Could Brooklyn Nets swoop in and steal Giannis Antetokounmpo from the New York Knicks … using the Knicks own first round picks? Wouldn’t that be juicy?

Well, ESPN’s Brian Windhorst, Tim Bontemps, Dave McMenamin agree there’s indeed a possibility of a Nets offer in the Wednesday edition of their Hoop Collective podcast.“ Windhorst took the lead…

“I think Brooklyn will seriously consider making an offer,” Windhorstr said, noting the assets Sean Marks & co. have accumulated, particularly draft picks which are likely to the coin of the realm as well as good young players in any deal for the 31-year-old two-time MVP and one Finals MVP. A number of those assets — three remaining unprotected firsts in 2027, 2029 and 2031 as well as an unprotected swap in 2028 — were all part of the Nets haul from the June 2024 trade for Mikal Bridges.

“Brooklyn has 10 tradeable firsts and Michael Porter Jr. and 11 tradeable firsts as of draft night. Do we think Brooklyn will make an offer,” the ESPN’s top NBA insider asked amidst a back-and-forth between the three writers. “I think Brooklyn will seriously consider making an offer.”

Both Bontemps and McMahon agreed with Bontemps offering this: “A top five player becoming available … a lot of things are going to be discussed that you don’t know about and you don’t expect to hear. Players like this do not become available very often and while there are concerns about Giannis out-years on the contract, about his calf, all this stuff at the end of the day, he’s a top five player on the planet and those five players are still going to return big value in a trade.”

All of this was in a roundtable of discussion of which NBA teams would make a move for the near 7-footer who has finally made it clear he wants a new home. as their colleague Shams Charania reported earlier in the day

So far, the Knicks and Miami Heat are seen as the leading candidates, but the Knicks and Bucks tried and failed to come to an agreement during an exclusive trade window last summer. A big impediment was that Leon Rose had traded all those picks (plus two in last year’s draft) and a couple of seconds to Brooklyn in the Mikal Bridges trade. The Nets also have $15.3 million in cap space

Giannis, whose never played for any team other than the Milwaukee Bucks in his 11-year career, is going to be eligible for a five-year, $275 million extension come October no matter who controls his contract with.

Windy and Bontemps discuss the risks involved with that extension.

“Also, if you’re trading for Giannis who’s 31 years old, you’re also trading for the right to pay him $270 million in an extension this fall,” said Windhorst. “If you’re going to do that, you’re going to have to commit to that, do we agree on that?”

“Yes,” agreed Bontemps. “Can’t imagine many teams that would want to take Giannis on for the price it would take to get him that would only want him for a year and a half.”

The Nets of course, with the smallest payroll in the league and Joe Tsai and Julia Koch’s deep pockets — a combined net worth approaching $100 billion, wouldn’t likely flinch at Giannis price tag. He currently makes $54.1 million. However, agreeing to the full amount and term of an extension would mean paying him more than $60 million at age 37.

Marks made it clear at the Nets Media Day in September that if they were to defer from their rebuild, there would have to a belief that whoever they acquired would have to dramatically change the franchise’s course, not an incremental move up the standings.

”If you’re going after max level talent, they’ve got to automatically and absolutely change the trajectory of your team. This this can’t be ‘well, let’s go get this and lock ourselves in to being a six or seven seed.” he said. (Emphasis added.)

Windhorst et al didn’t offer any thoughts on whether Antetokounmpo would want to join Brooklyn, particularly since the Nets are currently one of the league’s worst team and he reportedly wants to join a winner. In previous reporting, ESPN and others have suggested that the Bucks front office would try to work with their franchise player to get him to a team he likes. How much patience the front office and new owner would have remains to be seen.

The ESPN trio weren’t the only pundits suggesting Nets interest but the most prominent voice, Jake Fischer, told The SteinLine that he could see the Nets as well as the Hornets and Jazz playing a facilitator roles.

Growing belief that we’ll see Brooklyn, Charlotte and Utah play facilitator in a few of these more complicated frameworks. Sources say Nets, Hornets, Jazz have all been reiterating in ongoing conversations that they’re willing to help grease trades in exchange for draft capital.

The Nets could have as many as 13 firsts going forward, including the 10 tradeable ones, as well as as many as 20 seconds (While the Nets may have more than enough seconds, they could swap out seconds from traditionally good teams like the Lakers and Celtics for picks likely to be higher. The Nets currently have three Laker seconds plus a Celtics second and a Warrior second.)