Where is Giannis Antetokounmpo on Forbes’ list of highest-paid NBA players?

Giannis Antetokounmpo

Forbes has published its list of the highest-paid players in the NBA, and Athens-born Giannis Antetokounmpo features high up on it.

The list refers to the income of NBA stars in the 2022-23 season. There are two categories of income. One is the player’s contract and the other is sponsorships. Giannis Antetokounmpo is of course a member of the top 10 and appears at No. 4 with $86.5 million.

Of these, $42.5 million are from his contract with the Milwaukee Bucks for the 2022-2023 season, while the remaining $44 million are from various sponsorships. Forbes reported: “For the second year in a row, Antetokounmpo is the only one of the NBA’s top ten who is not yet 30 years old.

The 27-year-old Bucks forward, who was the subject of the Disney+ movie Rise released in June, works with online gaming site Novibet and watchmaker Breitling and has taken stakes in several companies, including telemedicine platform Antidote Health.

He recently opened a shop, AntetokounBros, with his four brothers at the Athens airport.”

LeBron James is at the top of the list with $124.5 million, with $44.5 coming from the contract he has with the Los Angeles Lakers and the other $80 million dollars from deals with sponsors.

The champion with the Warriors Steph Curry is 2nd with $95.1 million and in 3rd place is Kevin Durant with $88 million.

After Antetokounmpo on the list, we find Russell Westbrook in 5th place with $82.1 million and in 6th place Klay Thompson with $60.6 million. No. 7 is Damian Lillard ($60.5 million), followed by James Harden ($53 million), Paul George ($51 million), and Jimmy Butler ($49.7 million).

Meanwhile, “the Greek Freak” said he wasn’t worried about his team’s 0-5 preseason performance, including a 107-97 loss to the Brooklyn Nets on Wednesday night, while acknowledging they have some areas to clean up before the regular season begins next week.

“It doesn’t worry me,” Antetokounmpo said after Wednesday’s game. “What worries me is our habits and building good habits.

“Right now, we’re not vocal enough. We’re not urgent enough. We’re not hungry enough. But at the end of the day, it’s the preseason. We have the whole regular season to find ourselves.”

After Antetokounmpo spent the summer playing for the Greek national team at Eurobasket, the Bucks wanted to be cautious with his minutes during the preseason. He started Wednesday for just his second exhibition game and scored 24 points on 6-of-21 shooting against the Nets while grabbing 14 rebounds in 32 minutes.

Antetokounmpo said after the game that he felt “a little bit out of rhythm” after such limited action — he also played 21 minutes on Oct. 6 against the Atlanta Hawks — during the exhibition season, but still felt confident in the way he paced himself during training camp.

“It’s not going to be easy,” he said. “I think sometimes your mind forgets and thinks it’s going to be easy. But I feel like, me personally, you’ve got to come out and set the tone, play hard. Build good habits, play to improve, play for the team. And as a team, we have to be hungry, we’ve got to play together, we have to defend better.”

Milwaukee had an unorthodox preseason schedule featuring a trip to Abu Dhabi last week for the first two NBA games in the country’s history against the Hawks.

Upon returning to the states, the Bucks closed out their exhibition schedule with a preseason back-to-back against Chicago and Brooklyn on Tuesday and Wednesday this week.

Nearly all of their rotation players sat out Tuesday’s game in Chicago, and the Bucks were also short-handed for Wednesday’s game, missing Grayson Allen (illness), Pat Connaughton (calf) and Wesley Matthews, who missed the entire preseason with an ankle injury.

Connaughton sat out his second straight game after starting Saturday in Abu Dhabi, but Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer called the injury minimal and said the team was being cautious. Budenholzer added that Matthews was “getting close” to a return to the court.

The Bucks have about a week to go before their season opener on Oct. 20 against the Philadelphia 76ers, for which they will already be playing without forward Khris Middleton, who started to resume basketball activities in practice this week for the first time since undergoing wrist surgery in July.

But Antetokounmpo still felt confident in his team’s ability to get back on track before the games begin to count next week.

“Guys are down, who knows when they’re going to get back, so this is who we have right now,” Antetokounmpo said. “We still have a great team, but we’re seven or eight days from the next game and when it really counts. We’ve got to buckle down and start trying to build good habits.”

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