As rumors swirled this summer that Giannis Antetokounmpo was “open-minded” about a potential trade from Milwaukee, nothing materialized.

Multiple teams seemed to have been gearing up to have the capital to acquire Antetokounmpo in the offseason, with the San Antonio Spurs being one of them. When the Houston Rockets acquired Kevin Durant, all signs pointed to the Spurs putting together an attractive package to try to sway the Bucks to part with their franchise cornerstone.

The Spurs are “expected to ask about Giannis as they are committed to putting together a contending team now with Wemby,” Jake Fischer reports 👀

San Antonio have 36 future draft picks over the next 7 years and one of the cleanest salary sheets in the NBA. pic.twitter.com/uQbMgtCL3T

— Basketball Forever (@bballforever_) May 1, 2025

But as the offseason moved along and the Spurs got past the draft, the hype dwindled.

With the two-time MVP still under contract for two full seasons plus a player option, the question persists: should the Spurs—fresh off selecting Dylan Harper with the second overall pick—pursue an aggressive trade package to pair Giannis with Victor Wembanyama?

Shams Charania of ESPN recently reported that “New York emerged as the only team Giannis Antetokounmpo desired outside of Milwaukee in the offseason, sources told ESPN, and the Knicks and Bucks engaged in talks for a window of time.”

After a few months of talks dying, the conversation was then re-ignited with a bombshell report.

Shams on potential Giannis trade:

“If it does reopen in the season…that’s going to include other NBA teams. I expect it to go beyond just the Knicks. pic.twitter.com/4GCobUZUo0

— Oh No He Didn’t (@ohnohedidnt24) October 7, 2025

But what does this mean for the Spurs, who probably have the best trade package available to throw at Milwaukee?

To acquire Giannis, who posted 30 points, 12 rebounds, and seven assists per game last season, San Antonio would need to offer a substantial package. The framework would likely include Devin Vassell,Keldon Johnson, the recently drafted Dylan Harper, and approximately three unprotected first-round picks extending through 2031.

If there is one team that could make a trade for Giannis work at the trade deadline, it’s the Spurs.

That’s the only team who could realistically make the money work and give Milwaukee the assets needed in a two-team trade.

— Brett Siegel (@BrettSiegelNBA) October 8, 2025

A Giannis-Wembanyama frontcourt pairing would create incredible defensive and offensive versatility.

Wembanyama averaged 24.3 points, 11.0 rebounds, and 3.8 blocks in 46 games this past season, showing significant improvement in his shortened sophomore campaign. Combined with Giannis’s 30-12-7 production, the Spurs would field arguably the most dominant two-way duo in NBA history.

Giannis Antetokounmpo Shams report Knicks and Bucks had talks over the summer 🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽

Giannis Antetokounmpo has averaged 27+ PTS, 11+ REB, 5+ AST in 7 straight seasons no other player in NBA history has done that even twice

Last 3 seasons:
📊 30.4 | 11.9 | 6.5
📊… pic.twitter.com/0fBcie29IH

— State from Harlem🇬🇭🗽 (@bmorelikestate) October 7, 2025

The timing aligns as well.

Giannis is still in his prime with at least two elite seasons remaining, and the Spurs would immediately ascend to championship contention while Wembanyama operates under his rookie contract.

But let’s try to temper this enthusiasm.

Harper projects as a potential franchise cornerstone and perennial All-Star point guard. Trading him before he plays a single NBA game would be an extraordinary risk, considering he could serve as Wembanyama’s backcourt partner for the next 15 years.

The trade would also deplete San Antonio’s wing depth by surrendering both Vassell and Johnson in exchange for a 30-year-old player who, despite his exceptional talent, will be 33 when his current contract expires.

The prospect of pairing Antetokounmpo with a perennial Defensive Player of the Year candidate and budding superstar in Wembanyama for the next handful of years is intriguing, but do the Spurs value their young assets enough to hold back?

If they want to get back to championship contention quickly, this is the move they must make.