Basketball player Giannis Antetokounmpo spotted wearing a Rolex

At a Milwaukee Brewers promotional appearance, NBA superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo took to the podium wearing a Rolex Sky-Dweller Ref. 326934 — a pairing of athletic achievement and horological sophistication that felt entirely appropriate for the two-time MVP and reigning NBA champion.
The Sky-Dweller Ref. 326934 features a 42mm Oystersteel case paired with an 18k white gold fluted bezel — one of the hallmark aesthetic signatures of the model. The vivid blue sunray-brushed dial displays both a 12-hour local time and a second time zone via an off-center 24-hour disc, while an annual calendar complication resides discreetly around the dial's outer ring. Beneath the case sits the Rolex Calibre 9001, a 9-patent movement with a 72-hour power reserve and a paramagnetic blue Parachrom hairspring. The Ring Command bezel — which mechanically links to the movement to allow intuitive mode switching — remains one of the most clever interface solutions in modern watchmaking.
First introduced at Baselworld 2012, the Sky-Dweller targeted the frequent-flyer professional market, but quickly earned collector respect for its engineering density. The Ref. 326934 specifically — introduced as part of Rolex's reference restructuring — offers the aspirational combination of sporty Oystersteel and dressy white gold, making it broadly wearable across contexts. It sits at the premium end of the steel Sky-Dweller spectrum precisely because of that white gold bezel upgrade.
Giannis, born in Athens and raised between continents before becoming an NBA icon in Milwaukee, has a personal relationship with time zones that lends genuine narrative weight to his Sky-Dweller choice. The watch is not a vanity flex — it is a tool complication worn by someone whose life has always crossed meridians.
At an official retail of $14,800 USD, the Ref. 326934 is technically attainable, but grey market reality tells a different story: demand has pushed secondary prices well above $30,000, reflecting a broader Rolex supply shortage that has made the Sky-Dweller one of the brand's most desirable — and hardest to acquire — references. For a watch of this mechanical complexity, the premium is entirely justified.