Brandon Jennings reunites with the Milwaukee Bucks on a 10-day contract

Matt Velazquez
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Brandon Jennings (right) has been playing with the Milwaukee Bucks' G League affiliate, the Wisconsin Herd. On Sunday morning, Jennings signed a 10-day contract with the Bucks.

Brandon Jennings is no stranger to the itinerant life of a basketball player.

He played in Italy out of high school, suited up for five teams — including the Milwaukee Bucks — in eight NBA seasons and last summer elected to sign with Shanxi Zhongyu, a professional team in China.

For him, the trip to China had nothing to do with the NBA, yet it ultimately played a role in getting him back to the league and the city where his NBA career started.

"It was for me, personally," Jennings said at the Bucks' Sports Science Center Sunday afternoon fresh off his first practice with the team after signing a 10-day contract that morning. "Me overcoming my Achilles injury, me growing up and maturing and just my mental (well-being) and just becoming a better man."

While in China, Jennings appeared in 13 games, averaging 27.9 points, 6.8 assists, 5.1 rebounds and 2.7 steals before being waived in December. When Jennings returned to the United States, he spent a few weeks "at home being a dad and basically just chilling" before signing into the G League as a free agent.

And when he did, the Bucks' G League affiliate, the Wisconsin Herd, happened to have the top spot in the waiver wire. They used it to claim Jennings on Feb. 13, marking a reunion between the franchise and the player the Bucks selected with the 10th overall pick in the 2009 NBA draft and who spent his first four seasons in Milwaukee.

“I think it’s a fun story and it’s a good story and for us there may have been a little extra incentive because of knowing Brandon as a person — organizationally and what he’s done for us," Bucks general manager Jon Horst said. "You just have the familiarity, which is good. But it was really a result of our overall process that we go through. We study and research and analyze and evaluate basketball everywhere in the world — that’s one of the things we want to try to do.

"We don’t forget about the guys in China. We don’t forget about the guys in Europe or guys in South America or wherever they’re playing. We track those guys and Brandon played well in China."

Shortly after claiming Jennings, Horst and Dave Dean, who holds the dual position of Herd general manager and Bucks vice president of basketball operations, began having conversations with their new point guard. They impressed on Jennings that this was an opportunity for him to play in the United States and demonstrate what he could still do — both to the world at large as well as the Bucks organization.

"Learn our system, show us how you can be effective in our system, develop in our system, do things the right way and really impress us," Horst said. "Worst case scenario, you impress the rest of the league; best case scenario, you impress us and there’s an opportunity with us.”

Ultimately, that's what happened. Jennings played seven games with the Herd, averaging 21.4 points on 34.6% shooting while dishing out 7.6 assists and grabbing 4.7 rebounds per game. With point guards Malcolm Brogdon and Matthew Dellavedova sidelined by injuries, the Bucks are in need of help at that position and Jennings got the call thanks in part to his knowledge of the Bucks' system from playing in Oshkosh.

“It was good to have him here, brought a lot of energy," Bucks coach Joe Prunty said. "The nice thing is he brought a little bit of knowledge of the system because he’s been playing with the G League team. ...That’s going to be very helpful and creates that opportunity to put him in a game quickly. We’re hoping to utilize him soon.”

The Bucks went from Sunday's practice to the airport to travel to Memphis for Monday's game against the Grizzlies. It was a quick turnaround for him after arriving from Oshkosh, but he's grateful for the chance to be with the Bucks and back in the city where his NBA career started.

“I have 10 days, so every day is a good opportunity for me," Jennings said. "Just come in, play hard, run the second unit, get guys the ball, get Giannis the ball, make the right plays and just play hard every night. 

“Just being back in Milwaukee just feels like home. I can call Milwaukee, the Bucks, my family. A lot of people don’t get second chances, but I’m blessed and I’m grateful for this opportunity.”

Moving on: Jennings' addition came at the expense of forward Mirza Teletovic, who the Bucks waived Saturday night.

Teletovic, who signed a three-year, $31 million deal with the Bucks in the summer of 2016, has been sidelined for the past four months, first by a left knee injury, then by the appearance of pulmonary emboli — blood clots in his lungs — which were discovered in December.

Since December, physicians from within the organization and outside it have been evaluating Teletovic's condition, which can be life-threatening for any individual. For Teletovic, this is the second time he's been sidelined by pulmonary emboli, with the first time coming in January 2015 when he was a member of the Brooklyn Nets.

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Ultimately, the Bucks and Teletovic came to the decision that it was best to part ways, with Milwaukee utilizing his roster spot on Jennings' 10-day contract.

“We’ve been working very much in connection with each other," Horst said. "We had and will continue to have a great existing relationship with Mirza and his representation. We wish him the best and he knows he has the organization’s full support and the opportunity to be around the organization as much as he wants because of our relationship going forward. We love him, we love his family, we wish them well and we’re here to support him in any way we can.”