Yankees free agency and trade buzz: NY among teams in on Brewers RHP Freddy Peralta

Here’s the latest Yankees free agency and trade buzz during the 2025-26 MLB offseason…


Dec. 10, 7:26 p.m.

Brewers right-hander Freddy Peralta is a hot name on the trade market this offseason, and the Yankees are among the teams reportedly looking to add him to their team.

According to Will Sammon and Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic, the Yankees are one of five teams looking to trade for Peralta, joining the Orioles, Red Sox, Giants and Astros. Other clubs like the Mets had previously reported interest in a trade for Peralta. 

The news comes just days after the Brewers made it known they were open for business on a trade

With Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodon starting the 2026 season on the IL, the Yankees would hope Peralta gives them the depth needed to get through a season until their big arms return.

Dec. 8, 9:50 p.m.

Looking for bullpen help, the Yankees have shown an interest in right-hander Brad Keller, according to a report from Gary Phillips of The New York Daily News on Monday.

Nothing is imminent between Keller and the Yanks, Phillips reported, adding that two or three teams are considering signing the 30-year-old free agent as a starting pitcher.

Keller is coming off his best year as a professional by far, pitching to a 2.07 ERA and 0.962 WHIP with 75 strikeouts to 22 walks in 69.2 innings over 68 appearances out of the bullpen. The righty has some very attractive attributes: 30.6 percent hard-hit percentage (99th percentile) last year, with a fastball that averaged 97.2 mph and a sinker at 96.7 mph.

Dec. 8, 8:45 p.m.

As the Mets and Yankees continue to look to revamp their bullpen this offseason, they’ve both called the Brewers about reliever Trevor Megill, according to Joel Sherman of the NY Post.

Megill, of course, is the older brother of Mets starter Tylor Megill.

The 32-year-old would be a tremendous boost at the backend for either club, as he has developed into one of the top relievers in baseball over the past few seasons. 

Megill missed time to injury last year, but pitched to a stellar 2.49 ERA and 1.12 WHIP while locking down 30 saves. 

Dec. 8, 1:24 p.m.

SNY MLB Insider Andy Martino believes there’s a “solid chance” the Yankees will retain free agent Amed Rosario.

Rosario had a .788 OPS in 16 games for the Yanks last season after being acquired from the Nationals ahead of the trade deadline.

The 30-year-old excelled against left-handed pitching in 2025, slashing .302/.328/.491 in 122 plate appearances.

Rosario would provide strong versatility if brought back, with the ability to play shortstop, third base, second base, and left field. 

Dec. 7, 9:31 p.m.

While the Yankees reportedly discussed the chance of a reunion with All-Star reliever Devin Williams a few weeks ago, it appears their conversations never intensified.

Yankees general manager Brian Cashman said as much on Sunday night at the Winter Meetings, telling Greg Joyce of the New York Post that the club didn’t even make a formal offer to Williams before he signed a three-year deal with the Mets last weekend.

According to Joyce, Cashman asked Williams’ agent to keep the Yankees in the loop regarding the right-hander’s market, but he didn’t get a call prior to Williams signing in Queens. Cashman also noted that Williams’ reps never “needed to” update him on the process.

Dec. 4, 11:42 a.m.

While other suitors are certainly in the mix, Cody Bellinger remains the Yankees’ No. 1 target, and the club is making a “big effort” to bring him back, according to Jon Heyman of the New York Post.

Heyman lists the Mets, Phillies, Angels, and Dodgers as other possibilities. 

ESPN’s Jeff Passan has previously reported that signing Bellinger would be a “multipart move” for the Yankees, as the club would almost certainly need to move one of their other outfield pieces –potentially Jasson Dominguez or up-and-coming prospect Spencer Jones. 

With Trent Grisham accepting the qualifying offer, the Yanks would have a surplus of outfielders if Bellinger was to re-sign.

Dec. 3, 8:22 p.m.

The high-stakes bidding war for Kyle Tucker officiallyincludes one of the Yankees’ division rivals, as the superstar outfielder visited the Blue Jays’ facility in Florida on Wednesday, according to a report from Robert Murray of FanSided.

It’s no surprise the reigning AL champions are big-game hunting for a new bat. The club signed free-agent starter Dylan Cease to a massive seven-year, $210 million deal and right-hander Cody Ponce to a three-year, $30 million contract in the last week.

Murray reports the Blue Jays are also interested in retaining shortstop Bo Bichette, who could garner an average annual value above $20 million.

Tucker would make the Blue Jays’ lineup even more imposing. In his lone season with the Cubs, the 28-year-old slashed .266/.377/.464 with 22 home runs and 25 steals. His seven-year run with the Astros was far more impressive, though — he hit .274 with 125 homers and 417 RBI.

Only time will tell if the Yankees make a legitimate run at Tucker’s services. His contract demands seem too rich for their blood, and the Yankees have stated they’re focused on re-signing Cody Bellinger, who’d come at a much lower price.

Dec. 1, 9:19 a.m.

The Yankees re-signing Cody Bellinger would be a “multipart move,” reports Jeff Passan of ESPN.

Per Passan, the Yanks are unlikely to enter the season with Bellinger, Aaron Judge, Trent Grisham, Jasson Dominguez, and Spencer Jones all on the team.

Things got tight player-wise and payroll-wise for New York when Grisham accepted the one-year qualifying offer.

Another factor when it comes to Bellinger or other large signings/trades for the Yanks this offseason is that with Grisham now in tow, New York’s payroll for 2026 is already roughly $278 million.

Pair the above with owner Hal Steinbrenner‘s recent comments that it would be “ideal” to lower payroll for this coming season — and his repeated statements about not wanting to carry a payroll above $300 million — and it’s fair to wonder how much wiggle room there will be to retain Bellinger and address other needs. 

Nov. 20, 9:37 a.m.

The Yankees and Devin Williams‘ representatives recently discussed the possibility of the reliever returning to the Bronx, per Ken Rosenthal and Will Sammon of The Athletic.

In addition to the Yanks, Williams has reportedly drawn interest from the Mets, Dodgers, and Blue Jays, among others, this offseason.

The Yankees recently re-signed left-hander Ryan Yarbrough, but their ‘pen is still in need of serious reinforcements.

In addition to Williams, Luke Weaver is also a free agent. 

Nov. 13, 11:09 a.m.

The Red Sox are among the teams with interest in Devin Williams, reports Will Sammon of The Athletic, who also lists the Dodgers and Reds among teams that have expressed interest.

Fabian Ardaya of The Athletic also reported on Los Angeles and Williams, saying there appears to be mutual interest.

Los Angeles was one of the teams exploring the possibility of dealing for Williams last offseason before he was traded to the Yankees.

Williams, 31, struggled last season for the Yanks, posting a 4.79 ERA and 1.12 WHIP in 62.0 innings.

While Williams was not his regular elite self, his stuff still played up as he had a strikeout rate of 13.1 per nine.

In addition to Williams, Luke Weaver is also a free agent, leaving the back end of New York’s bullpen in an uncertain spot.

Nov. 12, 11:33 a.m.

A source told Gary Phillips of the New York Daily News that the Yankees have checked in on left-hander Ryan Yarbrough, and the club is “expected to be suitors” for the 33-year-old.

After signing with the Yanks last spring, Yarbrough ended up being a valuable and versatile piece for Aaron Boone‘s pitching staff. He started eight games and appeared in 19 games in total, pitching to a 4.36 ERA while holding opposing lefties to a .198 batting average. 

Yarbrough did miss a significant chunk of the season, though, as an oblique injury kept him out from mid-June to early September. As a result, he was left off the Yankees’ postseason roster.

Nov. 11, 3:45 p.m.

Historically, the Yankees have been among the highest-spending teams in baseball, but owner Hal Steinbrenner and GM Brian Cashman have reiterated multiple times over the past couple of years that having a payroll over $300 million is “simply not sustainable for us, financially,” as Cashman put it.

“It wouldn’t be sustainable for the vast majority of ownership [groups], given the luxury tax we have to pay,” Cashman said last May. “I’ve been a broken record [on this topic]: I don’t believe I should have a $300 million payroll to win a championship.”

So how does that line of thinking impact what the Yankees will do this offseason?

Appearing on “Pinstripe Post,” Joel Sherman of the New York Post laid out how he believes the Yankees can thread the needle to retain a key free agent like Cody Bellinger, whom he referred to as “the key to their offseason,” while lowering their payroll beneath the $300 million number.

“I think the goal this offseason is to try to get under $300 million, luxury tax money. I think within that they’d like to re-sign Cody Bellinger, add another reliever who can pitch in the final six outs of the game… I think they’d like to find a complementary starting pitcher to help them through some injuries early in the season. I think they’d love to flip J.C. Escarra for a righty version of J.C. Escarra… and I think they’d like to find a complementary right-handed bat, and maybe plus Amed Rosario, who they liked a lot and tried in previous years to get.

“That all told, I think the Yankees would feel, if they got the versions of the players they wanted to, they would feel that’s a 90+ win team, and they’d have a shot to line it up, and that they could do that in the high ($200 millions).”

The Yankees ended last season with a payroll of $323.7 million, for luxury tax purposes. Factoring in projections for arbitration eligible players and other players in their pre-arbitration years who are still under team control, the Yankees currently have a payroll of roughly $244 million.

Can the Yankees fit in a player like Bellinger, who is projected to make somewhere around $27 million per season, and still make other needed moves while staying under the $304 million luxury tax threshold? 

If that is indeed the goal, while it does appear possible, there doesn’t seem to be a lot of wiggle room.

Orioles get the big bat they needed as Pete Alonso cashes in on bounce-back season

ORLANDO, Fla. — Roughly 24 hours after Kyle Schwarber’s return to Philadelphia and Edwin Diaz’s deal with the Dodgers rocked the winter meetings, another titanic transaction hit the timeline Wednesday, with the reports of first baseman Pete Alonso agreeing to a five-year, $155 million deal with the Baltimore Orioles.

Last offseason, Alonso lingered on the open market for months, a sobering first journey through free agency that concluded in February with a two-year, $54 million deal to stay in Queens. Importantly, the pact featured an opt-out that enabled Alonso to hit free agency again after the 2025 season. He proceeded to have one of his best seasons as a big leaguer, helping to squander some of the doubts that surfaced about his trajectory after an underwhelming 2024 and reassert his status as one of the most reliable sluggers in the sport. 

Alonso’s bounce-back made reentering the market an obvious choice, but it still wasn’t clear how eager clubs would be to invest in him, considering the unsexy nature of his profile — a right-handed-hitting first baseman in his 30s with little-to-no defensive value — hadn’t changed. While Alonso had done his part to rejuvenate his production to something more closely resembling a true star position player, whether he warranted the nine-figure commitment that he and his agent, Scott Boras, sought remained an open question.

Enter the Orioles, an intriguing club this offseason considering their lackluster showing in 2025 amid an otherwise encouraging trajectory as a franchise over the past half-decade. Baltimore had already made two major moves to address some of the deficiencies on its roster, swinging a trade with the Angels to acquire outfielder Taylor Ward to strengthen the lineup and signing hard-throwing righty Ryan Helsley to be the new closer

With the relatively crowded state of the O’s position-player group following the Ward acquisition, it stood to reason that Ward on his own could fulfill Baltimore’s stated goal of adding a right-handed bat to complement a lineup that leaned pretty heavily left-handed. And with two right-handed first basemen already on the roster in veteran Ryan Mountcastle and 24-year-old Coby Mayo — plus two catchers who project to rotate through the DH spot in Adley Rutschman and Samuel Basallo — Alonso wasn’t an obvious fit on paper for Baltimore, at least not relative to some of the other potential suitors with more glaring holes at first or DH.

Evidently, the Orioles — amid their reported pursuits of sorely needed rotation upgrades — viewed adding Alonso as a worthwhile endeavor anyway, demonstrating a level of aggressiveness in free agency that has not been on display in Baltimore in quite some time. Although Alonso might not fit seamlessly with the current roster, he represents a definite upgrade over in-house options Mountcastle and Mayo, who now become trade chips (if they weren’t already). And rather than settling for Ward as their most prominent offensive upgrade of the offseason, the Orioles have acquired a pair of the most prolific right-handed home run hitters in baseball: Among all righty bats, only Aaron Judge (53), Eugenio Suarez (49) and Junior Caminero (45) hit more homers than Alonso (38) and Ward (36) in 2025.

For as discombobulated as things got on the mound for the Orioles in 2025, a big element of the team’s step back was that the lineup’s production did not remotely reflect the reputations and expected upward trajectories of the hitters involved. A position-player core that looked to be quickly trending toward being one of baseball’s best suddenly didn’t seem like much of a no-doubt strength outside of shortstop Gunnar Henderson. There was still plenty of talent to warrant optimism moving forward, but not many players whose production could be counted on.

[Get more Baltimore news: Orioles team feed

This is why a player such as Alonso, whose combination of durability and consistent power production is nearly unrivaled across the league, would appeal to a team such as Baltimore. No, paying a right-handed first baseman $31 million per year into his mid-30s is not an especially enticing proposition, but what Alonso can give Baltimore right away — a middle-of-the-order slugger whom new manager Craig Albernaz can confidently write into his lineup every day (Alonso played 162 games each of the past two seasons) — is exactly the kind of impact talent that a team with ambitions of returning to October should be chasing. And in order to secure a premium free agent’s productive, short-term present, teams often need to pay for his unflattering long-term future.

In tandem with Ward, Alonso fortifies an Orioles lineup that could be one of the AL’s deepest and most dangerous if enough of the younger core hitters can bounce back (Rutschman, Colton Cowser) or take a meaningful step forward (Jackson Holliday, Basallo, Dylan Beavers). But for as exciting of a splash as Alonso is on the offensive side, Baltimore’s prospects of being taken seriously as a contender in the AL East are largely predicated on how much the Orioles are able to improve their pitching staff between now and Opening Day. 

Does Baltimore have more financial flexibility to chase a top-end free-agent arm such as Framber Valdez or Tatsuya Imai — or even the next tier with Michael King or Zac Gallen? Or will president of baseball operations Mike Elias prefer to cash in some prospect capital in a trade for an available impact arm such as MacKenzie Gore or Edward Cabrera? Whether upgrades come via free agency or trade remains to be seen, but that is the crucial work that lies ahead for Elias and his front office if they are to succeed in restoring the Orioles to legitimate contender status.

Orioles get the big bat they needed as Pete Alonso cashes in on bounce-back season

ORLANDO, Fla. — Roughly 24 hours after Kyle Schwarber’s return to Philadelphia and Edwin Diaz’s deal with the Dodgers rocked the winter meetings, another titanic transaction hit the timeline Wednesday, with the reports of first baseman Pete Alonso agreeing to a five-year, $155 million deal with the Baltimore Orioles.

Last offseason, Alonso lingered on the open market for months, a sobering first journey through free agency that concluded in February with a two-year, $54 million deal to stay in Queens. Importantly, the pact featured an opt-out that enabled Alonso to hit free agency again after the 2025 season. He proceeded to have one of his best seasons as a big leaguer, helping to squander some of the doubts that surfaced about his trajectory after an underwhelming 2024 and reassert his status as one of the most reliable sluggers in the sport. 

Alonso’s bounce-back made reentering the market an obvious choice, but it still wasn’t clear how eager clubs would be to invest in him, considering the unsexy nature of his profile — a right-handed-hitting first baseman in his 30s with little-to-no defensive value — hadn’t changed. While Alonso had done his part to rejuvenate his production to something more closely resembling a true star position player, whether he warranted the nine-figure commitment that he and his agent, Scott Boras, sought remained an open question.

Enter the Orioles, an intriguing club this offseason considering their lackluster showing in 2025 amid an otherwise encouraging trajectory as a franchise over the past half-decade. Baltimore had already made two major moves to address some of the deficiencies on its roster, swinging a trade with the Angels to acquire outfielder Taylor Ward to strengthen the lineup and signing hard-throwing righty Ryan Helsley to be the new closer

With the relatively crowded state of the O’s position-player group following the Ward acquisition, it stood to reason that Ward on his own could fulfill Baltimore’s stated goal of adding a right-handed bat to complement a lineup that leaned pretty heavily left-handed. And with two right-handed first basemen already on the roster in veteran Ryan Mountcastle and 24-year-old Coby Mayo — plus two catchers who project to rotate through the DH spot in Adley Rutschman and Samuel Basallo — Alonso wasn’t an obvious fit on paper for Baltimore, at least not relative to some of the other potential suitors with more glaring holes at first or DH.

Evidently, the Orioles — amid their reported pursuits of sorely needed rotation upgrades — viewed adding Alonso as a worthwhile endeavor anyway, demonstrating a level of aggressiveness in free agency that has not been on display in Baltimore in quite some time. Although Alonso might not fit seamlessly with the current roster, he represents a definite upgrade over in-house options Mountcastle and Mayo, who now become trade chips (if they weren’t already). And rather than settling for Ward as their most prominent offensive upgrade of the offseason, the Orioles have acquired a pair of the most prolific right-handed home run hitters in baseball: Among all righty bats, only Aaron Judge (53), Eugenio Suarez (49) and Junior Caminero (45) hit more homers than Alonso (38) and Ward (36) in 2025.

For as discombobulated as things got on the mound for the Orioles in 2025, a big element of the team’s step back was that the lineup’s production did not remotely reflect the reputations and expected upward trajectories of the hitters involved. A position-player core that looked to be quickly trending toward being one of baseball’s best suddenly didn’t seem like much of a no-doubt strength outside of shortstop Gunnar Henderson. There was still plenty of talent to warrant optimism moving forward, but not many players whose production could be counted on.

[Get more Baltimore news: Orioles team feed

This is why a player such as Alonso, whose combination of durability and consistent power production is nearly unrivaled across the league, would appeal to a team such as Baltimore. No, paying a right-handed first baseman $31 million per year into his mid-30s is not an especially enticing proposition, but what Alonso can give Baltimore right away — a middle-of-the-order slugger whom new manager Craig Albernaz can confidently write into his lineup every day (Alonso played 162 games each of the past two seasons) — is exactly the kind of impact talent that a team with ambitions of returning to October should be chasing. And in order to secure a premium free agent’s productive, short-term present, teams often need to pay for his unflattering long-term future.

In tandem with Ward, Alonso fortifies an Orioles lineup that could be one of the AL’s deepest and most dangerous if enough of the younger core hitters can bounce back (Rutschman, Colton Cowser) or take a meaningful step forward (Jackson Holliday, Basallo, Dylan Beavers). But for as exciting of a splash as Alonso is on the offensive side, Baltimore’s prospects of being taken seriously as a contender in the AL East are largely predicated on how much the Orioles are able to improve their pitching staff between now and Opening Day. 

Does Baltimore have more financial flexibility to chase a top-end free-agent arm such as Framber Valdez or Tatsuya Imai — or even the next tier with Michael King or Zac Gallen? Or will president of baseball operations Mike Elias prefer to cash in some prospect capital in a trade for an available impact arm such as MacKenzie Gore or Edward Cabrera? Whether upgrades come via free agency or trade remains to be seen, but that is the crucial work that lies ahead for Elias and his front office if they are to succeed in restoring the Orioles to legitimate contender status.

NBA Cup 2025: Suns rule out Devin Booker ahead of showdown with Thunder

Facing the 23-1 Oklahoma City Thunder in the 2025 NBA Cup quarterfinals was going to be difficult enough for the Phoenix Suns. Now they have to do it without Devin Booker.

The Suns star was ruled out for Wednesday’s game against the Thunder due to a groin strain ahead of the game, which is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. ET in OKC. He was present for shootaround, but will not be able to suit up for the game.

Booker hasn’t played since the Suns’ win over the Los Angeles Lakers on Dec. 1, when he exited the game early with the groin injury. He’s missed two games since then, but Suns head coach Jordan Ott said last weekend there was a chance he would be able to play Wednesday.

Instead, the Suns will play without their leading scorer for a third straight game. Without him, they have lost 117-98 to the Houston Rockets and beaten the Minnesota Timberwolves 108-105.

With Booker not playing, the Thunder are -1200 favorites to beat Phoenix and continue one of the best starts in NBA history.

NBA Cup 2025: Suns rule out Devin Booker ahead of showdown with Thunder

Facing the 23-1 Oklahoma City Thunder in the 2025 NBA Cup quarterfinals was going to be difficult enough for the Phoenix Suns. Now they have to do it without Devin Booker.

The Suns star was ruled out for Wednesday’s game against the Thunder due to a groin strain ahead of the game, which is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. ET in OKC. He was present for shootaround, but will not be able to suit up for the game.

Booker hasn’t played since the Suns’ win over the Los Angeles Lakers on Dec. 1, when he exited the game early with the groin injury. He’s missed two games since then, but Suns head coach Jordan Ott said last weekend there was a chance he would be able to play Wednesday.

Instead, the Suns will play without their leading scorer for a third straight game. Without him, they have lost 117-98 to the Houston Rockets and beaten the Minnesota Timberwolves 108-105.

With Booker not playing, the Thunder are -1200 favorites to beat Phoenix and continue one of the best starts in NBA history.

Kyle Finnegan and Detroit Tigers reportedly agree to 2-year, $19 million contract

DETROIT — Right-hander Kyle Finnegan and the Detroit Tigers agreed to a $19 million, two-year contract pending a physical, a person familiar with the situation told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the agreement had not been announced.

A 34-year-old who was an All-Star in 2024 when he had a career-high 38 saves, Finnegan was acquired by the Tigers from Washington on July 31 for minor league pitchers Josh Randall and R.J. Sales. He throws mostly fastballs that averaged 96.3 mph this year and splitters, also mixing in some sliders.

Finnegan was 3-0 with a 1.50 ERA and four saves in 16 relief appearances for the Tigers, striking out 23 and walking four in 18 innings. He didn’t pitch for the Tigers between Aug. 31 and Sept. 20 because of a right adductor strain.

He was 4-4 with a 3.47 ERA with 24 saves in 56 relief appearances overall this year, striking out 55 and walking 18 in 57 innings. He had a $6 million, one-year contract that included $4 million in deferred money payable through January 2028.

He is 26-30 with a 3.55 ERA with 112 saves over 347 relief appearances in six seasons with the Nationals (2020-25) and Tigers. He struck out 343 and walked 135 in 347 1/3 innings.

Finnegan is part of a bullpen that includes right-handers Will Vest and Brenan Hanifee, and lefties Tyler Holton and Brant Hurter.

Bucks players shoot down report Giannis Antetokounmpo met with them amid trade rumors

Wednesday brought a new development in the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade rumors.

Whispers around the Milwaukee Bucks star have been swirling for a week now, since it was reported that the player and team were having conversations about his future with the franchise. The Bucks strongly denied that report, but it was still a noticeable bit of smoke in an area where some think there’s fire.

Antetokounmpo has been out since Wednesday, when he sustained a non-contact calf strain and is reportedly expected to miss around four weeks. In the meantime, NBA TV’s Chris Haynes reported Tuesday that Antetokounmpo “addressed some of his teammates recently to stress the importance of focusing on basketball and not to allow outside distractions to interfere with the process at hand.”

That was somewhat notable, though it was hardly a tell in either way when it came to Antetokounmpo’s intentions. What was interesting, however, was two of Antetokounmpo’s teammates bluntly shooting the report down.

Asked Wednesday about the reported meeting, Kyle Kuzma said he didn’t remember any such meeting:

“I don’t really know, honestly. I don’t really remember a time he met with us. Yeah, he didn’t sit us down like ‘The Apprentice.’ It didn’t go down like that.”

Kevin Porter Jr. was even firmer, blasting the report as false information and saying everyone needs to wait until Antetokounmpo himself says something:

“Did that actually happen? Are you asking me? I mean, no. This is the last thing I’m gonna say about anything regarding false information. At the end of the day, everyone needs to wait until Giannis says something. Because all of this is just he say, she say and I guarantee you when we start winning and go 8-0, 9-0, you won’t see nothing about the Bucks. You won’t say, ‘Oh, the Bucks are 8-0, 9-0, they’re flourishing and Giannis is —’ We’re not gonna see that positive news. At least for me, this is the last time I’m going to answer anything false.”

It’s worth noting that Haynes said Antetokounmpo only met with “some” Bucks players, but if the whole point was to urge the Bucks to stay focused on basketball instead of trade rumors, it would be a curious decision to exclude Kuzma and Porter. Both players are averaging at least 25 minutes per game for Milwaukee and rank second and fourth on the team in points per game.

So there appears to be some confusion on how much Antetokounmpo is even talking to his teammates. For now, the Bucks are 10-15 and have several more games to play before the Greek Freak is healthy again.

Bucks players shoot down report Giannis Antetokounmpo met with them amid trade rumors

Wednesday brought a new development in the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade rumors.

Whispers around the Milwaukee Bucks star have been swirling for a week now, since it was reported that the player and team were having conversations about his future with the franchise. The Bucks strongly denied that report, but it was still a noticeable bit of smoke in an area where some think there’s fire.

Antetokounmpo has been out since Wednesday, when he sustained a non-contact calf strain and is reportedly expected to miss around four weeks. In the meantime, NBA TV’s Chris Haynes reported Tuesday that Antetokounmpo “addressed some of his teammates recently to stress the importance of focusing on basketball and not to allow outside distractions to interfere with the process at hand.”

That was somewhat notable, though it was hardly a tell in either way when it came to Antetokounmpo’s intentions. What was interesting, however, was two of Antetokounmpo’s teammates bluntly shooting the report down.

Asked Wednesday about the reported meeting, Kyle Kuzma said he didn’t remember any such meeting:

“I don’t really know, honestly. I don’t really remember a time he met with us. Yeah, he didn’t sit us down like ‘The Apprentice.’ It didn’t go down like that.”

Kevin Porter Jr. was even firmer, blasting the report as false information and saying everyone needs to wait until Antetokounmpo himself says something:

“Did that actually happen? Are you asking me? I mean, no. This is the last thing I’m gonna say about anything regarding false information. At the end of the day, everyone needs to wait until Giannis says something. Because all of this is just he say, she say and I guarantee you when we start winning and go 8-0, 9-0, you won’t see nothing about the Bucks. You won’t say, ‘Oh, the Bucks are 8-0, 9-0, they’re flourishing and Giannis is —’ We’re not gonna see that positive news. At least for me, this is the last time I’m going to answer anything false.”

It’s worth noting that Haynes said Antetokounmpo only met with “some” Bucks players, but if the whole point was to urge the Bucks to stay focused on basketball instead of trade rumors, it would be a curious decision to exclude Kuzma and Porter. Both players are averaging at least 25 minutes per game for Milwaukee and rank second and fourth on the team in points per game.

So there appears to be some confusion on how much Antetokounmpo is even talking to his teammates. For now, the Bucks are 10-15 and have several more games to play before the Greek Freak is healthy again.