucks kept only two first-round picks beyond draft night from 2019-25 and used them on MarJon Beauchamp (2022) and A.J. Johnson (2024). Beauchamp couldn’t get consistent minutes in 2 ½ seasons with the Bucks. Johnson was sent to Washington his rookie year as part of the Khris Middleton-Kyle Kuzma trade.
Burries and Ament are Milwaukee’s first two top-15 selections since 2016, when they took Thon Maker at No. 10. These two picks are particularly important because the Bucks currently don’t have any first-round selections in 2027 or 2029.
The Bucks believe these two rookies are up to the challenge.
“They fit as people,” general manager Jon Horst said. “I think you can see the synergy here already. There’s a consistent theme in what we’ve targeted — the competitiveness, the character, the IQ of an athlete.”
They nearly ended up playing together in college. Burries made an official visit to Tennessee during the recruiting process and said he liked Volunteers coach Rick Barnes.
“I just went back and I just thought Arizona was the place to be,” Burries said. “Right before I was going to commit, like the week before, Nate and his people were trying to contact us and see what we were thinking.”
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