Ruzious wrote:Illmatic12 wrote:Ruzious wrote:No - Middleton - who lost a step from a hamstring injury that required surgery. Agreed on Beal.
Oh ok. Yeah, Middleton weirdly still has a defensive reputation dating back to pre-hamstring tear.
He's actually been a liability for the Bucks if anything.. Budenholzer benched him earlier in the year.
Yup. It'll be interesting to see what he gets this off-season in free agency. He and Giannis have a strong bond after a rough couple of years - Midds used to abuse him in practice - they'd have wars day after day, and that might have been a big part of Giannis' motivation to keep getting better. I guess you could compare the younger Middleton to Jimmy Butler - as far as how he treated his teammates - he was the bleephole who demanded everyone play his arse off. Even now, he plays with a permanent snarl on his face.
Interesting, I don't see the Jimmy Butler comp at all. In fact I just read a Zach Lowe piece that came out today that seems to paint a different picture:
http://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/26041744/khris-middleton-rare-kind-second-star
From the sounds of it, Middleton hasn't been known to be the hardest-working player and I imagine his fluctuating work ethic & effort level got on the nerves of his uber-competitve coaches and teammates (the article gives the example of friction Middleton had with Jason Kidd , as well as Giannis)
If you ask me, Middleton sounds suspiciously like the type of player who will get overpaid for one big contract and then relax. It's tough because I don't think Milwaukee has any choice but to max him if they have a good playoff run.
The Bucks know they might have to pay $30 million per season to keep Middleton. "Does he love Milwaukee enough to re-sign?" Lasry asks. "Yes. Enough to give us a real discount? No."




























