Regrading the Jrue Holiday trade almost a year later
It hasn’t even been a full calendar year since the Milwaukee Bucks traded for Jrue Holiday from the New Orleans Pelicans for Eric Bledsoe, George Hill, and every draft pick imaginable. The Bucks also received Sam Merrill in that trade as well. But what an eventful nine months it has been for the guard and the team.
In that timeframe, Holiday signed his massive contract extension, made First Team All-Defense, won an NBA championship, and capped it off with an Olympic gold medal just over a month later. It’s assuredly one of the craziest years in Holiday’s life, and it all started late in November with the trade to the Bucks.
I was at home when the trade happened, had gotten off work a few hours earlier, and was ready to play some video games to relax. Just as I was about to start, a friend of mine called me to tell me the Bucks traded for Holiday. I was excited but mostly confused. I didn’t know what the return was yet, but I was excited about getting a player like Holiday on the Bucks.
I’m sure most fans were a little hesitant when the full return was released and how many draft picks were being given up. Especially so knowing that Holiday only had one year left on his contract and, more importantly, so did Giannis Antetokounmpo.
In the initial grading of this trade, our Dalton Sell gave this deal a B letter grade. However, the massive caveat was that there was still the impending uncertainty of Antetokounmpo’s supermax extension. However, I’m sure my colleague would bump that grade way up if he knew for certain that Giannis would sign the extension soon after.
But we all know how the rest played out, and Holiday is, as he put it, ”a Buck for life.” But even with all of the success from the trade, how does it look almost a year later? It’s about time we take a look back and truly make sure that this was a success for the Bucks.
The financial impact of the Jrue Holiday trade almost a year later for the Milwaukee Bucks
Holiday had one year left on his contract when he was traded to the Bucks, which added some risk into the move as there was no guarantee he would re-sign. He would make just over $27 million, which made him the third-highest paid Buck behind only Antetokounmpo and Khris Middleton; who was actually the highest-paid player on the Bucks last season.
It wasn’t a huge salary, but it meant that they’d have to extend him in order to maximize the full value of the trade. At the moment I remember being a bit wary of trading for a player in the last year of their contract, but I don’t think they’d have made that trade without having a good sense that Holiday would re-sign with the team.
And then he did! Holiday eventually signed a four-year extension with the team, totaling at least $134 million, and will be paid over $30 million this coming season — still the third-highest paid player on the team. It’s obviously a large financial commitment, but it’s well worth the price after seeing what Holiday brought to the team in both the regular season and then in the playoffs.
Another part of the financial aspect of this trade was moving on from Eric Bledsoe’s contract in the same trade. Despite being another two-time All-Defense guard, Bledsoe had his struggles in the playoffs and just never was able to truly fit in with this team.
People might say the Bucks overpaid financially for Holiday, but it’s not our money and Holiday showed just how valuable he is during the championship run.
The on-court fit for the Jrue Holiday trade almost a year later for the Milwaukee Bucks
It’s safe to say that the first year with Holiday meshing with the Bucks core was a huge success. Although it took a couple of months for the team and Holiday to find their footing with each other and figure out how to make it work, it looked great once they did.
Holiday in particular had arguably the best season of his career from an efficiency standpoint. He set career-highs in field goal percentage (50.3 percent), 3 point percentage (39.2 percent, almost five attempts per game), effective field goal percentage (57.0 percent), and true shooting percentage (59.2 percent). It was “only” the third-highest scoring season of his career at 17.7 points per game, but he took on a lessened scoring role behind Antetokounmpo and Middleton, which seemingly also boosted his efficiency.
Holiday’s chemistry with Antetokounmpo took a little longer to build than it did with Middleton, but he still found his way to mesh with the Bucks superstar. Of Holiday’s 357 total assists from last season, 132 went to Antetokounmpo or Middleton, according to NBA.com/stats. He gelled in perfectly with the Bucks leading duo, which is exactly what the team envisioned when they made the move for him, while also forming one of the best trios in the NBA.
Say what you want about his offensive game in the playoffs, he still came up huge when the Bucks needed him, especially in the Eastern Conference Finals. Against the Atlanta Hawks, Holiday averaged 22 points and 10 assists over the six-game series and was undoubtedly one of the best players out on the floor.
On defense, he was an even better fit, but that was expected. Holiday is one of the best defenders in the entire league, and he showed it night in, and night out with the Bucks throughout his first season with the team. He earned First-Team All-Defense honors and without his elite defense, the Bucks don’t come close to winning the championship.
You have to be pretty special on defense for there to be a seven-minute highlight reel of your defensive efforts in a postseason run. That’s exactly what Holiday was in the 2021 playoffs: special.
The final (updated) grade for the Jrue Holiday trade almost a year later for the Milwaukee Bucks
Obviously, the hardest part to re-grade is what the Bucks sent away in the deal since we don’t know the full extent of what they gave up. In total, the Bucks dealt three draft picks and the rights to swap two more picks to the Pelicans, something that looked a lot more treacherous when the deal was first announced and we didn’t know Antetokounmpo’s future (or Holiday’s).
For right now, what we can look at are the players that were surrendered in the deal: Eric Bledsoe and George Hill. Starting with the veteran backup Hill, he played so incredibly well for the young Oklahoma City Thunder that they sat him after 14 games. Seriously, in that span, Hill was averaging almost 12 points per game on 63 percent true shooting. He then was dealt to the Philadelphia 76ers, where he struggled, but none of that matters because he’s back on the Bucks anyway.
After one year with the Pelicans, Bledsoe has been traded twice this offseason and is now back where he began his career, with the Los Angeles Clippers. I still like Bledsoe, but it was clear he wouldn’t be the player at point guard that would get the Bucks over the hump to win a title. Moving him was something that the Bucks had to do in order to reach their ultimate goal, unfortunately.
Regardless, I don’t think the return really matters all that much to Bucks fans anymore. Holiday helped bring the Bucks their first championship in 50 years and for that, all the picks can turn into Hall of Famers for all we care. The Bucks are champions and that means more than any potential draft pick ever could.
But now I know that — plus the Holiday extension, plus the championship, plus Hill being back on the Bucks, and plus the Bucks flipping Merrill for Grayson Allen — in making my updated grade.
BTBP (Updated) Final Grade: A+
JabariIverson楼主
翻译作品链接:(翻译完了记得填!!!) 招工链接:https://bbs.hupu.com/44947543.html原文标题:Regrading the Jrue Holiday trade almost a year later原文作者:Bradshaw Furlong发表时间:08.25原文链接:https://behindthebuckpass.com/2021/08/25/milwaukee-bucks-regrading-jrue-holiday-trade/分级:1级 招工:JabariIverson审核: 翻译: 备注:新手接工前请仔细阅读以下主题贴与完工期限: 一级文完工期限7天,二级文完工期限10天,有特殊时效要求的注意标题时效。NBA术语翻译对照>> 俚语及生僻词汇可查询>> 球员人名翻译及格式请参照虎扑的译名>>翻译团新人须知>> 文章完工后请不要直接发到篮球场及球队分区等板块,发至翻译团Lounge>>并标注完工 !
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