The
Portland Trail Blazers are trading guard
Damian Lillard to play to alongside
Giannis Antetokounmpo with the
Milwaukee Bucks as part of a three-team deal that also includes the
Phoenix Suns, sources told ESPN's Adrian Wojnarowski on Wednesday.
Portland will receive
Jrue Holiday,
Deandre Ayton,
Toumani Camara, Milwaukee's 2029 unprotected first-round draft pick, and unprotected Milwaukee swap rights in 2028 and 2030, sources told Wojnarowski.
The Suns will receive
Jusuf Nurkic,
Grayson Allen,
Nassir Little and
Keon Johnson, sources told Wojnarowski.
The deal comes months after Lillard formally requested to be traded in early July as the Blazers decided to take a patient approach to negotiations.
Lillard leaves Portland after 11 seasons in which he made seven All-Star and All-NBA teams and led the franchise to the playoffs eight times, including a Western Conference finals appearance in 2018-19. He ranks first in team history in both points and 3-pointers and second in assists.
He took to X on Wednesday to say he is excited for the next chapter.
Lillard, 33, had a career year last season, averaging 32.2 points and 7.3 assists but played just 58 games as he sat out the last month of the season. The highlight of Lillard's season came on Feb. 26 against the
Houston Rockets, when he scored 71 points.
Lillard's 32.2 points per game is the most by a player to change teams the following season, according to ESPN Stats & Information research.
Despite Lillard's numbers, Portland failed to make the playoffs for the second consecutive season for the first time in his career. The Blazers elected to keep their draft pick after both seasons, most recently selecting guard
Scoot Henderson with the No. 2 overall pick. Lillard's trade request came shortly after.
The Blazers remain engaged elsewhere on deals and will are expected to immediately engage contending teams on trade talks to move on Holiday, sources told Wojnarowski. Portland is committed to its young group of talented guards.
The Bucks emerged as the consensus favorites to win the NBA title after the trade, with odds around 4-1 at U.S. sportsbooks. Milwaukee had been listed as the fourth-favorite, behind the defending-champion
Denver Nuggets,
Boston Celtics and Suns.