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2026 NBA Head Coaching Search Tracker

Multiple teams around the NBA are making head coaching changes in advance of the 2026/27 season. In the space below, we’ll provide regular updates on the head coaching searches for each club that has yet to give anyone the permanent title. Some of these searches could extend well into the offseason, so be sure to check back often for the latest updates.

You’ll be able to access this page anytime under the “Hoops Rumors Features” menu on the right sidebar on our desktop site, or on the “Features” page in our mobile menu.

Updated 5-14-26 (10:55 am CT)


Active Searches

Chicago Bulls

  • Previous coach:
  • Potential candidates:
    • Spurs assistant Sean Sweeney (story)

The Bulls parted ways with top front office executives Arturas Karnisovas and Marc Eversley shortly after the regular season ended, but seemed prepared – or even eager – to bring back Donovan. Ultimately though, with the team seemingly entering a rebuilding period, Donovan decided against returning, having reportedly determined that both sides would benefit from a fresh start.

Donovan’s exit puts new executive VP of basketball operations Bryson Graham in position to choose his own head coach in his first year on the job. So far, there haven’t been many rumblings about which candidates he’s got his eye on.

New Orleans Pelicans

  • Previous coach:
    • James Borrego (interim)
  • Reportedly considering:
    • Borrego (story)
    • Bucks coaching associate Rajon Rondo (story)
    • Bucks assistant Darvin Ham (story)
    • Nets assistant Steve Hetzel (story)
    • Spurs assistant Sean Sweeney (story)
    • Pistons assistant Jarrett Jack (story)
    • Former Magic coach Jamahl Mosley (story)

After firing Willie Green early in the 2025/26 season, the Pelicans turned to Borrego, who was the lead assistant on Green’s staff and had previous head coaching stints in Orlando and Charlotte. New Orleans played a little better after the coaching change, but Borrego didn’t exactly lock up the permanent job by leading the club to a 24-46 record, so the front office is considering a wide range of candidates this spring.

The Pelicans will be looking for a coach who can get the most out of a roster featuring a handful of talented players who don’t always seem to fit seamlessly together. Whether that means turning to a first-timer like Hetzel or Rondo or someone with some past experience like Ham or Mosley remains to be seen.

Orlando Magic

  • Previous coach:
  • Reportedly considering:
    • Former Bulls coach Billy Donovan (story)
    • Spurs assistant Sean Sweeney (story)
    • Bucks assistant Darvin Ham (story)
    • Former Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau (story)
    • Michigan coach Dusty May (story)

The Magic entered the season projected to be one of the top three or four teams in the East and instead spent most of the year battling for play-in positioning. Injuries were a factor, but the club’s performance was still disappointing enough that Mosley was on the hot seat for much of the second half. It briefly looked in the first round of the playoffs like he might be able to save his job when Orlando took a 3-1 lead on the top-seeded Pistons, but with Franz Wagner sidelined, the team lost the final three games of that series and Mosley was dismissed less than 24 hours later.

No Magic players under contract for 2026/27 are over 28 years old, but this is still a veteran roster with win-now expectations, so the team’s head coaching hire figures to reflect that. In other words, a candidate with some head coaching experience could have the edge over another first-timer.

Portland Trail Blazers

  • Previous coach:
    • Tiago Splitter (interim)
  • Reportedly considering:
    • Splitter (story)
    • Nuggets assistant Jared Dudley (story)
    • Rockets assistant Ben Sullivan (story)
    • Nets assistant Steve Hetzel (story)
    • Lakers assistant Greg St. Jean (story)
    • Rockets assistant Royal Ivey (story)
    • St. Louis University coach Josh Schertz (story)
    • Iowa coach Ben McCollum (story)

The Trail Blazers may end up technically replacing two head coaches this offseason. While Chauncey Billups was never technically fired, it seems pretty safe to assume his coaching tenure in Portland is over following his October arrest on money laundering and wire fraud conspiracy charges. Splitter did an admirable job upon being promoted from his assistant role, leading the Blazers to their first playoff berth in five years, but he’s reportedly considered unlikely to get the permanent job.

The involvement of new team owner Tom Dundon is a wild-card factor here. At least one report has indicated that Dundon wants to interview upwards of 30 candidates for the job in the hopes of gathering as much intel as possible on the coaching market. There have also been rumors suggesting that Dundon isn’t looking to spend more than about $1.5MM per year, which would make the Blazers’ coach the lowest-paid in the NBA. However, sources connected to the Blazers’ owner and the team have pushed back on those reports.

For what it’s worth, some experienced coaches – including Michael Malone and Tom Thibodeaureportedly rebuffed the Blazers’ efforts to speak to them when they launched their search while Splitter was still coaching the team in the playoffs.


Completed Searches

Milwaukee Bucks

  • New coach:
    • Taylor Jenkins (story)
  • Previous coach:
  • Also reportedly considered:
    • Bucks assistant Darvin Ham (story)

When the Bucks announced their split with Rivers, they said he was “stepping down,” and the Hall of Famer later insisted it was “100%” his decision to leave. Still, it sure seemed by the end of the season that both sides were ready for a change, with one report in early April suggesting there had been a “season-long disconnect” between Rivers and his players.

While Milwaukee likely looked at a few more candidates who went unreported, it didn’t take the team long to zero in on Jenkins. He was identified even before the end of the regular season as a top target, and the Bucks reportedly reached a deal with him just 10 days after confirming that Rivers wouldn’t return.

Jenkins’ track record of player development, culture-setting, and competitiveness during his time as Memphis’ head coach was said to appeal to the Bucks, who invested heavily in him. One report said he received a six-year deal, while another said he’ll be paid “well north” of $10MM annually.

Bulls Hiring Stephen Mervis As Senior VP Of Basketball Operations

The Bulls are finalizing an agreement to add veteran Magic executive Stephen Mervis to their front office, sources tell Shams Charania of ESPN (Twitter link). According to Charania, Mervis’ title in Chicago will be senior vice president of basketball operations.

Mervis, who was hired by the Magic in 2014 after working as a basketball operations intern for the Pacers, originally held the role of special assistant to the general manager. He worked his way up through the basketball operations department over the next 12 years, earning promotions to assistant director of basketball strategy, director of basketball strategy, VP of basketball strategy, and eventually assistant GM.

According to the Magic, Mervis assisted with “all facets” of basketball operations, though he specialized in salary cap management, strategic planning, and CBA issues. He was also involved in managing components of Orlando’s scouting department.

According to K.C. Johnson of the Chicago Sports Network (Twitter link), Mervis immediately emerged as a “prominent target” for a position in the Bulls’ front office after Bryson Graham was hired as the club’s executive VP of basketball operations.

While Chicago hasn’t announced either hire yet, Graham has reportedly identified two lieutenants for his front office so far — in addition to bringing in Mervis, the Bulls reportedly intend to hire Acie Law as their VP of player personnel, as we detailed earlier this morning.

Bulls To Hire Acie Law As VP Of Player Personnel

Former NBA lottery pick and four-year veteran Acie Law IV is joining the Bulls‘ front office, according to Michael Scotto of HoopsHype, who reports (via Twitter) that Chicago is hiring Law as the team’s vice president of player personnel.

It’s the first major addition to the Bulls’ front office since the team hired Bryson Graham to be its executive VP of basketball operations. Graham and Law played college basketball together at Texas A&M during the 2006/07 season.

A standout guard with the Aggies from 2003-07, Law was the 11th overall pick in the 2007 draft but struggled to make an impact in the NBA as a player. He appeared in 188 games from 2007-11 for the Hawks, Warriors, Hornets (then the Bobcats), Bulls, and Grizzlies, averaging 3.9 points and 1.6 assists in 12.7 minutes per contest.

After competing overseas for a few years and winning a pair of EuroLeague titles, Law transitioned to the next stage of his basketball career, joining the Kings as a scout in 2018 and spending four seasons in Sacramento before being hired by the Thunder. Law was in Oklahoma City for three years, serving as the club’s director of amateur scouting and winning a championship with the franchise in 2025.

Following his stint with the Thunder, Law was hired as the Nets‘ director of player personnel and spent the 2025/26 season in Brooklyn. He’ll be leaving that role to work under Graham in Chicago.

Knicks Notes: Anunoby, Layoff, Brunson, Revenue

The Knicks are optimistic that, barring a setback, forward OG Anunoby will be ready to return from his hamstring strain for the start of the Eastern Conference finals, according to Shams Charania and Vincent Goodwill of ESPN.

The layoff following the Knicks’ second-round sweep has been beneficial for Anunoby, who suffered the hamstring injury in Game 2 of the conference semifinals last Wednesday. Reporting at the time indicated it was a very mild strain, and the veteran wing was listed as questionable for Games 3 and 4 before being downgraded to out for each contest. New York’s next series won’t begin until at least Sunday — it could be pushed back to Tuesday if the Pistons are able to force a Game 7 vs. Cleveland.

Anunoby didn’t do any live, full-speed work during Wednesday’s practice, but he went through portions of that practice and completed an individual workout, as Goodwill details.

“Any time anybody is able to do stuff, you’re encouraged,” head coach Mike Brown said. “But again, that’s what they told me he could do today. I’ll wait until Friday to see what they tell me.”

Here’s more on the Knicks:

  • While the Knicks appreciated not having to jump right into their next series without a real break, they’re getting antsy to return to the court and carry over the momentum from their current seven-game winning streak, Josh Hart admitted on Wednesday. “The first series we had what, four days’ break I think it was? That was good enough,” Hart said, per Brian Mahoney of The Associated Press. “This right now, I think at least a week, if not nine days. That’s a long time. So obviously it’s good for recovery, but mentally I’m watching the games, I’m just like just waiting, just waiting to get back out there.”
  • While Brown has received plenty of credit for unlocking Karl-Anthony Towns‘ play-making during the playoffs, Jalen Brunson deserves kudos for being willing to play off the ball more frequently, writes Zach Braziller of The New York Post. Responding on Wednesday to the suggestion that some stars wouldn’t have taken that change in stride, Brunson replied, “One, I’m not a star. Two, I want to win.”
  • If the Knicks are able to advance to the NBA Finals, they could be looking at somewhere in the range of $140-180MM in gross revenue as a result of their playoff run, writes Kurt Badenhausen of Sportico. New York is the only team still alive that ranks among the NBA’s top 10 in gate revenue, according to Badenhausen, who suggests that players on eliminated clubs should be rooting for the Knicks to play as many home games as possible during the next two rounds, since it would increase the league’s basketball-related income for the 2025/26 season.
  • Dan Devine of Yahoo Sports takes a closer look at how chemistry and “an absolutely bonkers level of shot-making” have contributed to New York’s historic run through the first two rounds of the postseason, noting that no team has a better point differential through 10 playoff games than this year’s Knicks (+194).

Southwest Notes: Morant, Grizzlies, Mavericks, Rockets

Landing the No. 3 pick in the draft lessens the motivation for the Grizzlies to trade Ja Morant, but that doesn’t guarantee he’ll still be with the team when training camp opens, Damichael Cole of The Memphis Commercial Appeal writes in a subscriber-only story. If the Grizzlies hadn’t moved up in the lottery, they would be stuck in a section of the draft that’s loaded with lead guards and likely would have been targeting Morant’s replacement. With the third selection, there’s a strong possibility they’ll be deciding between Duke big man Cameron Boozer and North Carolina forward Caleb Wilson.

While Morant remains a good fit from a roster perspective, Memphis still may try to move on following a troubled season where he only appeared in 20 games and feuded with coach Tuomas Iisalo.  After having no success when they tried to find a taker for Morant before the deadline, Cole expects the Grizzlies to reexamine his market value with an eye toward rebuilding around the third pick, Zach Edey and Cedric Coward.

Cole views the lottery luck as a sign that the organization’s path back to playoff contention may be shorter than originally expected. He adds that the team, which also holds picks No. 16 and 32, started working out prospects last week. Cole sees Boozer as a “cleaner fit” than Wilson with the current roster, pointing out that he and Edey could create significant matchup problems for opponents.

There’s more from the Southwest Division:

  • The Mavericks weren’t able to duplicate their good fortune from last year’s lottery, but they’re confident about adding talent with the ninth pick, per Mike Curtis of The Dallas Morning News (subscription required). Mike Schmitz, who was hired as general manager last Friday, said the team doesn’t have any preconceived notions as the pre-draft process heats up. “I don’t think [there’s] any position narrowed down right now,” Schmitz said. “I think we’re looking for someone who can fit our culture and have an impact at a high level for many years to come and I think that’s the beauty of this class. It’s very deep. There’s a wide variety of players at different positions that bring different skill sets and we’re going to bring those guys in and really vet the market and get a really good player at that number.”
  • Several of the top guard prospects view Dallas as a great landing spot, Curtis adds in a separate story. Even though the Mavericks have missed the playoffs the last two years, there’s a strong foundation in place for a quick turnaround. “Everyone knows who Cooper Flagg is. Rookie of the Year,” Kingston Flemings said.Kyrie (Irving) didn’t get to play this year, but everyone knows who he is. Learning under him, a player who’s been in the NBA, been through the ups and downs … being somewhere like Dallas would definitely be great. Anything the coaches need me to do, (new team president) Masai Ujiri, defense, offense, I can do that. Just doing what I can to help any team that drafts me.”
  • Varun Shankar of The Houston Chronicle (subscription required) examines how lottery reform might affect the Rockets, who hold first-round picks from Brooklyn and Phoenix in the 2027 draft.

Spurs Notes: Wembanyama, Harper, K. Johnson, M. Johnson

Victor Wembanyama realized that he lost his composure when he was ejected from Game 4 for knocking down Naz Reid with an elbow, so he didn’t let anything bother him when the series resumed Tuesday night, writes Jared Weiss of The Athletic. Wembanyama had interactions with Jaden McDaniels, Ayo Dosunmu and Anthony Edwards early in the game, but he just smiled and played through them as the Spurs rolled to a 29-point victory.

“I feel like the rage baiting would have been maybe one of their strategies,” Wembanyama said. “I just feel like we need to stay composed as a team.”

Instead of getting upset, Wembanyama responded by torching the Timberwolves for 27 points, 17 rebounds, five assists, three blocks and two three-pointers, a combined stat line that no one else has ever reached in the playoffs. Prior to the game, Devin Vassell said he was looking for “Angry Vic,” but coach Mitch Johnson was relieved that “Mature Vic” showed up instead. Wembanyama believes he brought a little bit of both, and the combination was too much for Minnesota.

“I feel like we got the Vic that you’ve seen all year. I think his maturity level was off the charts,” Stephon Castle said. “When he’s playing like that, playing aggressive with everything he brings for us defensively, I feel like we’re pretty hard to beat.”

There’s more from San Antonio:

  • Dylan Harper‘s highlight dunk in the fourth quarter provided an exclamation point for his high-level performance throughout the postseason, observes Marcus Thompson II of The Athletic. Harper was a plus-13 on Tuesday, and the Spurs have outscored opponents by 73 combined points in the playoffs when he’s been on the court. “If he played for any other team in the league,” Carter Bryant said, “he’d be starting and probably be winning the Rookie of the Year right now. And to see how he’s sacrificed and bought into his role, it’s amazing.”
  • Keldon Johnson has mostly been held in check during the postseason, but he displayed his Sixth Man of the Year credentials in Game 5, Jeff McDonald of The San Antonio Express-News notes in a subscriber-only story. Johnson, who was limited to 31 total points in the five games against Portland and 35 in the first four games of this series, went 8-of-11 from the field on his way to a 21-point night.
  • Prior to Game 4, Mitch Johnson talked about the team’s chances to be a title contender for years to come with a youthful core of Wembanyama (22), Castle (21), Harper (20) and Bryant (20), relays Tom Orsborn of The San Antonio Express-News (subscription required). “We have a lot of young players I don’t think are anywhere near reaching their ceiling or optimal level of playing,” Johnson said. “And we’re still learning about each other and ourselves. The coach has room to grow and get better. So, yeah, I just don’t think we’re anywhere near being a finished product by any means. There’s a lot of room to improve.”

Combine Notes: Dybantsa, Boozer, Peterson, Wilson

Potential No. 1 pick AJ Dybantsa is approaching this week’s draft combine in Chicago like a “job interview,” writes Josh Robbins of The Athletic. Dybantsa has been wearing a suit and tie not only in his meetings with team executives, but even for his sessions with the media.

“I had interviews this morning with different teams, and I mean, I never had a job before,” Dybantsa told reporters on Wednesday. “I was 13 (when I) started taking basketball serious. But this is like my first job interview. So my dad’s kind of like, ‘You know, this is your job interview. So come professional, come in a suit.’”

By noon Wednesday, Dybantsa had talked with the teams holding the top five picks in the draft – the Wizards, Jazz, Grizzlies, Bulls and Clippers – along with the Hawks and Mavericks, according to Robbins. His case for being selected first overall includes a mixture of versatility, dedication to the game and fan appeal.

“I’m super versatile as a player,” Dybantsa said. “I think I can guard one through four, play one through four. I think that I can play a little bit of combo guard if you need me to. I can be that jumbo wing if you need me to. I play the game the right way. So I try to play to win, try to make my teammates better. But I’m super exciting as a player, super explosive. I fill seats.”

There’s more from the combine:

  • The other projected top-four picks, Cameron Boozer, Darryn Peterson and Caleb Wilson, were also asked why they should be taken first, Robbins adds. Boozer responded, “I think my mind, for sure,” along with his “feel for the game” and competitiveness. Peterson stated that he can fit with any team and dispelled rumors that he only wants to play point guard. Wilson cited his “leadership and focus” in addition to his on-court talents and said the hand injury that derailed his collegiate season is no longer an issue. “My hand’s perfectly fine now,” he said, “and I feel like it offered me a different perspective on basketball in general, just because once I injured my hand, now I’m way more grateful to play. Every day I wake up and I get the opportunity to play and just be able to shoot and dribble and stuff like that. I just feel grateful for the opportunity, and I wasn’t as grateful as I am now.”
  • Wilson displayed his knowledge of Chicago by talking about Michael Jordan, “The Last Dance” documentary and SLAP, which is the acronym new Bulls executive vice president of basketball operations Bryson Graham uses to sum up what he looks for in a player – size, length, athleticism and physicality, per Julia Poe of The Chicago Tribune (subscription required). Wilson fits those characteristics and may be an easy choice for Chicago if he’s still on the board at No. 4, but the Bulls also hold the 15th pick and plan to talk to roughly 20 players this week, according to Poe.
  • Talent evaluators and executives at the combine view Dybantsa, Peterson, Boozer and Wilson as a “big four” in the draft, with the next tier starting once they’re off the board, confirms K.C. Johnson of Chicago Sports Network (Twitter link).

Board Of Governors Will Consider ‘3-2-1’ Lottery Reform Plan

Appearing Wednesday on Stephen A. Smith’s radio show (YouTube link), commissioner Adam Silver confirmed that the “3-2-1” lottery reform plan will be submitted to the Board of Governors when they meet later this month, relays Tim Bontemps of ESPN.

“What we’ve essentially done, and we have a proposal that we’re going to be bringing to our team owners at the end of May, and that is to create essentially a system of flat odds, so that you have no particular incentive to be bad,” Silver said. “There’s even something we’re calling draft relegation, that if you’re one of the bottom three teams in the league, you’ll actually have worse odds than teams that sort of are four through up until teams make the playoffs. We’re still playing a little bit with the system there.”

Bontemps points out that the Wizards, Jazz, Grizzlies and Bulls, who landed the top four spots in this year’s lottery, all made an effort to improve their draft status by losing games as the season wore on. Utah was fined $500K in February for “conduct detrimental to the league” after not playing Lauri Markkanen and Jaren Jackson Jr. in the fourth quarter of a pair of games.

Silver stated that the new plan will give the league additional powers to punish teams that engage in overt tanking.

“And also ultimately additional authority for the league office that if we do see that type of behavior where there’s a sense that teams aren’t going all out to win, that we can actually take away draft lottery balls, we can change the order of the draft,” Silver told Smith. “Teams have to know it’s not just about paying a financial fine, which they may think is worth it in order to get a top pick, but that it’ll directly impact their ability to get a top draft pick.”

Bontemps cites a “near universal belief” throughout the league that some type of lottery reform will be adopted in response to the growing problem of obvious tanking in the past few years.

The “3-2-1” system gets its name from the varying amount of lottery balls teams would be assigned depending on their place in the standings. Those that finish with the fourth-worst through the 10th-worst record would receive three lottery balls each, while the bottom three teams would only get two. The ninth and 10th play-in seeds in each conference receive two lottery balls each, while the losers of the 7-8 play-in games would have one apiece.

It’s a huge change from the current system, which includes 1,001 possible combinations of ping pong balls and gives significantly better odds to the teams with the three worst records.

The proposal would take effect for next season if it’s approved by the Board of Governors, but it’s only scheduled to last through 2029. That’s when a new collective bargaining agreement will be negotiated that could contain fresh anti-tanking measures.

“The system that we’re going to be putting in front of our teams will be in effect for three years,” Silver said. “What we’re telling our teams is, the term people use is it will ‘sunset.’ In other words, this is going to be a new flat-odd system. It’ll be in place for three years and will give us time for additional study to see whether there are other creative ways to better distribute players.

“And it’ll also give us an opportunity to see how our teams respond to the system, because one thing I’ve learned, whether it’s new provisions in the collective bargaining agreement, new provisions in the draft lottery, which as you know we’ve changed many times over the years, the teams are incredibly innovative and creative at coming up with ways to work the system.”

The NBA’s Board of Governors is reportedly scheduled to vote on lottery reform on May 28.

Sixers Notes: Morey, McCain, Trade Deadline, Embiid, Front Office Candidates

Daryl Morey’s post-trade assessment that “we sold high” when he sent Jared McCain to Oklahoma City in February continues to be mocked in Philadelphia, writes Adam Aaronson of The Philly Voice. While Jake Fischer has reported that trade wasn’t the “proverbial last straw” for Morey in Philadelphia, the deal – combined with the failure to get another player to replace McCain in the rotation – may have factored into the executive’s dismissal this week as the Sixers‘ president of basketball operations.

The only return in that deal with the Thunder was a first-round pick originally belonging to Houston that wound up at No. 22 in this year’s draft. McCain’s roster spot was given to Cameron Payne, who had been playing in Serbia, but he was waived after suffering a hamstring strain in the final week of the season. Two-way player Dalen Terry was promoted to take his place and saw minimal playing time in the postseason.

Morey approached the deadline looking for “cost-effective role players with multiple years of control,” a source tells Aaronson, and his top target was Thunder shooting guard Aaron Wiggins. Morey was hoping to land Wiggins as part of the McCain deal, but Philadelphia would have needed to include multiple other players to make the trade work. OKC held onto Wiggins, and Aaronson notes that McCain has played a role in pushing him out of the Thunder’s rotation.

Aaronson also hears that Morey offered multiple second-round picks to the Bulls for Jalen Smith, but Chicago opted to keep him. Two other prime targets were Rockets forward Tari Eason and Pelicans forward Saddiq Bey, who both remained with their teams through the deadline. Aaronson’s source said the Sixers made attempts to land the MavericksNaji Marshall, the TimberwolvesDonte DiVincenzo, the WarriorsBrandin Podziemski and the SunsRyan Dunn as well. None of those players wound up being traded.

Morey liked the potential fit of Ayo Dosunmu, who has been a valuable contributor in Minnesota’s playoff run, according to Aaronson’s source, but didn’t prioritize him because of his expiring contract. Aaronson reports that the team also had some interest in Vit Krejci, who was sent from Atlanta to Portland four days prior to the deadline in exchange for two second-round picks. Philadelphia had numerous second-rounders to offer, but Morey reportedly didn’t want to commit to a deal with so much time remaining before the deadline.

There’s more on the Sixers:

  • Morey’s relationship with star center Joel Embiid appeared to deteriorate throughout the season, Aaronson adds. Embiid expressed displeasure with management at the trade deadline and again when he was held out of a game in early April, and he refused to comment directly on Morey when asked about their relationship during the playoffs.
  • Bob Myers, who will be leading the search to replace Morey, could probably have the job if he tells managing partner Josh Harris that he wants it, Aaronson suggests in a separate story. If Myers opts to remain in his current role as president of sports for Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment, Aaronson identifies a few other candidates, including Elton Brand, who served as Morey’s top assistant, and Vince Rozman, who spent 16 years with the organization before joining OKC’s front office in 2022. Pistons senior vice president Dennis Lindsey and Timberwolves GM Matt Lloyd, who were both finalists to run Chicago’s front office, are also on the list, along with Spurs assistant GM Dave Telep, Celtics assistant GM Dave Lewin and prominent agents Austin Brown and Alex Saratsis.
  • In a mailbag column, Aaronson examines some options for the Sixers in free agency and explains why the team shouldn’t try to trade for Giannis Antetokounmpo.