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Rapid Recap: Bucks 116, Mavericks 114

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Well, in a game that absolutely nobody wants to remember, the Bucks eked out a win against the Dallas Mavericks in a game that had no right being that close. Giannis and Kyle Kuzma led the charge in the scoring column, combining for 56 points. Dallas was led by Cooper Flagg, who dropped 26 points, nine rebounds, and four assists.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


It was a brick-fest to start from both teams, but the Bucks eventually got going from three to take a 14-5 lead at the first timeout; Giannis threw some absolute dimes to get his teammates open as the Mavs swarmed him. The Mavericks, powered by Brandon Williams, then increased their defensive intensity to go on a 9-2 run, forcing Doc to call a timeout. That timeout did very little, with Dallas proceeding to go on an 8-0 run not long after, with Klay Thompson nailing consecutive transition threes. A Bobby Portis corner triple steadied the Bucks’ ship slightly, as the Mavs led 31-27 after one.

Giannis attempted, and made, his first shot early in the second (a ferocious dunk), and then followed it up with another big slam on the following possession. The Bucks then went cold for a few possessions, allowing the Mavs to extend their lead to seven in the early going, but two AJ Green triples spurred an 8-2 Milwaukee run to tie the game at 39 with 7:25 remaining. Giannis exited the game not long after that, and Ryan Rollins picked up the slack with a personal 5-0 run. From there, things went pear-shaped for the visitors, with turnovers and poor offensive possessions galore, ending the period with the Mavs holding a 57-53 advantage.

AJ Green buried a three to start the half, but it mainly went downhill from there. Giannis became frustrated by not receiving foul calls and began looking disinterested on both ends; he rushed on offence and his positioning on defence was horrible. The Bucks did not score for over three minutes and looked completely discombobulated out there as the Mavs extended their edge to 10. Cole Anthony continued his horrid night after four first-half turnovers, taking a bunch of dumb shots, as the Mavs took an 88-79 lead into the final frame.

Things didn’t get better for Milwaukee to open the final frame, with Giannis committing consecutive turnovers to allow the Mavs to increase their lead to 13 as Doc called an early timeout. The Bucks went cold for a period after that, but fortunately, so did the Mavs. Milwaukee then took advantage of that lull and went on a serious run, eliminating the deficit and taking a six-point advantage with five minutes remaining, behind contributions from Bobby Portis, Kyle Kuzma, and Giannis. The Mavs then took advantage of really sloppy offence from the Bucks (as they are wont to do!) to take a one-point lead, but the Bucks wrestled it back and Giannis was at the line to shoot two with 1:09 on the clock to put them up three—Mavs timeout. Cooper Flagg was able to get to the basket and draw the foul on Kuzma to reduce Milwaukee’s lead to one with 1:00 left. The Bucks then had yet another horrible offensive possession, allowing Cooper Flagg to score in transition, which was then followed by (you guessed it!) another bad offensive possession and a Giannis missed three. But wait, there’s more! Kuzma then stole it on the ensuing possession to put the Bucks up three, only for Giannis to stupidly foul PJ Washington on his three (I nearly had a conniption at this point). However, Washington missed the second and had to miss the third intentionally; the Bucks grabbed the rebound and won in a gross fashion.

Stat That Stood Out​


Milwaukee’s defensive rebounding issues were on full display tonight, yet again. The Mavs grabbed 16 O-boards to the Bucks’ 8.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...l-score-recap-giannis-kyle-kuzma-cooper-flagg
 
Milwaukee Bucks Poll: Should AJ Green or Gary Trent Jr. return to the bench?

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Our Tuesday Tracker is back! Only two weeks late (mea culpa) due to technical issues we had with our new poll client. But I’m excited to unveil our new look here, because we now have the capability to allow multiple responses to a single question. In fact, you’ll have a chance to do that below!

Otherwise, this is the same polling we’ve done in previous seasons each week. If you’re new around here, we want your opinions on talking points around the Bucks, and some questions will return in future editions. You’ll also have a weekly chance to weigh in on Doc Rivers’ and Jon Horst’s job performances—essentially an approval poll, like you’d see for a politician. We end with a question about the team’s title chances.

In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, sound off on Milwaukee’s small-ish wing duo in the starting lineup, Myles Turner’s offense, and the visible issues currently nagging at a solid 7-4 squad. And while we’re a ways from the deadline, it’s never too early to start thinking about who might make for a compelling outgoing trade package.



As always, this poll will be open until midnight Central on Friday, and we’ll post the results later that day. Thanks for voting!

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-poll...oc-rivers-myles-turner-gary-trent-jr-aj-green
 
Deer Diaries Episode 221: The little details

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After a 2-2 week, which could have been 3-1 or 1-3, Kyle and Jack go through the Bucks’ slate that saw a game-winner, a fourth quarter collapse, and everything in between.

They discuss Milwaukee’s late-game offensive plan and identity (editor’s note: or lack thereof), as well as its sustainability, especially after Monday’s game against the Mavericks. They also question the defensive assignments some players have and whether those are the best options for the team. With an underrated showing this season, is the Kyle Kuzma rehabilitation project going well? What could throw a wrench into those plans, such as playing him at the 3?

Then, to end, Jack provides an update on the 36ers, and they both discuss season 2 of the Netflix show “Nobody Wants This.”

You can watch our faces move to match the audio over on Brew Hoop’s YouTube channel:

Here it is on Apple Podcasts:

View Link

For those on Spotify:

And it is available everywhere else MP3 files are shared on the web!

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-podc...etokounmpo-kyle-kuzma-milwaukee-bucks-podcast
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Charlotte Hornets Preview: Douse the nest

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In a preview before Friday night’s NBA Cup game, the 7-4 Milwaukee Bucks head to the Spectrum Center to take on Rookie of the Year candidate Kon Knueppel and the 3-7 Charlotte Hornets. The Bucks have shown a tendency to play to their opponent’s level—good and bad—so tonight’s game is a chance to right that ship and set the tone against a Hornets team that has lost three in a row.

Where We’re At​


Rebounding aside—and that’s a very big aside—the Bucks looked good against the Rockets, controlling the game for the majority of the night. They were feisty, urgent, and poised (well, for the most part). Yet they lost. Against the Mavericks, they looked a different squad entirely. The game had very little rhythm and was far more notable for what went wrong than anything that went right. Yet they won. This has made for quite the conflicting fan experience. After all, we want our team to win and look good doing so. Up against a perennially struggling Hornets team that already has five losses by 16 or more points, tonight’s game offers the chance for self-correction. For the Bucks, this is all about the mind game—and it starts with Giannis, whose cerebrality has been questionable at best thus far despite his otherworldly production and dominance. Get this right and the Bucks should exterminate the Hornets.

In what must feel like déjà vu for Charlotteans, the Hornets are again NBA basement dwellers. Currently 12th in the East, the Hornets’ only wins have come against the combined 5-26 Brooklyn Nets, Washington Wizards, and Utah Jazz. Franchise player LaMelo Ball is dealing with yet another ankle injury and has only suited up for six games so far, while secondary “star” Brandon Miller has only played twice and remains out with a shoulder injury. On the positive side, fourth overall pick Kon Knueppel has looked great, averaging 16.7 PPG, 6.4 RPG, and 3.0 APG on .452/.400/.913 shooting splits, and was just one assist shy of a triple-double against the Lakers on Monday. The Hornets’ other standout rookie, 7’1” Ryan Kalkbrenner, has also exceeded expectations thus far. He’s started all ten games and put up 9.2 PPG, 6.6 RPG, 1.0 SPG, and 2.3 BPG in just 27 MPG.

Injury Report​


For the Bucks, Giannis is questionable (left knee; patellar tendinopathy), while Taurean Prince (neck; herniated disk) and Kevin Porter Jr. (meniscus surgery) remain out.

LaMelo Ball (right ankle; impingement) practiced with the G League’s Greensboro Swarm on Tuesday, but is listed as out against the Bucks. Also out are Josh Green (left shoulder surgery), Brandon Miller (left shoulder; subluxation), and old foe Grant Williams (right knee surgery). Probable are old friend Pat Connaughton (illness), Collin Sexton (right ankle; strain), and KJ Simpson (left AC joint; sprain).

Player To Watch​


In three games against the Bucks last year, Moussa Diabaté turned into Ben Wallace: 7.3 PPG, 12.7 RPG, 1.7 APG, 1.0 SPG, and 1.3 BPG on 62% shooting from the field in just 26.4 minutes. But it was on the offensive glass—aka the current Bucks’ kryptonite—that he went absolutely berserk, hauling in an absurd 6.7 per contest, including a career high 10 in a 115-114 win last November. Through ten games this year—all off the bench—the 6’10” big is averaging career highs across the board (including 10.1 PPG, 6.9 RPG, and 1.5 BPG) and if the Bucks don’t put serious work into boxing him out, he might just muck the game up enough to give the Hornets a chance.

How To Watch​


FanDuel Sports Wisconsin at 6:00 p.m. CST.


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View Link

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...-preview-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Rapid Recap: Hornets 111, Bucks 100

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Without Giannis, the Milwaukee Bucks posted a lowly performance against the Charlotte Hornets, losing 111-100. Ryan Rollins was the lone bright spot for the visitors, with 25 points, six assists, and five rebounds. The Hornets were led by Miles Bridges, who dropped 20 points, six assists, and six rebounds.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


With Giannis out, Myles Turner got hot early, going 2/2 from three in the opening two possessions. Gary Trent Jr. and Ryan Rollins also got to the cup for buckets, but Milwaukee couldn’t contain the Hornets’ second-round pick Ryan Kalkbrenner as he got two early O-boards and putbacks, Bucks down 12-17 at the first timeout. Speaking of offensive rebounds, Moussa Diabaté, who majorly hurt the Bucks last season in that department, came in and grabbed two almost immediately. However, Ryan Rollins poised the Bucks with consecutive perimeter jumpers to equal the tally at 23 with 4:32 left in the first. Unfortunately, the visitors cooled off for the rest of the quarter as the Hornets continued their hot shooting at 58.3% for the period. Charlotte up 27-35 after one.

Bucks fan favourite Pat Connaughton entered the game to start the second and, of course, nailed two threes and a transition layup in short order. Diabaté grabbed his fourth offensive rebound early in the second, as the Bucks’ struggles boxing him out continued and the Hornets’ lead expanded to double digits. Buckets from Turner and Rollins gave the Bucks some much-needed offence, but they still couldn’t knuckle down on defence; Charlotte up 49-40 with under five minutes remaining in the half. From there, both teams went bucket for bucket, for the most part, with Turner getting going again. Hornets still up, 59-50, at half.

Things were ugly for the Bucks to open the third, as they gave up a 13-6 run to start. Kuz missing multiple layups in the half-court and transition certainly didn’t help. From there, the Hornets continued to feast on Milwaukee’s lacklustre defence, expanding their edge to 19 about halfway through the third. The Bucks tried to stem the Hornets’ scoring run by going to the zone, and, well, I guess it worked? They missed some wide-open shots, but it allowed the visitors to get out and run, reducing the deficit to 10 behind a 9-0 run. Milwaukee had a bunch of chances to reduce Charlotte’s lead further, but faltered on both ends, as the Hornets led 83-72 after three.

Charlotte wasn’t having any of Milwaukee’s comeback to open the fourth, going on a 7-2 run out of the gate as Doc called a TO. Connaughton continued to punish the Bucks with his heady play. From there, the Bucks couldn’t get going on offence, making it just a matter of time before Doc waved the white flag. That flag was waved with just under six minutes remaining, as the third team came in for a run. There was some good stuff from Mark Sears and Pete Nance in garbage time, though. Hornets win.

Stat That Stood Out​


The Bucks just couldn’t keep the Hornets off the free throw line, as they shot 27 times at the charity stripe compared to the Bucks’ 13—a season-long trend.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...ap-ryan-rollins-myles-turner-ryan-kalkbrenner
 
Bucks vs. Hornets Player Grades: Ryan Rollins’ big game not enough in disappointing loss

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With Giannis sitting this one out, the Milwaukee Bucks sleepwalked through their game with the Charlotte Hornets, losing 111-100. Ryan Rollins played really well, but just about everyone else failed to show up. Miles Bridges top-scored for the Hornets with 20 points, and five other Hornets reached double figures. Read our full summary of the game here and catch a six-minute audio recap on the Bucks+ podcast Bucks In Six Minutes below.

View Link

Player Grades​

Myles Turner​


29 minutes, 21 points, 3 rebounds, 2 assists 7/14 FG, 3/8 3P, -12

I thought Myles played well on offence, setting good screens and being aggressive. That said, Doc may have to consider having Turner play more of the Lopez-style drop instead of the aggressive coverage he’s currently in when it’s not working; he was getting burned way too much last night by drivers getting past his hips.

Grade: B-

Ryan Rollins​


32 minutes, 25 points, 6 assists, 5 rebounds, 10/15 FG, 4/6 3P, -5

What do you know? Another great Rollins game. Look, Ryan’s performance was really the only good thing to come out of this game. He was efficient on offence, though I thought he took half a step back on D. Still, if Ryan hadn’t played, this would have been a 30-point loss.

Grade: A

AJ Green​


27 minutes, 3 points, 1/4 FG, 1/3 3P, -9

As a guy who can’t really self-create, AJ struggled to make an impact last night without Giannis. Not much more to say about it. He didn’t really hurt the team like some others did, but he didn’t help much either.

Grade: C

Gary Trent Jr.​


29 minutes, 2 points, 4 assists, 1/5 FG, 0/2 3P, -25

Yikes! Yet another nothing-y game for Gary. To GT’s defence, he can’t consistently create for himself (though I’m not sure he knows this), so he’s going to look worse without Giannis playing. At the same time, it’s undeniable how bad he looks out there doing anything but catching and shooting right now (did you see him on the fast break?). Gary’s defence is also quite gimmicky and has not been very effective this season.

Grade: D+

Kyle Kuzma​


29 minutes, 8 points, 4 assists, 3/12 FG, 0/2 3P, -12

Yeah, there was no Kuzmania last night. None at all. This game was reminiscent of last season; he was missing layups, taking ill-advised shots, and generally looking out of control. No bueno.

Grade: D

Cole Anthony​


18 minutes, 4 points, 3 assists, 2/12 FG, -18

Uhhhh, is it time to look at Mark Sears to replace Anthony in the rotation? Maybe not just yet, but it’s bad right now for Cole. This game was a new low, which is actually tough to do after his last few games. He had no plan on offence, just taking loads of low-quality shots (mostly fading mid-rangers). And then you’re obviously getting next to nothing on defence.

Grade: F+

Bobby Portis​


23 minutes, 14 points, 8 rebounds, 7/12 FG, -6

Overall, Bobby played an OK game. He gave them a spark on offence in that third-quarter run. Portis did get outrebounded by Ryan Kalkbrenner and Moussa Diabate quite frequently, which wasn’t ideal; that said, Kalkbrenner is massive, and Diabate is one of the top offensive rebounders in the NBA. Bobby is not the answer to the Bucks’ rebounding woes, but fans already knew that.

Grade: B

Jericho Sims​


18 minutes, 2 points, 7 rebounds, 2 assists, 1/2 FG, -8

Considering his limitations, Jericho was alright in his minutes. He did his job, and I do like the fact that he had a few assists. However, it should be noted that Pete Nance might actually be a better fit as the fourth big on this team because of his increased offensive capabilities (despite him being slighter than Sims).

Grade: C

Doc Rivers​


Look, this team will always struggle to some degree without Giannis, given its current setup, so I can’t put that on Doc. That said, the Hornets were also missing two of their best players in LaMelo Ball and Brandon Miller, and barely broke a sweat pummeling the Bucks. The combination of Green and Trent is not really working, especially on defence, but I’m not sure what the alternative is. Maybe they try Amir Coffey to get some more size and foot speed. I thought the zone helped that third-quarter run, so credit to Doc for that, I guess? But it also felt like Charlotte just missed a bunch of open shots. I think what buttons Doc pushes from here will reveal a lot about his ability to problem-solve.

Grade: C-

Limited Minutes:
Amir Coffey

Garbage Time: Gary Harris, Andre Jackson Jr., Thanasis Antetokoumpo, Mark Sears, Pete Nance

Inactive: Giannis Antetokounmpo, Kevin Porter Jr., Taurean Prince, Alex Antetokounmpo

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • This was another solid showing from Mark Sears in garbage time (seven points on 2/3 from deep in six minutes). At the very least, I do think his ability to shoot off the catch could well be better than Cole Anthony’s. Can he get downhill and create against NBA athletes? That’s a legit question. But if Anthony keeps playing like this, Sears could be worth a try.
  • Same thing for Pete Nance, who has clearly improved over the summer (10 points on 4/5 shooting in four minutes).
  • The Bucks lost second-chance points 5-19.
  • Moussa Diabate’s ability to grab offensive rebounds needs to be studied. It’s on the scouting report every night, and yet he still grabs them at a ridiculous rate.
  • Ryan Kalkbrenner, who the Hornets picked up early in the second round, looks like an absolute steal.
  • Former Buck Pat Connaughton dropping an efficient 11 on the Bucks was the most predictable thing ever, LOL. The Bucks players embraced PC after the game, which was nice to see.

Up Next​


The Bucks head home to play the Charlotte Hornets once again on Friday, this time in an NBA Cup game. Watch at 7:00 p.m. Central on FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...stats-ryan-rollins-myles-turner-miles-bridges
 
Taurean Prince undergoes surgery to address herniated disc

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Per a team release, Bucks forward Taurean Prince underwent surgery today to address the herniated disc in his neck. The procedure was performed by Dr. Robert G. Watkins IV at the Watkins Spine Center in Los Angeles. Prince remains out indefinitely, and further updates will be provided as necessary.

Prince had been thriving in his role this season, averaging 6.1 points on 42.9% shooting from three and showing great defensive intensity, exemplified by his average of 1.1 steals and blocks per game. TP’s absence will only exacerbate the Bucks’ lack of depth at the small forward position, which was already very thin.

So, where does Milwaukee go from here? Amir Coffey is likely to receive more minutes. Gary Harris may come into the fold. However, when the Bucks can play two shooting guards at the two and three positions, I think they will try to do so as much as possible.

Bringing in external help seems unlikely due to the number of Bucks with player options for next season, making them harder to cut. Also, a disabled player exception would appear not to be on the cards because of the uncertain timeframe for Prince’s recovery. Thus, it will likely have to be a problem that is papered over internally, by whatever means necessary.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-injury-report/54089/milwaukee-bucks-nba-injury-reporttaurean-prince
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs Charlotte Hornets Preview: Time to get their lick back

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The Milwaukee Bucks will look to continue their winning streak in the NBA Cup with a home matchup against the Charlotte Hornets. The Bucks will aim to get revenge after being defeated (without Giannis) by the short-handed Hornets on Wednesday night in Charlotte, 111-100.

Where We’re at​


Yes, the Bucks didn’t have Giannis Antetokounmpo, but that is no excuse for how they played on Wednesday night. The Hornets were without their two best players, LaMelo Ball and Brandon Miller, and have a weak roster, which made them even more beatable. So, why did the Bucks lose? Two of the usual reasons: too much fouling—which led to the Hornets attempting plenty of free throws—and poor rebounding. However, the Bucks did a better job at limiting the turnovers and actually took advantage of the Hornets’. The hope that having Giannis in this game should mean Milwaukee wins easily, but Milwaukee has had issues with playing to the level of the opposition, including against bad teams.

Injury Report​


The Bucks will not have Taurean Prince (who had surgery on his neck for a herniated disk) and Kevin Porter Jr. (meniscus surgery) remains out. Giannis is listed as probable after getting some rest on Wednesday.

The Hornets will be without Ryan Kalkbrenner (personal reasons), Josh Green (left shoulder surgery), Brandon Miller (left shoulder subluxation), and old foe Grant Williams (right knee surgery). LaMelo Ball is expected to return to the lineup tonight, as he has been upgraded to probable.

Player To Watch​


I am the biggest AJ Green fan on the Brew Hoop staff, which is why it pains me to say that Green has looked rough the past week. Green is struggling on the defensive side, similar to his wingmate, Gary Trent Jr., and the fouls are piling up quickly, forcing him to sit on the bench for extended periods. Usually reliable on offense, he has had his struggles on that side of the ball as well. While he shot the ball well against the Mavericks, in the other three games, he has been 4/16 from three. For the Bucks—and more importantly, me—he has to perform better.

How To Watch​


FanDuel Sports Wisconsin at 7:00 p.m. CST.

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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...-preview-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Rapid Recap: Bucks 147, Hornets 134 (OT)

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The Milwaukee Bucks remain undefeated in NBA Cup play through 10 games, beating the Charlotte Hornets in overtime, 147-134. Kyle Kuzma had his best game as a Buck, going for 29 points, 10 rebounds, and five assists, while Giannis ended with 25 points, 18 assists, and seven rebounds. Rookie Kon Knueppel and Miles Bridges each scored 32 for the Hornets, with Knueppel going 12/20 from the floor.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


Ryan Rollins got the party started on the first possession of the game, nailing a corner three. Offensive rebounding was an issue once again for the Bucks in the early goings, with Moussa Diabate grabbing two boards in the first three minutes of the game. Kyle Kuzma was inserted into the starting lineup, with Doc Rivers swapping him in for Gary Trent Jr., and he made his presence felt early. Kuzma scored six straight points to put the Bucks up by one with 6:21 to go. Myles Turner then caught fire from beyond the arc, hitting three straight from distance, followed by a Kuzma three to put them up five. After staggering the pair of Turner and Giannis for the last couple of games, the Bucks went back to a full-bench lineup for the final 2:51 of the quarter. It worked initially, with the Bucks going up seven off the first possession, but the Hornets quickly took control. They went on an 11-0 run to briefly take the lead in the late stages. Yet, a pull-up mid-range jumper from Anthony and a three from Portis with 10 seconds left sent the Bucks up by one, 34-33, going into the second.

The rarely used Gary Harris started the second with a corner three off an assist from Giannis. Then the Bucks’ defense began to fall apart, with the Hornets’ guards blowing by them in the 2-3 zone. Charlotte scored on three drives to the lane and was able to re-take the lead in part because of that. Doc finally called a timeout after Sion James hit a three, putting the Hornets up by six with 7:20 to go. The Bucks couldn’t find any momentum on the defensive end, even without LaMelo Ball on the floor. With the Bucks down by four, the Hornets went on a 9-3 run to go up by 10. Kuzma continued his strong performance, scoring a couple of layups and even assisting on one. Then the highlight of the half came when Tre Mann rose and dunked on Turner to put the visitors back up by 10. The Bucks did get within six with 1:12 to go in the quarter, but a late dunk from Diabate sent the Bucks into the locker room down by eight, 69-61. Charlotte was running a blistering offense, at one point shooting 11/15 in the quarter, before finishing 13/21 for 36 points to the Bucks’ 27.

The third quarter was a bit of a back-and-forth between the two sides, but there were some positives in it for the Bucks. AJ Green, who was in the midst of a poor run of form, got going on the offensive end. Green hit a couple of threes and made three free throws after being fouled by rookie Kon Knueppel. After the second three and a spinning layup in transition by Giannis, the Bucks got it back within four points, forcing a Hornets timeout. Milwaukee continued to find their feet offensively in the third, even after the timeout, going on a 12-5 run to take back the lead, with Turner and Rollins hitting threes, and Kuzma finishing it off with an and-one layup. It became a nip-and-tuck game from there on out, with neither team gaining much of an edge. Unlike in the first quarter, the all-bench lineup worked against the Hornets, building up a six-point lead with 1:33 to go. Charlotte was able to bring it down to two points, but a Gary Harris banked triple with 12 seconds left gave the Bucks a 103-98 lead heading into the fourth.

Things stayed tight as far as the middle point of the quarter, with both teams trading buckets. The Bucks did lead by three early, but a four-point run for Miles Bridges off some free throws and a layup gave the Hornets the lead. Milwaukee did come back to tie it a few minutes later, but a Knueppel layup gave Charlotte the lead right back. After the Hornets went up by four a few minutes later, Rollins and Kuzma came alive again, with the former Toledo PG hitting a three and then a transition layup to give the Bucks the lead right back. Both sides traded buckets again until Rollins hit a mid-range jumper to give the Bucks a two-point lead with 1:18 left in regulation. After a foul by Giannis put the Bucks over the limit with under two minutes, Ball only hit 1/2 of his free throws. Kuzma again proved his mettle down the stretch with another hook shot to put the Bucks up by three with 27 ticks left on the clock. On the next possession, a wild sequence of events unfolded when a missed poster by Bridges led to Knueppel hitting a big-time three to tie the game. Giannis then tried to recreate his magical game-winner from last week against the Pacers, but this one fell way short. To the OT period we went.

Turner came alive in the most significant moments of the game in overtime, hitting two three-pointers, and after a dunk from Giannis, the Bucks went up by six, 137-131, with 2:25 on the clock. The lead got as big as nine after Kuzma nailed a wing three, but Bridges answered right back with a three of his own. After a layup from Giannis, he stole the ball away from Bridges, leading to a wide-open dunk to seal the game.

Stat That Stood Out​


“Live by the three, die by the three” has in some ways become the new mantra in the NBA, and it certainly was for the Bucks tonight. In this case, they lived, shooting 20/34 (58.8%) from deep, while the Hornets shot 17/46 (37%). It especially lifted Milwaukee in the third quarter when they were trailing, as they went 5/7 from deep to come back from a nine-point deficit and take a five-point lead heading into the fourth.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...-kyle-kuzma-giannis-ryan-rollins-kon-knueppel
 
Milwaukee Bucks Poll: Fans want change to starting wings

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In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, we asked you about the starting lineup, Myles Turner, and the Bucks’ biggest issue through a dozen games. Here are the highlights:

  • Nearly 70% of respondents want a change to the starting wing duo of AJ Green and Gary Trent Jr., with just over half of them preferring Green to remain.
  • When presented with five options regarding the on-court problems facing Milwaukee thus far, rebounding won out with nearly 53% of the vote. No other answer received more than 18%.
  • Relatedly, 71% of voters feel that Jericho Sims should be in the rotation. Milwaukee’s defensive rebounding percentage jumps 4.9% when he’s on the floor to around 75%, which would place them just inside the top ten league-wide.
  • Among voters, 39% feel Bobby Portis should be made available in trade discussions, with Kyle Kuzma (26%) and Trent (18%) the only others above 10%.
  • GM Jon Horst’s approval rating is pretty high at 67%, while head coach Doc Rivers’ is only 44%. 33% are undecided about the latter.
  • A very tiny majority of fans surveyed feel the current team isn’t good enough to win a championship right now, and only 34% believe they are.


Thanks again for voting! Check back on Tuesday for another slate of questions.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-poll...reen-gary-trent-jr-starting-lineup-doc-rivers
 
Rapid Recap: Lakers 119, Bucks 95

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Even though their opponents were without LeBron James, the Milwaukee Bucks fell to the Los Angeles Lakers 116-93. Giannis Antetokounmpo scored 32 points, grabbed 1o rebounds and had five assists—the only Buck to score over 15 points. Doncic and Reaves combined for 66 points and 10 made threes.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


With both teams in the second game of a back-to-back, it was a bit of a slow start. The sides combined to shoot under .500 almost halfway through the quarter, but after two Luka Doncic threes, it was the Lakers who had a five-point lead. While Doncic and the Lakers got going, the Bucks were stuck in neutral, not scoring any points for 3:27 of game time until Ryan Rollins hit a 13-foot floater. Doncic continued to make plays for the Lakers, including a high-arching lob to Jaxson Hayes for a dunk. They built up a 12-point lead heading into the second, 30-18. Milwaukee shot 7/21 from the floor and 3/12 from the three point line.

LA went up by as many as 14 points in the first few minutes of the second, with DeAndre Ayton scoring three straight buckets. The Bucks did get it back within single digits, with Giannis finally getting some calls and heading to the free throw line. The Greek Freak even gave the Bucks fans at Fiserv a throwback moment, where he blocked Ayton on a layup attempt. Yet, when Doncic came back in for the Lakers, they re-ballooned their lead, reaching as high as 21 points, 52-31. Things didn’t get better for the team in hunter green, as they continued to miss wide open looks and the Lakers took advantage. Over the final 3:19 of the half, Los Angeles outscored Milwaukee 13-3, taking a 65-34 lead heading into the locker room. It was the 4th fewest first half points for the Bucks since the 2014-15 season, per StatMuse.

Despite the wide margin on the scoreboard, the Bucks tried to make it a game again. In the first three minute of the third quarter, they went on a 15-5 run to get the deficit under 30 points. AJ Green and Myles Turner started to hit their shots, with Green hitting a pair of threes and Turner hitting one during the run. The two sides would trade baskets back and forth throughout the rest of the third quarter, though, with the Lakers keeping the Bucks anywhere from 18-21 points away from their lead. The Bucks did get it down to 14 in the waning seconds of the quarter, but two annoying step-back threes from Doncic made it a 20-point game heading into the fourth, 92-72. Giannis played the entire frame, scored 15 points, and dished out four assists, but Doncic scored 16 for the Lakers.

The Bucks got off to a fast start to begin the fourth, going on a 9-3 run to get the game within 13 points. After a timeout from J.J. Redick, Austin Reaves took control of the offense with Doncic on the bench. He nailed two threes to push their lead back to 16 points, earning a timeout from Doc Rivers with 6:53 to go. The Bucks were able to get it back within 13 again, but that’s as close as they got. The duo of Reaves and Doncic kept pouring it on so Rivers waved the white flag, subbing Giannis out for Andre Jackson Jr with 3:35 left in the game.

Stat That Stood Out​


10/41. That’s what the Bucks shot in the first half against the Lakers. The fatigue really seemed to set in for Milwaukee, and Los Angeles took full advantage to build a 31-point halftime lead that they never relinquished.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...annis-antetokounmpo-luka-doncic-austin-reaves
 
Bucks vs. Lakers Player Grades: Kyle Kuzma’s and Myles Turner’s rough offensive nights lead to blowout loss

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The Milwaukee Bucks dropped the second leg of their back-to-back for the second time this season, this time to the Los Angeles Lakers, 119-95. Los Angeles beat Milwaukee for the first time since the 2023-24 season, after getting swept in the two-game series last season. Read our full summary of the game here and catch a six-minute audio recap on the Bucks+ podcast, Bucks In Six Minutes, below.

View Link

Player Grades​

Giannis Antetokounmpo​


32 minutes, 32 points, 10 rebounds, 5 assists, 5 turnovers, 9/15 FG, 1/1 3PT, 13/18 FT, -12

Giannis did everything he could in the third quarter to will the Bucks back into the game, scoring 15 points and dishing out five assists. The two-time MVP even hit a three in the fourth quarter, but it wasn’t enough with everyone not named AJ Green and Gary Trent Jr. having a rough night offensively.

Grade: A-

Myles Turner​


30 minutes, 3 points, 8 rebounds, 1/4 FG, 1/2 3PT, -12

After having one of his best offensive games as a Buck, this is up there as one of Turner’s worst. He would’ve been 2/3 from three if it didn’t get overturned, but he wasn’t able to get it going against Deandre Ayton. Add in the defensive struggles in the pick-and-roll, and it was a bad night for No. 3.

Grade: D+

Ryan Rollins​


27 minutes, 10 points, 3 assists, 2 steals, 3 turnovers, 4/11 FG, 0/3 3PT, 2/4 FT, -22

Fatigue was noticeable from the jump with Rollins, as one of his first three-point attempts missed off the front of the iron. He still put up a solid all-around performance, but having to guard a white-hot Austin Reaves was not ideal, considering the load Ryan carried on Friday.

Grade: C+

Kyle Kuzma​


20 minutes, 1 point, 5 fouls, 0/6 FG, 0/5 3PT, -17

The pendulum swung back in the other direction for Kyle Kuzma. He had trouble staying in front of Luka Doncic and couldn’t get anything going offensively. Kuzma sat out the entire third quarter and didn’t re-enter until late in the fourth quarter, when there was little chance for a comeback.

Grade: F

AJ Green​


25 minutes, 15 points, 3 rebounds, 5/10 3PT, -5

The arrow keeps pointing back up for AJ Green. He had 12 points on 4/6 from three in the third quarter alone, and was a huge reason the Bucks even had a shot of pulling off the comeback. Doc needs to find more ways to get him three-point looks.

Grade: B+

Gary Trent Jr.​


24 minutes, 13 points, 5/12 FG, 3/9 3PT, -27

Trent was one of the few players who kept the Bucks offense afloat during the second half. While Gary’s efficiency wasn’t great, he was one of the better Bucks on the floor last night.

Grade: B-

Cole Anthony​


18 minutes, 0 points, 7 assists, 5 rebounds, 2 steals, 2 turnovers, 0/5 FG, -2

The more time goes on, the more it seems as if that first week of Cole Anthony isn’t really what he is. Anthony had some head-scratching decisions on offense, and he clearly had nothing on D guarding Austin Reaves. Maybe he gets better in a reduced role when Kevin Porter Jr. comes back, but until then, Cole is going to have to figure something out.

Grade: D+

Bobby Portis​


18 minutes, 8 points, 6 rebounds, 3/8 FG, 2/2 3PT, -2

It was a quiet Bobby Portis game, which can be both good or bad. BP hit his threes, but he went back to his bull-headed ways of taking contested hook shots and jumpers. There was one sequence where he posted up Reaves and spun to the middle of the floor to take a contested hook over multiple defenders.

Grade: C+

Gary Harris​


26 minutes, 6 points, 2/4 3PT, -6

Gary Harris was one of the better defenders guarding Doncic and Reaves, and he also hit some timely three-pointers. It was a solid game for Harris. He didn’t put up much in terms of his other stats, but his job is to play defense and hit threes—he did that at a solid level.

Grade: B

Doc Rivers​


It’s hard to put much of the blame on the head coach when guys aren’t hitting their shots and aren’t executing on defense. While it’s an understandable loss to a Western Conference contender, the Bucks haven’t looked good any time they’ve had to back up on the second night of their back-to-backs this season.

Grade: C

Limited Minutes:
Jericho Sims

Garbage Time: Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Mark Sears, Andre Jackson Jr., Amir Coffey

Inactive: Kevin Porter Jr., Taurean Prince, Pete Nance, Alex Antetokounmpo

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • Giannis’ performance was the 156th time in his NBA career where he logged 30+ points, 10+ rebounds, and five+ assists. He just needs two more performances like that to past two Bucks legends in Kareem-Abdul Jabbar and Oscar Robertson for the most in NBA history.
  • Coming into tonight, Giannis was averaging the most paint points in NBA history (since the NBA started tracking it in 1997), at over 23 points per game. He added another 16 tonight, going 8/14 from inside (57.1%).
  • The Bucks struggled defending the pick-and-roll with Doncic tonight, with Ayton and Jaxson Hayes combining for 30 points. Rollins said that the communication has to be better in those moments, regardless of how tired they are:
“It boils down to that, and if you miscommunicate, then it kind of messes up the switches and getting back in front of it. [We have to] do a better job being on the same page of what we’re doing; it’s as simple as that.”
  • The Bucks’ worst shooting performances have all come in the three games they’ve had on the SEGABABA. They shot 43% against the Toronto Raptors, 45% against the Dallas Mavericks, and the worst of the bunch last night against the Lakers at 40%.
  • After starting the season 4-1, the Bucks have tailed off to go 4-6 since then, and haven’t won two in a row since they beat the New York Knicks and Golden State Warriors back in the second week of the season. Giannis talked about the need to be more humble in victory and learn how to improve from those games:
“I always try to play to win… If that’s going to be us winning two in a row, three in a row, 10 in a row, it doesn’t really matter to me. I just really want to keep on figuring out ways to win. We have to be more consistent and find a way to not be complacent when we have a good game. To come in here and being humble, to figure out a way to watch film and see what we can do better. We dropped the ball a little bit. We have to figure out ways, when we are in the high, to be humble enough to understand that we have 68 more games to go. We gotta keep on competing, gotta keep on learning, gotta keep watching film, see what we didn’t do well when we won the game. There are so many aspects in the game you can keep on getting better, and that’s what I think we are missing, being humble in victory.”

Up Next​


The Bucks have an off day today as they travel to Cleveland for their second game of the season against the Cavaliers on Monday. The tip-off is scheduled for 6:00 p.m. Central from Rocket Arena, and you can watch it on Peacock or listen to it on the radio at 620 AM/103.3 FM.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...tats-giannis-myles-turner-kyle-kuzma-aj-green
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Los Angeles Lakers Preview: A chance to prove the doubters wrong

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Following an OT win last night, the Bucks back up tonight against one of the NBA’s top teams in the Los Angeles Lakers. This will be the teams’ first time matching up this season, but the Bucks had the wood over LA last year, going 2-0.

Where We’re At​


As I mentioned, the Bucks secured a win in overtime last night against the Hornets, whom they had lost to just two nights prior on the road. Last night was a tale of two halves, with the second half being much better than the first. Before that game, Milwaukee beat the Mavericks on the road behind a fourth-quarter comeback. In short, the Bucks have been like Jekyll and Hyde; once fans get excited, they seem to have a let-down game. Tonight against LA, there will be nowhere to hide. Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves have been among the NBA’s most dangerous duos, and will punish them for any little mistake they make on defence. Any breakdown in pick-and-roll coverage, or hand in the cookie jar, will be capitalised on. On the other hand, a win tonight will put fans at ease and have them back on board.

The Lakers have also been splitting games over the last week, beginning their road trip with a loss to the Trae Young-less Hawks, beating the Hornets by 10, losing big to the Thunder, and taking down the lowly Pelicans last night. Of course, LA is led by Luka Doncic, or “skinny Luka,” as he has been labeled following an offseason body transformation. Doncic seems to be on something of a revenge tour after recently fired Mavs GM Nico Harrison cast him away because Harrison didn’t believe he was durable enough to build around. Doncic is posting ridiculous averages of 34.9 PPG, 8.9 APG, and 9.1 RPG on 47.6% shooting from the floor. Shutting him down should be easy enough!

Injury Report​


Both teams played last night; thus, updates will be available at midday with statuses for tonight’s game. With that said, we already know that Kevin Porter Jr. and Taurean Prince will be out for the Bucks. For the Lakers, we know that LeBron James and Gabe Vincent will miss.

Player To Watch​


I’m going with Gary Harris, who gave the Bucks a nice boost last night. The other Gary, of the Trent Jr. variety, has been poor this season. I haven’t loved Trent’s play on either end, especially on defence, where it looked last night like he was uninterested as he halfheartedly gambled for steal after steal, leaving his teammates in a vulnerable position. On the other hand, Harris seems a much steadier ship on D, but can he make enough threes to be respected on O and not clog things up?

How To Watch​


FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin, NBA TV, and the following local stations at 7:00 p.m. Central:

WDJT & WYTU (Milwaukee)
WISC (Madison)
WMEI (Green Bay)
WECX (Eau Claire/La Crosse)
WYOW (Wausau)
WQAD (Davenport, IA, Rock Island/Moline, IL)


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...-preview-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Cleveland Cavaliers Preview: An Erie déjà vu

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The Milwaukee Bucks take a short road trip to Ohio to take on the Cleveland Cavaliers on Monday night. The Bucks lost a close contest there earlier this season and will look to even the season series before their Milwaukee matches.

Where We’re At​


Thank goodness the Bucks didn’t play yesterday and don’t play tomorrow. They played their third B2B of the young season on Friday and Saturday, effectively losing twice although the standings recorded an overtime win against the Hornets as a win. Still, they take a reasonable record into Cleveland and should be excited by the twofer of rest days that follow. Here’s hoping that a quorum of Bucks come to play against the Cavs, with many of them battling inconsistency (Kyle Kuzma, Gary Trent Jr.) and some of them battling the wrong kind of consistency (Cole Anthony).

Our colleagues over at Fear the Sword have been COOKING, let me tell you: 10 articles this weekend?! They’ve catalogued what has been a bit of a bumpy stretch for our friends on Erie: barely beating the Grizzlies, getting pantsed by the Raptors (been there), and splitting a pair of games to the Heat. If you’re looking for reasons to be concerned about the Cavs, Corey Walsh has four: Evan Mobley’s fluctuating usage, a lack of effort outside a few role players, Jarrett Allen’s low usage, and overreliance on Mitchell’s heroics, under the broad banner of lacking identity. All told, this team is in a different place from their first matchup with Milwaukee.

Injury Report​


Same old, same old for the Bucks: Giannis is probable (left knee patellar tendinopathy) and Kevin Porter Jr. (right knee meniscus surgery) and Taurean Prince (neck surgery) are out.

For the Cavs, Darius Garland (left “great” toe injury management), Max Strus (left foot surgery – Jones fracture) and Jaylon Tyson (concussion) are out.

Player To Watch​


Ryan Rollins topped the team in minutes last time out against the Cavs and notched the highest plus-minus to boot. Here’s hoping he sees a similar workload this time out as he fights for the mantle of second banana.

How To Watch​


Peacock (yeah) at 6:00 p.m. CST.


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...-preview-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Rapid Recap: Cavaliers 118, Bucks 106

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The Milwaukee Bucks fought hard against the Cleveland Cavaliers but ran out of gas when Giannis left in the second quarter with a groin injury, losing 106-118. Ryan Rollins led the Bucks with 24 points and five assists, while Donovan Mitchell dominated for the Cavs with 37 points and seven helpers.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


It was a sensational start from the Bucks, who got off to an 11-2 run, but especially for Giannis. It was next-level stuff from the big fella, who scored or assisted on the Bucks’ first 23 points! Within that stretch, Rollins hit a few threes, as did AJ Green. Giannis was able to get out on the fast break and finish multiple times at the rim, as well as a Dirk fade for good measure. The score was 30-16 at the four-minute mark, and things were looking good. Unfortunately for Milwaukee, it was at this point that Donovan Mitchell began to fry, putting Gary Trent Jr. in the blender multiple times. After leading by a substantial margin throughout the period, the Bucks were up by just seven, 33-26, after one quarter.

The Bucks tried Gary Harris on Mitchell to open the second period, but to no avail, as the superstar put more moves on the visitors. Another Mitchell transition attack was immediately followed by an altercation between Trent and Thomas Bryant, who shoved GT into the front row, earning himself a technical foul. Both teams went dry on offence for the next few minutes, but some untimely turnovers from Ryan Rollins allowed the Cavs to eke their way in front at the five-minute mark. A few minutes later, the Hearts of Bucks fans collectively stopped when Giannis went to the locker room holding his groin. However, Kuzma was able to keep the Bucks afloat, with three buckets to end the period, as the Bucks were only down two, 57-59, after two quarters.

The team announced that Giannis would be out for the rest of the game with a groin strain at half. Former Buck Sam Merrill nailed two threes off the bat to start the third, but the Bucks responded with consecutive threes of their own. Without Giannis, Milwaukee actually did quite a good job of staying with the Cavs; Gary Trent Jr. got going a little bit, and Bobby Portis was able to use his size advantage down low. The Bucks’ guards did a solid job making the Cavs’ guards uncomfortable, resulting in numerous misses. Milwaukee ended the quarter down 88-92 going into the fourth.

AJ Green got the Bucks started off on the right foot in the final frame with a give-and-go triple, and then Trent made another few shots from inside the ark as he continued to gain rhythm. Amazingly, the Bucks were down just six with as many minutes to play as Kenny Atkinson called time. Out of the timeout, the Bucks went to their zone, which was promptly busted by Merrill, hitting his sixth three-pointer of the night. The visitors continued to fight, but the Cavs put their foot down from there, breaking the Bucks’ will, primarily behind Donovan Mitchell’s stellar play as the lead swelled to 14. Cavs win.

Stat That Stood Out​


With Giannis out for much of the game, Cleveland’s size was simply too much to overcome. The Cavs beat the Bucks 54-34 in paint points.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...e-recap-giannis-ryan-rollins-donovan-mitchell
 
Bucks vs. Cavaliers Player Grades: Giannis’ terrific start sullied by injury

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The Milwaukee Bucks went down to the Cleveland Cavaliers last night, losing two games in a row for the first time this season. The headline from this game was obviously Giannis leaving in the second quarter with a groin complaint; the big fella was having one heck of a game before that. For the Cavs, Donovan Mitchell just went to work on the Bucks, slicing and dicing for 37 points. Read our full summary of the game here and catch a six-minute audio recap on the Bucks+ podcast Bucks In Six Minutes below.

View Link

Player Grades​

Giannis Antetokounmpo​


13 minutes, 14 points, 4 assists, 5 rebounds, 1 steal, 6/10 FG, +2

In the minutes played, Giannis was otherworldly. As I mentioned in the rapid recap, the Bucks’ first 23 points were accounted for by GA, which is wild. He was orchestrating everything out there and making every right read. It just sucks that he got injured.

Grade: A+

Myles Turner​


37 minutes, 15 points, 7 rebounds, 3 steals, 4/9 FG, 4/5 3P, +1

Myles played decently in this one. He isn’t going to create his own shot, but he competed on both ends and was impactful in his minutes against the towering duo of Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley. The players must be aware that when they pass him the ball and he doesn’t immediately shoot it, there needs to be a “next action” right away; the possessions where guys look to him to make a play on his own go nowhere.

Grade: B+

Ryan Rollins​


29 minutes, 24 points, 5 assists, 4 turnovers, 9/22 FG, 5/10 3P, +1

Ryan wasn’t as efficient as usual, and he turned it over too much. While he needs to improve on those things, I mostly attribute that to unrealistic expectations being placed on him to lead the offence after Giannis went down. The ball was placed in his hands to make a play out of nothing against that defence. Tough.

Grade: B

Kyle Kuzma​


24 minutes, 10 points, 5 rebounds, 2 assists, 1 steal, 4/12 FG, +2

I didn’t hate Kuzma’s minutes. Again, asking him to be a primary option against the Cavs is tough. Regardless, I thought he competed hard and tried to play through the system.

Grade: B-

AJ Green​


40 minutes, 12 points, 4 assists, 1 steal, 4/10 FG, 4/8 3P, -10

Finally, a game where AJ didn’t find himself in foul trouble, which is reflected in him playing 40 minutes. I thought Green took his chances and played hard, but he still needs to refine some aspects of his defensive positioning.

Grade: B

Gary Trent Jr.​


31 minutes, 12 points, 2 turnovers, 5/10 FG, 2/5 3P, -18

I’m not sure what to think of Trent’s game on defence. On one hand, GT was set up to fail guarding Donovan Mitchell; on the other, he definitely could have done better at forcing him one way and not allowing him to reject screens. On offence, it was good to see Gary gain some rhythm in the second half.

Grade: C+

Cole Anthony​


21 minutes, 4 points, 8 assists, 2 turnovers, 2/8 FG, -11

It was another rough game on offence for Cole, but his passing was a positive.

Grade: C

Bobby Portis​


26 minutes, 11 points, 6 rebounds 3/7 FG, -13

This has always been a bad matchup for Bobby, but he competed hard and kep the ball moving on offence.

Grade: C+

Doc Rivers​


Talking about the portion of the game where Giannis was playing, I give Doc credit. He had the team prepared for the game, and I really liked the cross-screen set they used to get GA open on the block. Of course, after the big fella went down, things got much tougher, naturally. I will say, though, that Doc just is not creative enough in getting a movement shooter like AJ Green more looks. Green seems to either get his shots off doing the dirty work in inverted pick-and-rolls with Giannis or off spot-ups. AJ is capable of much more, and Doc isn’t doing enough to maximise him.

Grade: B-

Limited Minutes:
Gary Harris, Jericho Sims

DNP-CD: Amir Coffey, Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Andre Jackson Jr., Pete Nance, Mark Sears

Inactive: Kevin Porter Jr., Taurean Prince, Alex Antetokounmpo

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • According to Marc Stein, Giannis will undergo an MRI today to assess the extent of his injury.
  • Doc said that Giannis grabbed his groin multiple times beofre the injury that took him out occured:

“He grabbed [his groin], I want to say in the first quarter and I asked him then. He said it was fine. Then I think he grabbed it again and he said it was fine. And then the third time, you know, is when it happened. But I think it happened earlier, in my opinion.”

Up Next​


The Bucks will head home to play the Philadelphia 76ers on Thursday. Catch the action at 7:00 p.m. Central on FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...-giannis-ryan-rollins-donovan-mitchell-injury
 
Giannis to miss 1-2 weeks with groin strain

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There is finally an update on Giannis Antetokounmpo’s injury status. After leaving Monday night’s 118-106 loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers late in the second quarter due to a left groin strain, it was revealed this afternoon that he will only be out 1-2 weeks, with the injury being classed as low-grade. ESPN’s Shams Charania reported the news at 4:14 p.m. Central time, but it was head coach Doc Rivers who initially revealed he would be out for two weeks while on an appearance on the podcast Courtside with Gale Klappa, which was published about two hours earlier.

Giannis was off to a tremendous start in the 2025 season as the lone All-Star on this iteration of the Bucks. In the 13 games this season, the two-time MVP looked primed to add a third trophy to his cabinet, averaging 31.2 PPG (4th in the NBA), 10.8 RPG (7th), 6.8 APG (15th), and shot 62.9% from the field (8th), leading all Bucks players in those categories.

While it could’ve been a lot worse for the Bucks, losing a player like Giannis for any extended period of time is never a good thing. That is especially true considering the numbers the Bucks have put up when he’s been on and off the floor. According to Justin Garcia, the Bucks’ offense increases by 21 points per 100 possessions when Giannis is on the floor. The highest mark before this season was 9.2, essentially saying that the Bucks have played at a 58-win pace with him on the floor and a 14-win pace with him off.

We’ll have to wait until Wednesday to see who Doc Rivers decides to place in the starting lineup for Giannis, with Kyle Kuzma presumably moving down to the four in the front court next to Myles Turner. If I had to make an educated guess, I would expect Gary Trent Jr. to get the nod, considering that Milwaukee is also down Taurean Prince as well, who would’ve slotted in at the small forward position.

As for when we could expect Giannis to return, on the optimistic side, if it’s only a week, he would be ready for either next Wednesday against the Miami Heat or Friday the 28th against the New York Knicks in the final NBA Cup group-play game. That would only cause him to miss 3-4 games this season. Yet, based on what Rivers has said and the assumption that the Bucks will be more cautious about bringing Giannis back, two weeks would bring him back for Wednesday, December 3, against the Detroit Pistons, or Friday, December 5, against the Philadelphia 76ers. That would be 7-8 games missed in total for Giannis. It’s a tough stretch, and the Bucks are going to need their other role players to step up and for Turner to level up his game in the coming weeks.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-inju...aukee-bucks-shams-charania-giannis-doc-rivers
 
Momentum Moments: Vol. 2

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The Bucks have come back down to earth after the electricity of the season’s opening week and a half, playing just .500 ball over their last eight games. But the momentum shifting plays? They haven’t gone anywhere. For better or worse.

@ Pacers​


The Bucks are behind enemy lines and it is hostile—Myles Turner’s return breathing life into the zombie Pacers. Boos chorus from all corners of Gainbridge Fieldhouse but Turner revels in the vitriol, swatting three shots and splashing two threes in the first. Has he finally arrived? The thought crosses every Bucks fan’s mind but fades as quickly as the lead and suddenly it’s a dogfight at the half. Deep in the third, threes from Giannis and Ryan Rollins bookend a pair of Pascal Siakam free throws, and the Bucks pull away, leading by 10. Finish the quarter strong, and the starters can rest in the fourth to prepare for Toronto. Just a stop and a score—it’s time to break their backs. AJ Green does his job, forcing Spicy P into an isolation miss, but four Bucks fail to put a body on Isaiah Jackson, and the rebound slips away. Soon enough, so does the lead—and seemingly the game—until Giannis sticks a dagger in Aaron Nesmith’s eye at the buzzer. The Bucks win, but Giannis is right: thumbs all the way down.

Win probability following Rollins’ three: 87.2%

Win probability after the Bucks fail to grab the rebound, leading to Jarace Walker’s score: 82.6%

@ Raptors​


SEGABABA, back in the Toronto mud. The first quarter opens with a shootout—a combined seven threes without a miss. But it’s the way the quarter closes that makes all the difference. 2:07 on the clock, Kuzma’s at the line down 28-31. The beginning of the end. He splits the free throws, and Sandro Mamukelashvili nets a three. He misses a transition left-handed floater off glass—and Gradey Dick hits a trey of his own. Then he turns it over on a drive-and-dish. The effort is there, but it’s all haphazard. Down 29-37, the Bucks get a stop late. There are 24 seconds left in the quarter. Time to run a play, get a quality look. Take some momentum into the second. Instead, Kuzma catches in semi-transition—20 ticks on the clock—and launches a 25-footer from the wing. Iron. The Raptors learn the lesson, walk it down. Set a play. Scottie Barnes catches it at the free throw line, turns, and faces. Two dribbles into Bobby Portis’ chest—pow, pow—then hits a step back on the buzzer. Raptors by 10. And it just gets worse from there.

Win probability when Kuzma splits the free throws: 43.4%

Win probability after Barnes’ buzzer beater: 24.1%

vs. Bulls​


NBA Cup, time to defend the throne. It’s late in the final term, a back-and-forth vs. the second-in-the-East Bulls, winners of six out of seven. Matas Buzelis scores on a feed from MIP candidate Josh Giddey and cuts the lead to five. 104-99, Bucks. There’s 5:29 left to play—clutch time in everyone’s book besides the NBA’s. The Bucks walk it down, a Turner screen forcing Nikola Vucevic to switch onto Giannis. Vucevic concedes the perimeter, the clock winding down: 5:20, 5:19, 5:18. The Freak backs it up, gets his rhythm, checks his toes. Releases from three at 5:17. Time slows, the parabola cinematic. Then, as 5:16 becomes 5:15, it’s water—the crowd, the splash. Giannis clasps his hand over his mouth. Pounds his chest. And the words echo through Fiserv: “Don’t you know I’m a 60% three-point sniper?!” There’s 5:14 left on the clock, but this one’s done. Smash to black, roll the credits.

Win probability after Buzelis’ layup: 86.2%

Win probability after Giannis’ three: 92.3%

vs. Rockets​


It’s a matchup full of moments. In the second, Gary Trent Jr. turns into a pickpocket, leading to transition threes for Anthony and himself a minute apart. With 31.8 to go, Kuzma hits a three of his own to give the Bucks a two-for-one opportunity, end the half on a high. To start the third, Turner commits a moving screen—wiping away a Green three—and then cops a Kevin Durant trey in his grill for his troubles. Six-point swing. Later, Giannis Dream shakes his way to a left-handed poster on four Rockets, and Kuz gets back into it with a sequence that raises Wisconsin’s collective saliva quotient: a three and a stop on Durant. In the fourth, the moments keep coming. Anthony gets an and-one on Alperen Sengun—his fourth personal foul. Reed Shepherd flashes back to Trent in the second: two steals, two buckets. Two-point game. Rollins and Portis also have moments of their own, as do KD—an absurd hoop-and-the-harm—and Sengun. Amidst it all, Giannis loses his mind in what is arguably the worst two-minute stretch of his career.

But none of these are the game’s defining moment, not really. It’s a subtler one that’s most telling—way back in the first. Sengun catches between the high post and the three-point line, faces up. He dribbles twice—the second between his legs—and pulls the trigger on the J. It air balls, only for Steven Adams to collect the board. Adams misses the put-back, then grabs it again. Misses, then grabs it again. Toys with the Bucks—“Thanks, bro!”—and finally decides to tip it home. All in three seconds. It’s a harbinger of things to come. 20-7 on the night. If you know, you know. Here, the Rockets’ lead is just two, and the Bucks actually have the upper hand for most of the night. The game remains close down the stretch, but like a ball caroming off the defensive rim, the Bucks just can’t get a hold of it, and the Rockets haul in the victory.

Win probability after Sengun’s air ball: 37.4%

Win probability after Adam’s tip-in: 34.9%

@ Mavericks​


Heavy legs, tired minds—back-to-backs are tough. But good teams find a way. Split them at the very least. Down 13 at the 10:35 mark of the fourth, having not scored in the quarter, the Bucks aren’t looking particularly good. In fact, this is burn-the-tape bad. Hire the guys LeBron did to erase that Jordan Crawford poster kind of bad. If only they could find a spark. A moment. Enter Kyle Kuzma. The possession is stilted, Giannis catching it on the left block with just seven seconds left on the shot clock. He drives middle, collapsing the defence—four defenders in the paint. The usual. Then he flicks it to Rollins at the top of the three-point line, who immediately swings it to Kuzma on the wing. Kuz pump fakes, sidesteps to the corner, releases from three—all of it decisive. Splash. A minute and a half later, after a tough Rollins reverse, an AJ Green technical free throw, and a Giannis jam, Kuz splashes another one, and it’s a four-point game. The action reverts to junk—both sides making boneheaded plays—but the Bucks do enough and find a way, just like good teams do.

Win probability at the 10:35 mark of the fourth: 5%

Win probability after Kuzma’s second three: 26.6%

@ Hornets​


The omens are there from the start. Kon Knueppel and Ryan Kalkbrenner—Hornets’ rookies—school the Bucks in the first, and Moussa Diabate licks his lips as soon as he enters; he gets straight back to where he left off last year. The score remains in reach through much of the first half, but the Bucks find themselves in a 14-point deficit with just 3:24 left in the second. To the Hornets. The 3-7 Hornets. Without LaMelo Ball and Brandon Miller.

Despite the score, Turner and Rollins are giving it their all and combine to go on a 10-3 run that looks like it might breathe life back into the squad. Restore order. All they need is a dagger heading into the half. It’s the final possession—at least for the Bucks—and Rollins takes command. 1-4 flat. Green sprints from the baseline, becomes a screener, and Rollins moves right, finding the angle. Collin Sexton gets physical with Green, disrupting the action momentarily, but Rollins gets downhill and forces Sexton to help. Simultaneously, Turner comes from the far corner to set a gorgeous pick on Sexton—who’s now scrambling—and Green finds himself all alone at the top of the three-point line. He rises—you know the image—and the scorers sharpen their pencils. Start to write it in. Except they can’t. Because the shot is short, and what would have been a six-point deficit remains nine. It ends up at 11 by the final horn.

The season’s only 12 episodes in, but the reruns are already in syndication: 50-34 disadvantage on the boards, inability to defend without fouling, and limited shot creation. Still, even without Giannis, the Bucks absolutely should have won this one. Perhaps “good team” was premature after all.

Win probability before the game: 51.4%

Win probability after Green’s three-point miss: 21.3%

vs. Hornets​


Sometimes momentum comes when there is none. Giannis is back and the Bucks are at home, playing on the best-looking court there is—it’s the NBA Cup at Fiserv. Turner hits three threes in the first, and the sequence is almost enough to claim tonight’s moment. But it’s these Hornets against these Bucks and—with help from an oh-so fitting offensive board bouncing straight to Knueppel for three and a very questionable Giannis hero-ball shot at the buzzer—it’s OT. Anyone’s game.

The Bucks open overtime with a patient set, Green curling around a Giannis screen and into the paint, drawing just enough attention from Diabate to free up Turner for a wing three. Butter. Exactly a minute later, Turner moves into Rollins’ eye-line at the top of the three-point line—his spot—and it’s butter again. The lead is four, but Turner has already scored more than the Hornets ever will in the extra period. The Bucks get the dub, Wisconsinites get to sleep a little easier, and Turner makes every writer smile—those first-quarter threes foreshadowing all along.

Win probability to start overtime: 50.0%

Win probability after Turner’s second three-pointer in overtime: 76.2%

vs. Lakers​


Both sides are on the second leg of a back-to-back, but it’s the Bucks who are most affected. They just can’t hit anything—34.8% and just 18 points in the first. Meanwhile, the Lakers follow their leader, play their methodical game, lull the Bucks to sleep, and build a 16-point second-quarter lead with 10:55 on the clock. The Bucks cut it to eight—38-30—and when Giannis comes out of nowhere to reject DeAndre Ayton rolling to the rim off a Luka Doncic no-look dime, the pulse gets stronger. Portis secures the board and feeds Anthony in transition, who crosses behind his back, finds Green wide open on the left wing. Green catches it in rhythm, rises, and lets it fly. But it rims in and out—the crowd exhaling a collective groan.

The Bucks are stuck on 30 for the next two minutes, then on 31 for two more. In the same span, the Lakers put up 14 points, pushing their lead to 19, then to 29 at the half. Green tries to redeem himself in the third, hitting four threes, and the Bucks push like a mother during labour, but the C-section is inevitable and the cut is permanent. Bucks lose, 119-95.

Win probability after Giannis’ block: 30.8%

Win probability after the Lakers’ 14-1 run following Green’s missed three: 5.2%



Volume 2 preaches, but what does it say? One, it’s a requiem for the three; the long ball giveth and taketh away. Two, to paraphrase the late great John Thompson, you can dribble too much, you can pass too much, and you can shoot too much. But you can’t rebound too much. Guys, it’s time to get in the trenches.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-feat...-momentum-moments-giannis-kyle-kuzma-aj-green
 
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The Bucks have a pick-and-roll defense problem

gettyimages-2246379949.jpg


The Bucks stink at defending the pick-and-roll. Any time an opponent runs the action right now, it’s basically an automatic bucket. The stats are mind-bending. Milwaukee is allowing a league-worst 64.6% roll man scoring frequency, which equates to 1.35 points per possession. For reference, the two worst transition defenses, Sacramento and Washington, are giving up 1.29 points per possession. Pick-and-roll ball handlers are scoring 41.0% of the time against the Bucks, which is 19th in the league, but that’s hardly a silver lining when you’re already leaking points to rollers.

So, what’s the problem? What is Milwaukee doing wrong? The answer is a lot of things, but a few major trends show up in the tape from the past three games against Charlotte, Los Angeles, and Cleveland.

Blitzing blunders


In their recent matchups, the Bucks have employed the blitz as their primary P&R defense. Blitzing is when the two defenders involved in the action trap/double the ball handler right as he comes off the screen, trying to force a pass or turnover. Teams often blitz star guards who feed on pull-up jumpers and torch mismatches—guys like Luka Doncic and Donovan Mitchell, who the Bucks just faced.

Unfortunately, blitzes rarely lead to turnovers in the NBA because guys are too good. Luka, Spida, and LaMelo Ball have faced a billion doubles; they’re not just gonna panic and cough it up. So, Milwaukee is essentially opting to have all the non-stars beat them, and that’s exactly what they’re doing.

Teams have found an easy exploit to crack Bucks blitzes. Screeners are quickly slipping, getting catches in the middle of the floor, and finding themselves with massive advantages. Milwaukee’s backline defense behind the blitzes has been putrid, and it’s why they’re allowing so many points to rollers. This was a serious problem against the Lakers.

In the first clip of this compilation, Turner and Kuzma blitz Luka, and Deandre Ayton dives to the rim. AJ Green makes the elementary mistake of not tagging the roller (stepping in to take away a pass/layup), and Ayton throws down the lob after Luka predictably beats the trap. In the second clip, Green does step in to cover Ayton, but he’s way too small to prevent the score. In the third clip, Jaxson Hayes gets the ball with plenty of space in the middle of the floor, and Trent rotates over. This leaves Rollins guarding two shooters at once on the weak side—easy read for Hayes, even easier triple for Knecht.

Charlotte was also finding all the gaps in Milwaukee’s backline help. In the first clip below, Kon Knueppel gets the catch with two feet already in the paint, a death sentence for the defense. The second and third clips are the same thing for Sion James and Miles Bridges. In the fourth clip, where the Bucks are blitzing Bridges, not LaMelo, they don’t let Diabate get the ball deep in the paint, but in the act of sinking to tag him, they leave Knueppel wide open for three. In the final clip, Knueppel catches Milwaukee off guard, slipping for a pop rather than a dive. Look how dejected Trent Jr. looks as the shot goes up.

To improve the effectiveness of their blitzes, the Bucks need to start by cleaning up their rotations and not forgetting the basics, like tagging the roller. Blunders like the one AJ Green made in that first clip vs. the Lakers can’t happen against good teams (especially ones with all-time great P&R operators like Luka). That said, there are also deeper-rooted personnel issues that make things tricky. We’ll dive into those later after highlighting another way opponents are frying Milwaukee with P&Rs.

Reject regrets


A second exploit teams have found for Bucks blitzes is having the ball handler reject the screen (dribbling the opposite direction from where the screen is set; for example, going left when the screen is on the right). Because the guy defending the screener (usually Turner or Portis) comes up so high to prepare to double, there’s less resistance in place against a drive if the handler can blow by his man—and there’s been a lot of blowing-by going on. Milwaukee’s guards couldn’t stay in front of the dynamic Donovan Mitchell at all. The first clip below shows how Cleveland’s star was able to break down the defense and send everyone into rotation with a simple bursty rejection. Multiple Hornets did the same thing in Friday’s game, making Milwaukee’s perimeter defenders look like cones.

Personnel problems​


Sacrificing spades of driving lanes and layups wasn’t a problem for the Bucks until recent years. The massive shift that occurred when the team fired Mike Budenholzer, traded Jrue Holiday, and lost other key defenders like Wesley Matthews and Jevon Carter is well documented. This current roster and its deployment are very different from the squads of the early 2020s. Nowadays, the Bucks just don’t have many good defensive players. AJ Green can hold his own one-on-one, but can’t get through a screen. Gary Trent Jr. gets some nice steals but is rarely able to sit in the chair and chase his man. Cole Anthony is a non-factor, if not a negative. We all know Bobby Portis’ flaws. Even Ryan Rollins, who is solid, is nowhere close to being Jrue Holiday or even a Jalen Suggs or Cason Wallace. Believe it or not, it’s tough to get stops when your players aren’t equipped to do so.

@BuckAnalytics on X developed a metric called PEST that quantifies the aggressiveness of perimeter defenders, accounting for stats such as steals, blocks, charges, and shots taken against. Rollins actually grades out in the 96th percentile league-wide in PEST—he’s a phenomenal defensive playmaker, but his on-ball results on a possession-by-possession basis don’t quite match his highlight moments. Meanwhile, Trent and Anthony rank in the 59th percentile, while AJ Green falls all the way down in the 34th. Having a barely-above-average defender as the second-best guy in your unit isn’t exactly the recipe for building a formidable fortification.

On the interior, Myles Turner has been underwhelming in certain facets too. The whole point of moving away from Brook Lopez was to open up the possibility of scheme versatility. Turner, who is younger and more athletic than Lopez, should theoretically be more apt to guard on the perimeter, but the difference between him and his predecessor has been pretty marginal in reality. He’s aggressive and comfortable in rising to the level and initiating blitzes/hedges, but if a guard attacks him, he’s probably getting cooked. His feet are slow.

Turner is best employed in drop coverage, but that’s not how Doc Rivers is using him. The big man is defending the fewest shots at the rim (per 75) of his career. It’s nice that he isn’t a total slouch in other schemes, but it’s clear that more drop is in order because the blitzes aren’t working well for anyone. The Bucks should also be actively shopping for better perimeter stoppers on the trade market, because without an upgrade in that department, they won’t be able to execute any coverage smoothly.

The Bucks aren’t modeled to be a defensive juggernaut anymore, and that’s fine, especially because their offensive rating of 128 with Giannis on the floor would rank number one in the association. However, they’re not going to achieve any meaningful success without cleaning up their pick-and-roll defense, which will require some drastic revisions to their schemes and roster.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...is-pick-and-roll-defense-myles-turner-giannis
 
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