Giannis injury timeline extended to 4-6 weeks

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For the first time since his injury back on December 3, Giannis Antetokounmpo spoke with the assembled media. Outside of addressing the constant rumors surrounding his status with the team, he gave an injury update that Bucks fans didn’t want to hear. He revealed that the injury was actually a soleus strain, the same injury that knocked him out of the playoffs in the 2023-24 season. He expects his timeline to return will be 4 to 6 weeks from the date of the injury, rather than the 2 to 4 weeks that Shams Charania of ESPN initially reported.

The main difference between calf and soleus strains, and the reason I think the timeline got bumped by two weeks, is the way these injuries occur. Soleus strains typically occur from overuse in endurance athletes like Giannis.

With Giannis now out even longer than expected, it’s almost guaranteed that he will not qualify for an All-NBA team for the first time since the 2015-16 season. He will miss more than 17 games, which is the number allowed for him to play 65 games in a season. He also won’t qualify for the MVP race for the first time since that same season. He’s already missed 10 games this season and was ruled out for tonight’s game against the Toronto Raptors, bringing that total to 11 games. He would’ve needed to come back for the New Year’s Eve game against the Washington Wizards, but that’s unlikely to happen. Going off the original timeline, Giannis could’ve been back in the January 4 game against the Sacramento Kings. Now with the extra two weeks, he will either return later during the Bucks’ four-game West Coast trip or when the Bucks return to Milwaukee to play the Minnesota Timberwolves on January 13.

Milwaukee has not been good with Giannis out of the lineup this season. They’ve put up a record 2-8 in games he doesn’t play and 3-9 in games he doesn’t finish. The Bucks currently sit at 11-16 and 11th in the Eastern Conference, a half game back of the Chicago Bulls for the 10th seed. In the 17 games Giannis has played this season, he showed why he was in contention for the MVP award, averaging 28.9 points per game, 10.1 rebounds, and 6.1 assists while shooting 63.9% from the field and 43.5% from the three-point line (1.4 3PA).

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-news...ded-4-6-weeks-milwaukee-bucks-nba-injury-news
 
Bucks vs. Raptors Player Grades: Big nights from Portis and Turner go unrewarded as Porter’s turnover struggles persist in close loss

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The hits keep on coming for the Milwaukee Bucks, as they couldn’t win their second-to-last home game of December, losing to the Toronto Raptors 111-105. Even with good offensive games from a couple of bigs, Milwaukee couldn’t get back over the hump to complete the comeback. The Bucks are 1-2 against the Raptors this season and have lost two straight to the team up north. 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​

Kevin Porter Jr.​


40 minutes, 22 points, 13 assists, 4 rebounds, 7 turnovers, 7/18 FG, 2/6 3PT, +2

While the counting numbers look solid for KPJ, this wasn’t his best day. At times, it felt like he was pressing and doing too much to put the Bucks on his back. He must clean up the turnovers—and it better be sooner rather than later.

Grade: C+

Myles Turner​


31 minutes, 21 points, 6 rebounds, 6/14 FG, 4/10 3PT, 5/6 FT, -9

Turner was a man on a mission in the first half, attempting 10 total shots. He looked much more in flow with the offense and was the Bucks’ leading scorer at the break with 15 points. Then his shots dried up in the second half, and he would’ve only scored three points if not for a late bomb.

Grade: B

Ryan Rollins​


28 minutes, 17 points, 5 assists, 4 rebounds, 3 steals, 7/15 FG, 3/7 3PT, +7

For the first time since the season opener, Rollins came off the bench for the Bucks. He was solid as ever and was better than KPJ at times. Still a head scratcher as to why Doc opted to play him off the bench.

Grade: B+

AJ Green​


24 minutes, 5 points, 2 rebounds, 2/5 FG, -3

It was AJ Green’s first game back in 13 days, and it showed. Green didn’t move well and didn’t get his first three-point attempts until the fourth quarter. Hopefully, this game will get the ball rolling in the right direction for Sunday.

Grade: C-

Gary Trent Jr.​


30 minutes, 3 points, 2 assists, 2 steals, 1/8 FG, 1/5 3PT, -15

After a strong run of form from Trent, he had himself a stinker last night. GT had open looks; he just couldn’t bury them. Put this game in the rearview mirror for Trent against his former team.

Grade: D-

Bobby Portis​


39 minutes, 24 points, 12 rebounds, 2 steals, 9/16 FG, 3/6 3PT, +3

I know there are things about Bobby’s game to criticize, but he’s been great offensively for the Bucks. It’s arguably been his best season in that department.

Grade: B+

Jericho Sims​


26 minutes, 6 points, 7 rebounds, 4 fouls, 4 turnovers, 3/4 FG, -6

We saw the good and bad with Sims last night. He can be a good roller at times, he rebounds the ball well enough, and his hops are something to marvel at. But why Doc continues to play him such heavy minutes (tonight not withstanding with Kyle Kuzma out) baffles me.

Grade: C-

Gary Harris​


21 minutes, 7 points, 3 rebounds, 1 assist, 1 steal, 3/4 FG, -9

One of the better defenders on Ingram last night, Harris was solid on both ends. He continues to be a surprise contributor, considering where he was in the rotation at the start of the season.

Grade: B

Doc Rivers​


Doc gave an interesting answer when asked why he sent Rollins to the bench to start the game. It was to have a fresh guard on the court at all times to counter the Raptors’ ball pressure, and the numbers with Rollins and KPJ haven’t been good sans Giannis. Benching him just didn’t seem like the right move, and it appears it won’t be changing anytime soon.

Grade: D+

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

Inactive: Giannis Antetokounmpo, Kyle Kuzma, Taurean Prince, Alex Antetokounmpo

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • Bobby Portis officially sits alone in third place for double-doubles by reserves in NBA history. He recorded his 82nd double-double, passing Roy Tarpley, and is only four behind Enes Freedom for second place (86).
  • The Bucks had the game within four points, 88-92 with 7:01 left in the fourth quarter. That was the closest they got, as the Raptors went on a 9-3 run in one minute and 56 seconds of game time to take a 10 point lead. Bobby was asked what went wrong in that stretch and why they couldn’t get over the hump:
“We couldn’t string together consecutive stops. We had a lot of energy going on from the second quarter on; the ball was moving, guys flashing (to the ball), just playing their roles. Then on defense, we couldn’t string together enough stops, three, four in a row, couldn’t get a kill (three stops in a row). I feel like we would get two and then they would hit a janky shot or a put-back, that’s just how the game went.”
  • The Bucks are now 2-9 in games without Giannis this season.
  • Despite that record, Doc said that the Bucks are getting closer to finding what they to win without him.
“I think we’re starting to figure out, and we’re not there, who plays best in the non-Giannis minutes. That’s something, if we can get Giannis back healthy for the rest of the year, I think it will serve well for us.”
  • The Bucks are now 1-2 in the Cream City jerseys this season.

Up Next​


The Bucks will begin a five-game road trip against the six-seed in the Western Conference, the Minnesota Timberwolves, for the first time this season. The game is scheduled for Sunday, Dec. 21, with tip-off at 6:00 p.m. Central time; it will be televised on FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...ats-bobby-portis-myles-turner-kevin-porter-jr
 
Rapid Recap: Raptors 111, Bucks 105

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The Milwaukee Bucks have now dropped two games in a row, falling to the Toronto Raptors 111-105; it is their second loss to the Raptors this season. Bobby Portis had 24 points and 12 rebounds to lead the Bucks, while KPJ had 22 and Myles Turner had 21. The red-hot Brandon Ingram led all scorers with 29 points on 50% shooting, while his running mate Scottie Barnes had 24 points and 11 rebounds.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


There was a big lineup shift even before tip, as Doc Rivers opted for Gary Trent Jr. over Ryan Rollins to split time with him and Kevin Porter Jr. The idea didn’t seem to work well early, as the Bucks fell behind in a hurry against the Raptors; Toronto went on a 15-4 opening run. Once Rollins checked in, the Bucks went on an 8-0 run to bring the game back within three, 12-15. Toronto, particularly Brandon Ingram, shot hot from three-point range, going 3/3 from deep and helping keep the Raptors ahead. When the dust settled, Milwaukee trailed by just six points, 31-25, heading into the second quarter.

The two sides went back and forth in the early parts of the second frame. With 6:56 left to go, the Raptors had outscored the Bucks just 12-11 and held a seven-point lead before Rivers called a timeout to reset his group. Milwaukee did make a bit of a run thanks to Myles Turner, getting the lead down to just four, but a layup from Sandro Mamukelashvili and an Ochai Agbaji three pushed the lead back out to eight points. Despite falling behind, the Bucks were able to claw their way back into the game, going on a 12-4 run to tie the game with 1:35 left, thanks to a Rollins three-pointer. That tie didn’t last long, as Scotte Barnes made a layup and Agbaji hit a three to send the Raptors into the locker room up 57-52.

Before most of the fans could get back in their seats from halftime, the Bucks got a rally going. Bobby Portis and Myles Turner hit back-to-back threes to give the Bucks their first lead of the game, 59-57, just 75 seconds into the third. Toronto took the lead back after getting their first free throw of the game after Barnes converted the and-one opportunity. Despite the Bucks keeping it close for most of the quarter, the Raptors were able to rattle off an 11-5 run to take an eight-point lead, 82-74, in the late stages of the third quarter. The Bucks trailed by seven heading into the fourth quarter, 76-83.

The home team stayed in contact with the visitors through the opening minutes of the fourth, thanks to a 9-5 run over three minutes, getting them back within four points. Then, the Bucks went cold at one of the worst times of the game. They went 1/3, all from KPJ, as the Raptors went on a 9-3 run to take a ten-point lead, 101-91, with 5:05 left in the game. Milwaukee couldn’t dig out of the hole they made for themselves, with Shead nailing the dagger three to end this one.

Stat That Stood Out​


21-4. That’s the free throws attempted discrepancy between the Bucks and the Raptors in the second half. The Raptors didn’t get their first free throw until the second half, after the Bucks took 12 in the first half. While they went just 14/21, it was the lift Toronto needed to put the Bucks away.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...jr-myles-turner-brandon-ingram-scottie-barnes
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Toronto Raptors Preview: The only way is up

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After being blown out by 45 points to the tanking Brooklyn Nets, one would think the Milwaukee Bucks have nowhere to go but up tonight when they face the Toronto Raptors at home. The season series currently sits at 1-1, with the Bucks taking the first matchup, and the Raps’ taking the second—both played in The Six. One thing is for sure, though: it’s good to be back watching NBA basketball on a consistent basis after the long breaks from the NBA Cup.

Where We’re At​


As mentioned in the intro, the Bucks are in a rough patch right now. Their overall record since the 3-2 start is obviously poor, but losing that badly to the freakin’ Nets in their last game was inexcusable. Some might call the Brooklyn drubbing confusing, seeing as they beat the Celtics just one game prior; however, we should acknowledge that Kyle Kuzma and Bobby Portis had magnet-ball games against the Cs, which probably masked a lot of things.

The Raptors are also going through something of an early-season funk. After a blazing start in which they won 13 of 14 games, Toronto has lost six of its past eight contests. In their past three games, they went down to the Celtics and Knicks and beat the Heat on Monday. As our friends at Raptors HQ pointed out after their loss to New York in the NBA Cup quarterfinal, there is no reason to panic about the Raptors. They have been dealing with injuries to key guys (just now getting a few back), and have shown the ability to play extremely well and extremely poorly; within this team sits a good mix of youth and vet savvy that I believe will bode well for the immediate and long-term future.

Injury Report​


For the Bucks, Giannis (calf) is out, as is Taurean Prince (neck). Cole Anthony (neck), AJ Green (shoulder), and Kyle Kuzma (illness) are all questionable.

As for the Raptors, RJ Barrett (knee) is the only assured absence. Jakob Poeltl (back) is probable.

Player To Watch​


Let’s go with Kevin Porter Jr. After a string of electric performances in which he shot the ball uber-efficiently, KPJ came back down to earth against the Nets, dropping just five points on 2/13 shooting (with six giveaways to boot). Without Giannis, they really need Porter’s creation; can he give them something better tonight?

How To Watch​


FanDuel Sports Network 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
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Minnesota Timberwolves Preview: Into the fray

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The Milwaukee Bucks (11-17) open a five-game road trip against the Minnesota Timberwolves (18-10) tonight, a stretch that could very well make or break their season. After a shellacking by the Brooklyn Nets, the Bucks were better against the Toronto Raptors but still unable to get over the hump, falling 111-105. They’ll need every bit of an early Christmas miracle tonight, facing a Timberwolves team that just beat the Oklahoma City Thunder 112-107. History is in their favour, though, with the Bucks winners of five of their last six matchups (and 11 of their last 14!).

Where We’re At​


The Bucks have now lost four out of their last five games and, outside of the win against the Boston Celtics, there’s been very little to get excited about. The stats back it up too, with the Bucks getting progressively worse almost across the board as the season continues (per NBA.com):

MonthPTSFG%3P%REBASTTOVSTLBLK+/-
October121.845.239.641.226.614.88.65.46.8
November113.542.141.539.527.214.48.24.0-5.0
December107.939.038.337.625.716.47.63.7-8.9

While this isn’t that surprising if you’ve been watching the games—and, of course, Giannis has missed 11 already—it points to a side that has well and truly lost its rudder. There’s no wonder that 87% of fans disapprove of the job Doc Rivers is doing, or that the team is going “big game hunting” to try to retool. Ironically, the recent play of Bobby Portis and Kyle Kuzma might help with the latter—across the last five, both are putting up more than 18 points per game on over 55% shooting. Keep it going, fellas.

Having reached the Western Conference Finals the past two seasons, the Timberwolves have high expectations again this year and, sitting sixth in the conference and just two wins behind the second-placed Denver Nuggets, are very much still in the hunt. In fact, the Wolves have won eight of their last 10 games, including the aforementioned victory over championship-favourites the Oklahoma City Thunder, where stud Anthony Edwards was huge on both ends down the stretch. Edwards continues to be the preeminent shooting guard in the league, averaging 28.5 PPG, 5.2 RPG, and 3.8 APG on the season, and is well supported by five teammates—Julis Randle, Jalen McDaniels, Naz Reid, Donte DiVincenzo, and Rudy Gobert—averaging double figures (and the maligned Bones Hyland coming to the party over the last five, putting up 12.0 PPG of his own). As such, the Wolves hold the eighth-best offensive rating on the season to go along with their 10th-rated defence.

Injury Report​


For the Bucks, Taurean Prince (neck) and Giannis (calf) remain out.

For the Timberwolves, Mike Conley is questionable (right Achilles; tendinopathy).

Player To Watch​


In 19 games without Kevin Porter Jr., Ryan Rollins blossomed, averaging 18.8 PPG, 4.2 RPG, 6.1 APG, and 1.5 SPG on .495/.425/.775 shooting splits. Since Porter’s return, Rollins’ numbers have dropped to 13.8 PPG, 3.5 RPG, 5.9 APG, and 1.9 SPG on .436/.326/.727 shooting splits. Of course, correlation doesn’t mean causation, and the drop in scoring and efficiency—everything else is much the same—could very well be put down to increased opponent scouting, a shooting slump, or even reduced minutes (blowouts and foul trouble will do that). Regardless, this is a trend worth monitoring, as for both the short and long terms, the Bucks need to find a way to maximise both of their young guards. Against the Raptors, Rivers opted to bring Rollins off the bench, citing the need for fresh ball handlers against the Raptors’ ball pressure, but this put excessive pressure on Porter to create everything, and the Bucks were down 12-2 by the 9:35 mark of the first quarter—a deficit from which they could never recover. With Kuzma no longer on the injury report, it will be interesting to see if Rivers keeps the lineup from the Raptors game or reinserts Rollins. More importantly, what strings will he pull to get Rollins rollin’ again?

How To Watch​


FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin 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: Timberwolves 103, Bucks 100

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Milwaukee Bucks lost a close one to the Minnesota Timberwolves 103-100 due to a dud of a third quarter. Kevin Porter Jr. nearly notched a triple-double with 24 points, 10 rebounds, and 9 assists. Anthony Edwards led the home team with an identical 24 points.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


Bobby celebrated his return to the starting lineup by splashing an early three, part of several threes that saw the Bucks build an 11-2 lead. He continued to celebrate by calling his own number, allowing the Timberwolves to start clawing their way into the game. Ryan Rollins entered at the 2:34 mark (!) and promptly threw down a dunk for payback. Minnesota got into the bonus early and found success in the line (which they would not replicate in the second). That kept them within striking distance of Milwaukee, who finished the frame up 29-23.

An 11-point run between quarters helped the Bucks extend that lead to as many as 16. The Timberwolves were fittingly frigid from the field and Jaden McDaniels exited with an injury. Old Friend Donte DiVincenzo snapped the spell before Myles Turner got in on the action, each splashing a couple treys. Milwaukee mostly maintained a double-digit lead into halftime, leading 60-48. For the Bucks, Kevin Porter Jr. led the way with 13 points, while for the Wolves, Anthony Edwards had 14 points on π shooting (3/14). (And 4/22 from deep was not what Prince would’ve wanted.) If the first half felt like a slog despite its success, look no further than its 25 combined fouls.

Milwaukee came out of the halftime gates quickly, earning a quick timeout from Minnesota on the strength of KPJ. But the Timberwolves would come back, first slowly, then bigly. The bottom would completely drop out, with Minnesota going on a 20-point run that earned them their first lead of the night after being down 16. Nas Reid was hitting shots from everywhere, Rudy Gobert was feasting on the offensive boards, and Mike Freakin’ Conley was making a difference on both ends of the floor. Rollins was subbed in at the end of the run and somewhat helped, and the quarter mercifully ended with the squads knotted at 75.

It was an evens stevens start to the fourth until Terrence Shannon Jr. went supernova. That bought Minnesota a five-ish-point lead that they would maintain for a big chunk of the quarter. Points off turnovers reared their head, with KPJ loosing his handle multiple times and the Timberwolves cashing in. Bobby got in on that action too, leading to a three from Ant that had dagger vibes with his team up eight with under three minutes left. There were some endgame hijinks, but this one was done.

Stat That Stood Out​


The Timberwolves outscored the Bucks 23-7 off turnovers. That was in part due to Milwaukee turning the ball over five more times than Minnesota. Kevin Porter Jr. stuffed the stat sheet, including turnovers—and while Doc rode his generally hot hand and is trying to stagger him with Ryan Rollins, it was tough to see Rollins with significantly fewer minutes (14) when KPJ racks up six turnovers.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...l-score-recap-kevin-porter-jr-anthony-edwards
 
Milwaukee Bucks Poll: Most fans don’t want the Bucks to tank yet

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In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, we asked you about team direction, rumors that the Bucks are looking to buy, and engaged in some blame placement. Here are the highlights:

  • Voters generally favor staying the course right now and either trying for the playoffs or at least waiting until January to decide, with only 23% thinking Milwaukee should start tanking now.
  • Fans polled are currently split on whether making a trade for star talent will placate Giannis: 54% believe it will convince Giannis to remain a Buck for at least the rest of the season, while 46% think it will make no difference.
  • Looking back on the past three seasons, 64% of respondents blame coaching moves—most of whom believe hiring Adrian Griffin or Doc Rivers was the biggest mistake—for the franchise’s problems, though 32% blame it on the Damian Lillard trade.
  • When considering the higher-ups’ decision-making, GM Jon Horst (38%) and co-owner Jimmy Haslam (39%) are drawing a nearly equal share of the blame.
  • Doc Rivers’ approval rating dropped from 7% to 4% this week, with 87% disapproval. Horst’s sunk about 6% while his disapproval rating climbed the same amount.


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

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-poll...s-poll-trade-zach-lavine-jon-horst-doc-rivers
 
Actually, Chris Paul does make sense for the Bucks

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Upon recent news that the Bucks may be interested in Chris Paul, Jack wrote why that probably wouldn’t be a good idea in terms of an on-court and locker room fit. I agree with that 100%, but the I think Bucks should still trade for CP3 since it could net them a second-round pick from the Clippers. Then they should immediately waive him. By making such a trade, Paul would never even suit up for Milwaukee, but they’d gain a future asset on the cheap.

This is a pretty straightforward process, but it requires a few steps. First of all, the Bucks’ roster is full right now with 15 standard contracts. If they wanted to acquire someone new, someone already rostered needs to be traded or waived. In the case of the former, the Clippers likely want to move CP3 without taking back a player and his salary in return, so acquiring a current Buck for him might not be feasible. LA’s team salary has them within $1.3m of the first apron, where they are hard-capped for the remainder of the league year.

This is why they can’t simply waive Paul today: if he goes unclaimed on waivers, his cap hit for the 2025–26 season sticks around even as he departs, so they’d still only have $1.3m to fill the resulting vacancy. They’d have to fill it within two weeks: LA has 14 guys on their standard roster, and teams can dip below that league-mandated minimum for 14 days tops. As of today, a pro-rated veteran’s minimum is just under $1.5m, and a sophomore’s is just over $1.3m, so they’d be limited to a rookie—like their 2025 second-round pick Kobe Sanders, currently on a two-way deal—for their 14th standard contract, which would be pro-rated to $819k.

It won’t be until January 7th that they’ll have enough breathing room to sign a pro-rated vet minimum, as things currently stand. So the latest they could waive Paul and be in compliance with the 14-man rule would be December 24th. While it rarely happens with minimum contracts, a buyout might be an option, but Paul might not want to give any money back to the Clippers after they summarily sent him home the other week. He would have to give up at least $209k from what LA owes him here on out to shrink his cap hit enough for them to add a vet minimum.

Anyway, acquiring a player in a Paul trade wouldn’t necessarily solve their problems either. For one, they couldn’t acquire very much more than his $2.3m in incoming salary and doing so would push them even closer to their hard cap. Not a good place to be if injuries (recall that they employ Kawhi Leonard) necessitate filling that 15th roster spot at some point. They’d have to wait even longer than January for the pro-rated minimum salary to fall low enough and allow them to fit a 15th man beneath the first apron. Sure, they could acquire another minimum-salaried player in Paul’s stead, which could even save them money if it’s a rookie or sophomore minimum, but why would a rival trade even a little bit of value for a 40-year-old malcontent?

Bringing it back to the Bucks, they (and any other team) can easily acquire CP3 using the veteran’s minimum exception. Because that exception allows teams to add a minimum player via trade regardless of their apron situation (barring proximity to a hard cap, which the Bucks don’t face right now), they don’t have to give up any outgoing salary in the deal. So there’s no actual need for Milwaukee to send out Amir Coffey, Cole Anthony, or Andre Jackson Jr., who all make as much or less than Paul.

However, the Bucks would need to create a roster spot to accommodate a trade acquisition, and waiving Coffey would be the easiest from a purely financial perspective. His contract isn’t fully guaranteed until January 10th, and if he’s waived before January 7th, the Bucks will owe him zero since he’ll clear before his guaranteed date. While yes, they could use a bigger body on the wing, Doc Rivers has played him just 32 minutes since November 12th, almost entirely in garbage time. If they don’t think he’s good enough to crack their wing rotation, Milwaukee should move on, because there are better uses for their 15th standard contract slot, including this.

They could trade Coffey to his former team—though the Clippers probably don’t want him if they let him walk last summer—in exchange for Paul, and as long as they acquire and waive him before January 7th, LA would also not owe him anything. But why should the Bucks send the Clippers a get-out-of-jail-free card? Regardless of whether they trade Coffey or “nothing” (more on that later) to LA for CP3, Milwaukee is doing them a favor, giving them more flexibility by taking on CP3’s contract.

Milwaukee’s ability to absorb him is why the Bucks should acquire, then immediately waive CP3—once they create a roster spot. As mentioned, the Bucks are not hard-capped anywhere and nowhere near either apron. In fact, they’re $11.5m beneath the luxury tax threshold, even when you consider the $27.4m in dead salary on their ledger. That’s plenty of room to eat the minimum salary cap hit that would remain on their books after waiving Paul.

For their trouble, the Bucks deserve an asset from the Clippers in return. This is not unlike what we saw back in 2018 when Jon Horst took on the final year of Jodie Meeks’ contract from the Wizards. To rid themselves of Meeks’ $3.5m salary, Washington sent Milwaukee a 2020 second-round pick (which was traded a few months later, along with three other seconds, in exchange for Nikola Mirotic). LA has some seconds: they can trade their own seconds in 2031 and 2032, or their rights to Memphis’ 2026 second, though its protections would only send it their way if it falls between 43 and 60. Otherwise, it goes to Portland. If the draft were held today, Memphis would pick 43rd, so it’s unclear if it would convey to LA or to a team—like Milwaukee—who might happen to acquire it from LA.

Technically, the Bucks need to send something to the Clippers for the deal to work. This could be a future second, and in this case, it would assuredly be top-55 protected. However, Milwaukee has traded all of its second-round picks through 2032 in various transactions. The only one they own is Utah’s top-55 protected 2026 second, which is not going to convey: San Antonio will make the pick if it falls between 31–55, so they’ll receive it because Utah isn’t going to finish with one of the league’s best five records.

Milwaukee could send this pretty worthless pick to LA for Paul and one of their future second-round picks, particularly the two unprotected choices. They have other options to trade away too, namely cash considerations and draft rights they own on foreign players. The Bucks are permitted to send out nearly $8m in cash this league year, and they could even trade away as little as $1. As far as draft rights go, setting aside 2025 second-round pick Bogoljub Marković, the Bucks own rights to four European players from the 1994, 1995 (those aren’t typos), 2012, and 2015 drafts. One of those players isn’t even alive anymore (condolences to Ilkan Karaman’s family), but these can nevertheless be outgoing pieces in trades.

In any case, exacting a second-round pick to bail the Clippers out of their CP3/hard cap dilemma is reasonable, even if one of those far-off seconds is protected. While the Bucks could always hold onto their new pick and use it in whichever draft, it also might make for a decent trade chip, á la the Mirotic deal. That second-round pick cupboard needs restocking, and all it would cost Milwaukee is $2.3m.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...-chris-paul-trade-rumors-los-angeles-clippers
 
Momentum Moments: Vol. 4

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No Giannis. Reduced expectations. Fewer games. All of this has to mean less pain, right? Don’t be so sure. Over the past fortnight, the Bucks have learned otherwise. And so have we.

vs. 76ers​


There’s energy to begin this one. Ryan Rollins opens the Bucks’ scoring with a fast-break dunk off a precarious pass from Kevin Porter Jr., and the crowd comes to life. Rollins hits a three off another Porter find not long after, and then Myles Turner gets in on the action with a three of his own to give the Bucks an 11-9 lead. Time out, Sixers.

Moments later, scores tied, the Bucks are on defence, and Adem Bona lurks in the left corner, coiled like a spring under tension. The 76ers run their action, but Tyrese Maxey is cut off, forced to backpedal and reset the play. He kicks it to Jared McCain on the opposite wing, who drives left, forcing Turner to dig. It’s here that Bona’s eyes light up, potential energy transforming to kinetic. He curls around the makeshift screen, receives the handoff from McCain, and uncoils right down the centre of the lane, rim in sight. Turner contests, but it’s too late, Bona’s flying with too much length—too much momentum—and he lays it in over the top. The moment is subtle—there are no “oohs” or “ahhs”—but it springs the 76ers into a 19-4 run that’s capped off by a McCain three, and the Bucks can never recover.

Win probability after Bona’s layup: 43.7%

Win probability after McCain’s three: 17.7%

@ Pistons​


The Bucks venture to Motown, and despite AJ Green’s absence, there are promising signs early. Porter snags three steals in the first, and Turner drains three from deep. But the Pistons just dominate the glass—18-7—and take a seven-point lead into the second. Clearly set on revenge after losing in Milwaukee just three days prior, Detroit’s physicality doesn’t just show up on the boards. Porter sees it, feels it too—every trap, drive, attempt coming with a bump. But he feels himself even more and tries to single-handedly keep the Bucks in it. Behind-the-back crossovers into bank shot and-ones. Up fakes into tippy-toe threes. Rise up and stick it in your eye Js. He does it all—gives his all—on his way to a game (and Bucks personal) high 32 points on 69% shooting, including 7/9 from three. He adds six assists too and would’ve had at least a handful more if his teammates could knock down the open looks he generated for them.

Alas, here they are. The Bucks start the fourth down, but it’s just 10—nothing in the modern game. 16 points ain’t nothin’ though, and that’s exactly what it is just a minute later after Bobby Portis turns it over in the backcourt following a defensive stop to start the quarter. Porter keeps trying, hitting his seventh three, but it’s all in vain and the Pistons run away with it, the Bucks waving the white flag.

Win probability to start the fourth: 7.9%

Win probability after consecutive threes following Portis turnover: 1.6%

vs. Celtics​


The Boston Celtics are in the building, and the Fiserv Forum crowd looks simultaneously like Jaylen Brown’s hair and the Bucks’ defence—gaps, everywhere. The Celts do their thing, racking up threes and controlling the ball, building double-digit leads in both the first and second quarters. The Bucks stick with it, though; Bobby Portis is bringing buckets from the bench, and when he checks back in over halfway through the third, it’s a tied game. Scores locked at 75, Brown forgets what he said just days earlier and sells his soul to draw a foul on Porter. Boos chorus through Fiserv and Porter feels it, gets into Brown’s grill, and offers him his own two cents. Juiced, Porter forces Brown to give it up on the ensuing play and then tracks down the rebound. He pushes in transition, finds Portis in the corner, and you already know the result. Money. He’s now 5/5 from deep. Brown responds with a tough middy, and Portis decides he’s had enough of this finesse game, goes old-school, backing his way to a left-shoulder hook for two. Back on defence, Porter hounds Brown into another tough middy—this time forcing the miss—and collects the carom.

Sensing the moment, Portis turns into Usain Bolt, moves faster than he ever has, hunting the corner three, the post-up—whatever he can get. And you best believe he’s getting it. Eventually, the ball finds him and he channels his inner KG, slapping the ball on the catch, the reverberation a precursor for what’s to come. The homage continues with the three-dribble to the middle, then the turnaround, then the splash of the net. But that ain’t enough. Not when the big fella’s feeling like this. He halts his transition to defence, realises the impression isn’t complete, and turns back to Brown. Arms rigid, neck in full extension, crazy eyes bulging, he barks at Brown: “This is my city! I’m the MFing mayor!” And when Brown retaliates, pushing BP in the chest, it’s already over—the Devil has come to collect.

Win probability when Portis re-enters in the third, scores tied at 75: 39.8%

Win probability after Portis’ turnaround on Brown: 62.1%

vs. Nets​


Fresh off an inspired win over the Celtics and playing the 6-18 Nets, the Bucks have a chance for just their third set of consecutive wins of the season. But when Nic Claxton wins the tip and rookie Egor Demin—shooting a paltry 37% from the field for the season—splashes the opening three of the game, a shiver runs down your spine, and your chest tightens. The Nets go on to make seven of their first nine shots from the field and put up 37 first-quarter points, making a mockery of the Bucks’ defence. Demin finishes the game with 17 points on 75% shooting—outscoring Rollins and Porter combined—and the Nets gut the Bucks, win by 45 points. As the Bucks head back to the locker room, you have flashbacks to the 15-win 2013–14 season and, although these Bucks have nearly eclipsed that win total already, you find yourself longing for those days—when the fun of potential outshone the disappointment of expectation.

Win probability to begin the game: 56.5%

Win probability after Demin’s opening three: 51.3% (but it felt like a whole lot less)

vs. Raptors​


The hump grows quickly in this one—sand passing through an hourglass—and the Bucks find themselves in a 10-point deficit just two and a half minutes into the game. Players groan, fans moan, and a thought detonates in their collective consciousness: here we go again. But a quick timeout stops the bleeding and they regroup—hang around like flies in the heat—and suddenly it’s the fourth quarter. A Portis floating jumper makes it a six-point game at the 9:56 mark, and the top of the hump is well and truly in sight. KPJ sees it too: a steal and a fast break dunk cuts it to just four, momentum all Bucks. But the vision is a mirage on the desert dunes, and he mishandles the ball on the interception. Loose, it caroms around before landing in the lap of Gradey Dick in the corner, who buries the open three with just 3.4 seconds left on the shot clock. It’s a microcosm of the Bucks’ season—full of potential and, if just something went differently here or there, a different story. Tonight, though, the hump is just too much, and on the season it’s turning into a mountain.

Win probability after Portis’ jumper: 17%

Win probability after Dick’s three: 10.8%

@ Timberwolves​


Forget about the opening quarter, where the Bucks never trail—never even tie. Forget about the second, where they continue the renaissance, look like the team we thought this could be to start the season. And forget about the opening of the third, where Porter converts a dunk and then a cutting layup to put the Bucks up 16, forcing Chris Finch into a timeout. Instead, skip to the fourth—three minutes left—long after a 23-2 Wolves run got them right back into it. And now they lead 98-93.

Anthony Edwards has the ball on the right wing. He’s trapped, forced to give it up to Julius Randle at the top of the three-point arc. Randle has been quiet tonight—just nine shot attempts—and he wants none of this moment. So he drives to the paint, drops it off to Rudy Gobert camping in the dunker’s spot. Gobert does what he does, rises for the point-blank two. But Porter’s not having this—not after he’s led the Bucks all night, putting up a near triple-double—and so he meets Gobert at the summit, swats him into the backboard. The ball ricochets towards the Bucks’ basket, igniting the fast break, and Portis grabs it and pushes. One dribble. Two. Three. All he has to do is gather and finish, give the Bucks the jolt that will push them over the top, and win one they deserve on the road. Start a road trip that will revive their season. Instead, he… just leaves the ball behind and, on the other end, it finds Edwards on the left wing, perfectly in stride. Edwards is just 5/20 on the night, 1/9 from three, but that don’t matter—this dude lives for the moment. And so he finishes the stride, rises up, and splashes the three, the dagger finding its way right between the Bucks’ ribs. Right into their heart.

Win probability after Porter’s block: 14.7%

Win probability after Edward’s three: 5.0%



The thesis is clear: momentum isn’t always about what happens—it’s about what almost happens. And for the Bucks, “almost” is perfectly poignant. They woulda, coulda, shoulda… but they haven’t. And this is why it hurts.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-feat...-jr-bobby-portis-jaylen-brown-anthony-edwards
 
Rapid Recap: Bucks 111, Pacers 94

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The Milwaukee Bucks took round 2 over the Indiana Pacers, 111-94, in a (mostly) uneventful game in which they led wire-to-wire to end their eight-game road losing streak. Kevin Porter Jr. led the Bucks with 24 points, five assists, and six boards. T.J. McConnell led the Pacers with 16 points and six assists.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap


The first quarter was not a particularly pretty one for either side, with just 46 combined points, going 17/44 and 3/16 from deep. Myles Turner was not afraid to let it fly against his former team, but went just 1/6 in the opening stanza. It was T.J. McConnell who got the Pacers going with his mid-range magic, but Ryan Rollins matched him with a few middies of his own. The Bucks built a small lead as the quarter wound down, getting out in transition for some layups and dunks; unfortunately, one of those transition plays resulted in Gary Trent Jr. hobbling off injured. Bucks led 26-20 after one.

Milwaukee swiftly expanded their lead to open the second, going on a 7-0 run courtesy of Kyle Kuzma, Gary Harris, and Kevin Porter Jr. The newly signed Garrison Matthews was keeping the home team in it, nailing a set of triples in the early going as the Bucks nursed a double-digit edge. The visitors’ lead expanded into the mid-teens as the quarter rolled on, taking advantage of the Pacers’ sludge-like offence; Bobby Portis was one of the main guys who got going during this stretch, leading all scorers at that point with 12 points on 5/8 shooting. The offence was just flowing so easily to end the quarter; Bucks up 59-44 at half.

It was more of the same in the third; the Bucks just kept running over the Pacers and their sluggish O, expanding the lead into the 20s for most of the period. Ryan Rollins was solid in this period, showing his touch from inside and out. Additionally, Kyle Kuzma was able to use his size to back down Indy’s smaller forwards and get to the rim and free throw line, where he went 4/4 in the third. That said, the Pacers were only outscored by three in the period, so it wasn’t like the Bucks were knuckling down on defence to any significant degree. Visitors up 86-68 after three.

A bunch of poor opening possessions leading to transition opportunities for the Pacers had Doc call an early timeout. Indy had the lead down to 12 shortly thereafter as Johnny Furphy got multiple layups off Bucks turnovers. Thankfully, a few KPJ rim finishes and an AJ Green transition triple got the edge back up to 19. Some minutes passed with both teams mostly matching each other, but the Bucks lost a bit of focus at around the six-minute mark as the Pacers went on a 9-0 run to whittle the lead down to single digits. After the timeout, KPJ and Rollins both made crucial buckets to allay concerns. Bucks win.

Stat That Stood Out


Coming off a back-to-back, the Pacers’ offence looked sluggish all night, shooting just 40.7% from the field. The Bucks shot it at 51.2%, which was the difference in the game.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...inal-score-recap-kevin-porter-jr-ryan-rollins
 
Milwaukee Bucks Poll: Who should be playing more? Who should be playing less?

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A hot-button topic in recent weeks has been how Doc Rivers has allocated minutes in the absence of Giannis and since Kevin Porter Jr. returned. The main issues fans have (including myself) are in the backcourt and frontcourt, particularly with regard to two younger Bucks. Instead of giving you my two cents, I’ll just provide you with the minute averages and games played from December 1–22 for every Buck not named Antetokounmpo (or Prince).

  • Kevin Porter Jr.: 8 GP, 34.8 MPG
  • Ryan Rollins: 8 GP, 28.1 MPG
  • Kyle Kuzma: 7 GP, 27.0 MPG
  • Myles Turner: 8 GP, 26.9 MPG
  • AJ Green: 5 GP, 26.8 MPG
  • Bobby Portis: 8 GP, 26.6 MPG
  • Gary Trent Jr.: 8 GP, 26.2 MPG
  • Jericho Sims: 8 GP, 24.2 MPG
  • Gary Harris: 6 GP, 17.5 MPG
  • Cole Anthony: 5 GP, 9.9 MPG
  • Andre Jackson Jr.: 4 GP, 7.3 MPG
  • Amir Coffey: 4 GP, 5.0 MPG
  • Pete Nance: 4 GP, 4.2 MPG
  • Mark Sears: 0 GP, 0.0 MPG

In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, tell us who generally should be playing more or less. This will be an inexact science because it depends on game-to-game availability, of course, but just go with your gut. Also, weigh in on playoff chances and Giannis rumors.



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...-nba-playoffs-giannis-trade-rumors-doc-rivers
 
Bucks vs. Pacers Player Grades: Ryan gets rollin’ and Porter gets scootin’ as Bucks out-pace Indiana

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The Milwaukee Bucks got back in the win column after a convincing 111-94 win over the Indiana Pacers at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. After a back-and-forth first quarter, the Bucks held the Pacers scoreless for nearly three minutes to start the second, building a double-digit lead from which they wouldn’t look back (despite the inevitable Pacers run in the fourth). 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​

Kevin Porter Jr.​


38 minutes, 24 points, 6 rebounds, 5 assists, 3 steals, 8/13 FG, 2/3 3PT, 6/9 FT, +16

Porter continued his strong play in this one, filling up the stat sheet once again. He consistently put pressure on the rim and was at it again with his opportunistic defence with three steals. More importantly, Porter was under much more control than he has been recently, finishing with just one turnover, and his 11 last-quarter points were pivotal as the Bucks struggled to score and the Pacers brought it too close for comfort. He’s been asked to do a lot lately—too much, really—but this is the Porter the Bucks need. Bravo.

Grade: A-

Myles Turner​


28 minutes, 10 points, 6 rebounds, 3 blocks, 4/14 FG, 1/8 3PT, –3

Turner couldn’t get his shot to fall on a consistent basis, but the attitudinal shift was noteworthy. He was aggressive early and often, looking to score, moving the ball decisively, and swatting shots at the rim—his three blocks were his most since he had four against Portland 12 games ago. If he maintains this aggression, the results will come.

Grade: C+

Kyle Kuzma​


35 minutes, 15 points, 7 rebounds, 2 assists, 2 blocks, 5 turnovers, 5 fouls, 5/12 FG, 1/3 3PT, +5

Kuzma had a few rough sequences, particularly in the second half when he got the raw end of the whistle; overall though, he played quite an effective game. He had two offensive rebound put-backs that came at opportune times and generally made sound decisions.

Grade: C+

AJ Green​


26 minutes, 4 points, 2 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 steal, 5 fouls, 1/6 FG, 1/6 3PT, +2

Green is now just 3/16 from three since returning from injury and it’s clear something still isn’t right. But he did have a moment, splashing a transition three to stunt the Pacers’ momentum in the fourth quarter. Still, if Green is going to play 26 minutes, he needs to contribute more.

Grade: D

Bobby Portis​


32 minutes, 14 points, 9 rebounds, 2 assists, 6/12 FG, +8

Portis is one of the few Bucks who looks comfortable with the offence running through him; he was productive again with a typical “Bobby Buckets” 14 and nine. BP set the tone on the defensive glass, helping limit the Pacers to just seven offensive rebounds, and even dropped a dime to Jericho Sims for a jam. Importantly, he wasn’t burned by the Pascal Siakam matchup either—Spicy P finished with a very quiet 15 points.

Grade: B

Ryan Rollins​


33 minutes, 23 points, 7 rebounds, 4 assists, 1 steal, 1 block, 10/15 FG, 2/5 3PT, +18

Rollins put on a masterpiece, sending a message to Doc Rivers to play him more minutes. He missed his first shot but then went on to knock down eight in a row, proving the perfect yin to Porter’s yang. At one point, he hit a crossover-into-step-back three that was reminiscent of Damian Lillard and ended the game with zero turnovers. What more does he have to do?

Grade: A

Jericho Sims​


20 minutes, 6 points, 7 rebounds, 1 assists, 1 steal, 4 turnovers, 3/3 FG, +13

Despite coughing it up four times, Sims played another strong game overall. His newfound ability to power dunk without the power dribble (thanks, Finn) has made such a difference to his offensive game; plus, he continues to rebound well. Yes, Sims is limited, but he can be really valuable in his role and was so last night.

Grade: B-

Gary Harris​


16 minutes, 5 points, 2 rebounds, 1 assist, 1 block, 5 fouls, 2/4 FG, 1/2 3PT, +20

Harris continues to be the plus/minus darling of the team, posting a whopping +20 in just 16 minutes of game time. Rarely anything but a steady veteran presence, this game was no different for Harris, who shot when he was open and otherwise kept the ball moving. He just knows how to play.

Grade: C+

Doc Rivers​


For some reason, Rivers brought Rollins off the bench for the third game in a row. He ended up playing 33 minutes; however, with Gary Trent Jr. forced out early with a calf contusion and Green in foul trouble, it remains to be seen if this was Rivers’ intention or not. Otherwise, Doc called two timeouts just a minute apart in the fourth when the Pacers were on a run, and while the Bucks didn’t score immediately out of these, they—along with the substitutions made—did enough to break the momentum.

Grade: C

Limited Minutes:
Gary Trent Jr., Amir Coffey.

Garbage Time: Pete Nance, Cole Anthony, Andre Jackson Jr.

DNP-CD: Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Mark Sears.

Inactive: Giannis Antetokounmpo, Taurean Prince, Alex Antetokounmpo.

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • Turner missed his first five shots before finally converting on his sixth. Shortly after, he headed back to the locker room but returned to action late in the second quarter.
  • The Pacers were called for a backcourt violation in the first quarter and another in the third. They are now tied with the Philadelphia 76ers and Memphis Grizzlies (6) for most in the league.
  • Speaking of violations, Sims was called for an offensive 3-second violation to end the third quarter—the first of the season for a Buck.
  • The teams combined to shoot just 3/16 from three in the first quarter, one of which was an absurd Porter turnaround from the corner to beat the shot clock.
  • The Bucks held the Pacers scoreless until the 9:26 minute mark of the second quarter while putting up seven points of their own. It would be the defining run of the game.
  • Giannis played three-on-three yesterday, suggesting he is ramping up towards a return—possibly this time next week!
  • With last night’s game, Rollins has 29 double-digit scoring performances on the season. Last year, he had just 15 in total.
  • The Bucks held the Pacers to just 68 points through three quarters and 94 on the night—an opponent low on the season (and just the second time they’ve held a team under 100).

Up Next​


After a Christmas pitstop, the Bucks head to Memphis to take on the Grizzlies for the third leg of their five-game road trip. You can find all the action on FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin—tip off is at 7:00 p.m. Central.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...yer-grades-stats-kevin-porter-jr-ryan-rollins
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Indiana Pacers Preview & Game Thread: Turner grudge match, round 2

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Editor’s note: As you can see from the title, game threads will no longer be posted in The Feed; they will be combined with game previews from now on.

The Milwaukee Bucks play the Indiana Pacers in their second matchup of the season tonight, with the Pacers playing on the second night of a back-to-back. Of course, we all know the bitter rivalry and storylines behind this matchup, with Giannis nailing a game-winner in the early-November matchup to give the Bucks a 1-0 lead on the season against their divisional rivals. Can they make it 2-0 without the big fella? We shall see.

Where We’re At​


The Bucks have lost three straight against the Nets, Raptors, and Timberwolves. On the plus side, they gave the final two opponents a good run for their money, unlike the first one. The most notable development has probably been Ryan Rollins’ move to the bench (and his general minimisation). Granted, Rollins had played poorly over a few games, but I’m not so sure playing him just 23 minutes is the answer. Rollins’ skillset will be needed tonight as an advantage-creator against the Pacers’ pressing defence; I have a feeling he’ll have a good one—if Doc lets him.

On the other hand, the Pacers are on an even worse slide, having lost five in a row, including near-20-point Ls to the lowly Wizards and Pelicans. Although Myles Turner was often the source of frustration for Indy fans, they are finding out that his backups may not be up to the level. And then you obviously consider how much that team relied on Tyrese Haliburton to stir the drink; not having him makes them a way less dynamic outfit. Still, you can bet your bottom dollar that team, and that city, wants to beat the brakes off the Bucks tonight. They’ll be ready.

Injury Report​


For the Bucks Giannis (calf) and Taurean Prince (neck) are both out.

The Pacers are on the second night of a back-to-back, and thus will have their report up by midday.

Player To Watch​


Pascal Siakam is my player to watch. When these teams last played, Siakam got whatever he wanted when Giannis wasn’t guarding him. Well, with Giannis not playing, the Pacers star forward could go off. It will take doubles, stunts, and an overall increased team presence from the Bucks to limit him.

How To Watch​


FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin at 6:30 p.m. CST.


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...scussion-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Bucks vs. Timberwolves Player Grades: Kevin Porter Jr., Bucks can’t hold on, fumble big lead against Wolves

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The Bucks looked like a different team in the first half against the Minnesota Timberwolves, leading the entire way, and held a 16-point lead early in the third quarter. But a 23-2 Timberwolves run flipped the game on its head, and the Bucks ended up losers for the third game in a row (and the fifth out of six). 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​

Kevin Porter Jr.​


37 minutes, 24 points, 10 rebounds, 9 assists, 4 steals, 6 turnovers, 8/17 FG, 3/9 3PT, 5/6 FT, -5

Some reckless turnovers aside, Porter was fantastic in this one. Often the only ball handler on court, Porter’s shot-creation for himself and others helped the Bucks build a 16-point lead. His cat-quick reflexes were positive defensively too, leading to four steals, and he had what could have been a momentum-shifting block in the fourth—if only Bobby Portis didn’t inexplicably lose the handle in transition.

Grade: B+

Myles Turner​


38 minutes, 13 points, 5 rebounds, 4 assists, 4/11 FG, 3/8 3PT, -12

If it wasn’t for an eight-point personal run late in the second and a late three in the fourth when the game was all but over, you could have easily thought Turner didn’t play. He was simply invisible for much of the game—a habit that has marred too much of his Bucks tenure thus far—and finished with a team-worst plus/minus of -12, offering little in the way of rim protection. For a player on his contract, Turner simply must produce more.

Grade: D+

Kyle Kuzma​


32 minutes, 12 points, 10 rebounds, 4 assists, 4 turnovers, 3/5 FG, 6/8 FT, -9

Kuzma got the assignment of guarding Anthony Edwards for much of the night and did an exceptional job, forcing Edwards into 7/24 shooting. Offensively, he played within himself for the most part—though some costly tunnel-vision plays down the stretch did hurt—got to the line more than any other Buck, and attacked the defensive glass. The renaissance season continues—keep it up, Kuz.

Grade: B

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AJ Green​


23 minutes, 4 points, 3 rebounds, 1/8 FG, 1/8 3PT, -9

Green is on the court for one thing and one thing only—his shooting. Last night, he offered almost nothing in that department, posting his second-worst shooting performance of the season (behind only his “0-for” when he left the game early against Philadelphia). Most of the shots he took were good looks, though, and he needs to keep letting them fly. Perhaps that shoulder still isn’t quite right after all.

Grade: F

Ryan Rollins​


23 minutes, 16 points, 4 rebounds, 5 assists, 1 block, 8/17 FG, 2/6 3PT, +5

Rollins came off the bench for the second game in a row and was aggressive on the offensive end, hunting his shot throughout and providing much-needed creation outside of Porter. His minutes have trended downward lately and, for some reason, that continued tonight despite his strong play.

Grade: B

Gary Trent Jr.​


18 minutes, 6 points, 2 rebounds, 2/11 FG, 2/7 3PT, +3

How Trent finished with a positive plus/minus is anyone’s guess—he chucked shots any time he had the chance, including several forced, contested looks from the paint. At one point, he even fumbled a loose ball out of bounds that would’ve led to an uncontested layup. Like Green, when Trent’s shot isn’t falling, he offers little else, and—outside of his 15-game rookie season—he’s now shooting a career-low from the field (including 3/19 over the last two).

Grade: F

Bobby Portis​


39 minutes, 16 points, 11 rebounds, 1 steal, 3 turnovers, 7/17 FG, 2/6 3PT, +6

Tonight was a classic love/hate game from Portis. He put up points and crashed the boards well, arguably outplaying Julius Randle. Yet, his inability to convert shots around the rim once again proved costly, and he just about closed the door on a Bucks comeback when he forgot how to dribble on the aforementioned fast-break opportunity in the fourth.

Grade: C+

Jericho Sims​


19 minutes, 9 points, 6 rebounds, 2 assists, 1 steal, 4/4 FG, 0

Back off the bench, Sims played his role to a T tonight, corralling rebounds and finishing around the rim with authority. He continues to be the only Buck who collects rebounds above the rim and finally seemed to realise he doesn’t have to pound-dribble before dunking—more please. At one point, Sims even showed off his handle with a behind-the-back crossover!

Grade: A

Doc Rivers​


Rivers went to the zone early and often in this one, and it worked in the first half, with the Timberwolves struggling from three. His decision to go big to counter the Wolves’ size was also sound, and he even won a rare coach’s challenge. But limiting Rollins to just 23 minutes with the Bucks so desperate for shot creation—and Green and Trent struggling mightily on a combined 3/18—was just baffling. Horst, it’s time.

Grade: C

Limited Minutes: Gary Harris

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

Inactive: Giannis Antetokounmpo, Taurean Prince, Alex Antetokounmpo.

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • Ryan Rollins came off the bench for the second game in a row and didn’t check in until the 2:34 minute mark of the first quarter. Despite playing just 6:57 in the first half, he put up eight shots.
  • The Bucks led for the entire first quarter—the first time this has happened for the season—and continued that throughout the second quarter.
  • Prior to tonight’s game, ex-Buck Donte DiVincenzo averaged 14.3 PPG against the Bucks. Tonight he finished with 18 points, offering the distance shooting the Bucks’ shooting guards couldn’t—and the overall versatility they simply don’t have. What could have been.
  • Myles Turner scored his first points of the game—a straightaway three-pointer—at the 4:00 minute mark of the second quarter. He hit another from the same spot on very the next possession, then went to the line for two free throws—eight points in one minute and seven seconds.
  • Both teams struggled from three in the first half, shooting a combined 12/47 (Milwaukee 8/25; Minnesota 4/22). The Wolves turned that around in the second half, going 10/23, while the Bucks got colder, hitting just 5/20.
  • After Porter converted a cutting layup to put the Bucks up 16 early in the third, the Timberwolves went on a 23-2 run to take a five-point lead.
  • Working well for much of the night, the Bucks’ zone looked poor to begin the fourth; Terrance Shannon Jr. took advantage, hitting three triples in just over two minutes of action.
  • Doc Rivers won a coach’s challenge late in the fourth and then strangely followed it up with a timeout—the Bucks’ final one for the game. When asked about the purpose of this, he said:
“Exactly what we got… It was a tough call because I would have loved to save that timeout. But I’m looking at the score—and we needed to score—and I thought we needed a three. And I thought we needed to do it in under ten seconds, so the only way to do that is by running what we ran.”
  • Despite 18 rebounds from Rudy Gobert—and Milwaukee being the worst per-game rebounding team in the league this season—the Bucks out-rebounded the Wolves 51-46. It’s just the sixth time all season they’ve won the battle of the boards.

Up Next​


The Bucks take on the Indiana Pacers on Tuesday for the second leg of their five-game road trip. You can find all the action on FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin—tip off is at 6:30 p.m. Central.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...stats-kevin-porter-jr-ryan-rollins-doc-rivers
 
Rapid Recap: Grizzlies 125, Bucks 104

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The Milwaukee Bucks fall to the Memphis Grizzlies 125-104, unable to win consecutive games since they did so in the early season. AJ Green was probably the Bucks’ best player with a season-high-tying 20 points on 6/11 from three. Jaren Jackson Jr. led the Grizzlies with 24 points, nine rebounds, and five blocks.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap


Both teams were feeling each other out throughout most of the opening period, with neither gaining much of an advantage. AJ Green got going with two much-needed threes in the opening stanza, while Bobby Portis (nine points) and Kevin Porter Jr. (seven) accounted for much of the scoring elsewhere. For the Grizzlies, Jaren Jackson Jr. put the team on his back, attacking the rack for 10 early points. It was late in the period that the Bucks made their move, going on a 13-2 run; much of that late push was powered by Ryan Rollins, who ended the quarter with an acrobatic and-one finish. Bucks led 35-25 at quarter time.

After a slow first quarter, Ja Morant got going in transition to open the second with consecutive buckets. Myles Turner threw up multiple attempts to foul-bait, none of which worked, but the latest led to another Memphis transition bucket as Doc called a timeout, Bucks up 37-33. In the space of just under four minutes, the Grizz went on a 14-5 run. The Bucks would fail to score a field goal for nearly five minutes as Memphis took full advantage, expanding their lead to double digits. Things really fell apart in the second for the Bucks; they got outscored 35-15 (!) in the period, had seven turnovers, and thus were down 60-50 at half.

The third quarter started out with Memphis extending its lead to 15, a run capped off by a Christian Koloko transition lob. Luckily, the Bucks were able to keep the deficit at around 10 points for the remainder of the quarter. AJ Green and Kyle Kuzma made timely shots, as did Bobby Portis. What was letting the Bucks down was simple lapses in focus; for example, they had the lead down to nine, and then Jericho Sims fouled Santi Aldama on a three. Overall, though, it was an OK quarter for Milwaukee, down 92-83 after three.

The fourth started off well for the Bucks, with Rollins nailing a step-back two and some great defensive possessions in their zone. Unfortunately, a horrendous call on a Morant three let the air out of Milwaukee’s balloon, which was then followed by a Cedric Coward transition triple to bump the lead back up to 12. KPJ nailed a kick-out triple to have the Bucks within 10 at the 6:30 mark; unfortunately, that was followed by a Cam Spencer four-point play. From there, the Grizz just incrementally extended their lead until it was time to get the starters out and prepare for tomorrow’s back-to-back. Bucks take another L.

Stat That Stood Out


The Bucks turned the ball over a whopping 22 times; KPJ had seven of them. Just can’t win that way.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...s-final-score-recap-aj-green-jaren-jackson-jr
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Chicago Bulls Preview & Game Thread: Mid recognizes mid

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The Milwaukee Bucks travel to the Chicago Bulls tonight for an epic play-in battle that may feature one Giannis Antetokounmpo. The “rivalry” series started at the Fiserv Forum last month with the Bucks emerging victorious. We’ll see if history repeats itself; it’s been a tale of two offenses recently, with the Bulls (2nd) overpowering the Bucks (30th) over the last five games.

Where We’re At​


It turns out the Bucks struggle without Giannis: they have lost four out of five, with a win against the Pacers. Indiana is actively trying to lose, but that hasn’t been a deterrent to Milwaukee as of late (see: Brooklyn). In times like these, it’s important to take the silver linings where you can. The Bucks have some interesting young pieces that are developing individually and in tandem. It may be living hell watching Doc orchestrate them, but they can shine in spots nonetheless. Of course, in times like these, you also wait for the big guy’s return, which could be tonight.

The Bulls have been historically mid and are living up to it due to a recent hot streak. That’s thanks to a coinkydink of recent scheduling that saw them win two straight against the Cavs and two straight against the Hawks, scoring 126+ in each. Our Old Friends at BlogABull have been holding them accountable as ever, with choice headlines like “The middling calvary has returned, and shockingly that’s not enough,” “Billy Donovan says blame the guy who put this team together,” and “Bulls ‘depth’ has been explored, and exposed.” Ever the critic, they’ve been noticeably more quiet during their recent success (lol).

Injury Report​


It’s a SEGABABA for both teams, so the injury report (and subsequently this article) will be updated later today.

UPDATE: Josh Giddey is fittingly questionable for the Bulls (left ankle sprain), while Noa Essengue is out (left shoulder surgery).

UPDATE #2: Giannis is questionable for the Bucks with his right calf strain, as is Gary Trent Jr. with his left calf contusion. Of course, Taurean Prince (neck surgery) is out.

Player To Watch​


Ryan Rollins, and specifically his minutes. Play him!

How To Watch​


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


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...scussion-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Rapid Recap: Bucks 112, Bulls 103

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Giannis Antetokounmpo came back from an eight-game absence with a calf strain, helping the Milwaukee Bucks snap the Chicago Bulls’ five-game win streak at the United Center. The Greek Freak had 29 while Ryan Rollins stepped up in key moments to finish with 20. No Bull had more than Nikola Vucevic and Coby White, each with 16.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


While Giannis loudly announced his return by blocking Matas Buzelis at the rim, the Bucks turned it over on their first two possessions with bad passes, forcing a timeout from Doc Rivers just 81 seconds into the game. Chicago opened on a 10-3 run, but Milwaukee got back into it quickly with a 10-4 run, highlighted by a Giannis triple. Consecutive turnovers by Josh Giddey gave Milwaukee their first lead of the game with 4:53 left in the frame, and a bench lineup anchored by Kyle Kuzma briefly extended it to five. Though it tightened back up, the visitors finished the first ahead 28-26.

On a minute restriction, Giannis exited with 5:48 left in the first, but the Bucks held their own without him well into the second. Four Bulls turnovers in the opening three minutes resulted in a seven-point Milwaukee advantage as Giannis and Myles Turner re-entered at 8:22. And man, did they get rolling. An 8-0 run featured three consecutive Giannis dunks and put the Bucks on top by 13 under two minutes later. Giannis made that four off a nice feed from Kevin Porter Jr. before hitting the pine for the last five minutes. The starters plus Kuz didn’t let it get closer than seven until the closing minute, when two late turnovers—their first since the 10:41 mark of the first—closed the gap to 54-50 Bucks at half.

Both sides traded threes for several minutes out of the locker room, but the Bulls started racking up whistles to keep the Bucks up by as much as eight. Giannis’ shift was done after just over five minutes, and Chicago took advantage with a 7-0 run, slicing their deficit to one. Stop me if you’ve heard this before, but offensive rebounding and turnover woes plagued Milwaukee during this stretch as Chicago extended that run to 14-5 and jumped in front with about two minutes left. Badly needed threes by Harris and Bobby Portis, plus Giannis checking back in, staunched the bleeding as the third ended with the Bucks leading 85-80.

Milwaukee couldn’t really hold serve as the fourth began, even with Giannis. He sat with 8:52 remaining, and it was up to the bench bigs, who barely clung onto the lead in the next three minutes before Giannis and Turner were back just past the midpoint. The starters soon reassembled, right around the time when Rollins hit two huge threes. He then grabbed a big offensive board 53 seconds later, which Turner paid off at the rim and made it a six-point game. AJ Green then made it nine with a trey, but four quick Vucevic points made it 103-100 with 90 seconds left. Giannis committed an offensive foul, hit two free throws, made a layup, and had an inbounds violation in that stretch, so they needed a defensive stop with 33 seconds to go, and they got it. Giannis did throw down a fast-break dunk with two seconds on the clock, which drew tons of boos from the United Center crowd and sparked a postgame scuffle. More on that in the extended recap.

Stat That Stood Out​


Milwaukee shot just 22.2% from deep in the first half to Chicago’s 53.3% on three more attempts. But in the second, they flipped that number on its head, shooting 50% to the Bulls’ 21.7%, despite taking five fewer attempts.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...cap-giannis-antetokounmpo-return-ryan-rollins
 
Bucks vs. Grizzlies Player Grades: Green’s hot shooting spoiled by Porter’s volatility

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22 turnovers played a major role in the Milwaukee Bucks’ loss to the Memphis Grizzlies, 125-104. Jaren Jackson Jr. dominated for the Grizz, highlighted by his defensive impact (five blocks). Memphis has now beaten Milwaukee eight times in a row, going back to March 2022. 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​

Kevin Porter Jr.​


33 minutes, 16 points, 5 assists, 8 rebounds, 7 turnovers, 4/15 FG, 1/7 3P, –17

KPJ was bad last night. Just trying to do too much with the ball. Didn’t have it going from a shooting standpoint. He has now has committed six or more turnovers in four of the last five games, which is wild.

Grade: D

Myles Turner​


28 minutes, 8 points, 2/11 FG, 2/6 3P, -6

You know, for most of Myles’ “bad games” this season, I’ve felt myself assigning more blame to others, given his limited ability to self-create—but not this game. I felt Turner was soft on both ends in this one; he kept trying to foul-bait and seemed to find ways not to embrace contact on offence. On defence, he kept letting guys overpower him way too easily.

Grade: D+

Ryan Rollins​


23 minutes, 15 points, 5 assists, 4 rebounds, 2 turnovers, 5/12 FG, 2/4 3P, -3

Rollins was solid in this one as a lead initiator, certainly better than KPJ. I thought he ran the team well and created good looks for himself. It also felt like Ryan got a horrendous whistle.

Grade: B

AJ Green​


34 minutes, 20 points, 7/13 FG, 6/11 3P, -23

From a process POV, there’s not much to say about AJ’s game that’s much different from his other games; shots just went in last night. His defence can still leave you wanting, but it was nice to see Green get some positive results on the shooting front.

Grade: A-

Kyle Kuzma​


29 minutes, 15 points, 8 rebounds, 5/10 FG, 0/2 3P,-23

This was kind of a meh game for Kuz. He scored relatively efficiently, turning it over just twice, but wasn’t really able to make his teammates better. I thought his defence was fine as well.

Grade: C+

Gary Harris​


16 minutes, 8 points, 3/3 FG, –2

As Zac said in the last extended recap, Harris just knows how to play—and that was no different in this game. He played good defence, converted plays when he had to convert, and even got to the cup off a tough DHO action (given that’s generally not his role).

Grade: B+

Bobby Portis​


35 minutes, 15 points, 12 rebounds, 7/14 FG, 1/5 3P, -23

I thought Bobby’s defence faded as the game went along, but his offence—and specifically his ability to play on the block—was needed. Given the number of minutes he played, I don’t think his plus/minus is representative of his game, which was completely acceptable in my view.

Grade: B

Jericho Sims​


18 minutes, 2 points, 5 rebounds, 1/2 FG, –23

Sims was mostly fine. He’s got to stop setting illegal picks, though; it’s clearly becoming something other teams are scouting.

Grade: C+

Doc Rivers​


I want to stress that, by and large, I do think this team has been making progress over the last few weeks, which has to be credited, in part, to Doc. The wheels kind of fell off last night, but I want to see what the team looks like in the coming games and if this one was an aberration. After all, the Grizzlies have quite literally dominated the Bucks for years now. I will say that Ryan Rollins, although he did have five fouls by the end, should still not be playing just 23 minutes.

Grade: C

Limited minutes:
Amir Coffey

Garbage time: Cole Anthony, Pete Nance, Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Andre Jackson Jr.

Inactive: Taurean Prince, Alex Antetokounmpo, Mark Sears, Giannis Antetokounmpo, Gary Trent Jr.

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • Doc put the turnovers down to not moving the ball: “I thought when the ball stopped was when the turnovers went up. We started trying to make our [own] plays; our spacing got bad. Every possession we moved the ball, we got whatever shot we wanted.”
  • On KPJ’s persistent individual turnover issues, Doc wants him “just to be solid.” Said he thinks one mistake is leading to the next, and that he must grow in that area.
  • Ryan Rollins continues to get no love from the refs; every 50/50 call seems to go against him.

Up Next​


The Bucks back up tonight against the Chicago Bulls; Giannis is expected to play! Catch the game on FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin at 7:00 p.m. Central.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...-player-grades-stats-aj-green-kevin-porter-jr
 
Bucks vs. Bulls Player Grades: Ryan Rollins is clutch in Giannis’ big return

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Taking out the Bulls at the United Center last night, the Bucks salvaged the second half of their back-to-back with their second road win in three games—no small feat for this year’s squad. Milwaukee has defeated Chicago in both of their matchups so far. 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​


25 minutes, 29 points, 8 rebounds, 1 assist, 2 turnovers, 1 steal, 1 block, 10/15 FG, 1/3 3P, 8/10 FT, +13

Watching him get cooking in the second quarter was a sight for sore eyes. It didn’t matter how many defenders Chicago threw at him—he got to the rim. In a four-possession stretch encompassing 1:27 of game time, he had four dunks. And to top it off, he was great at the line.

Grade: A+

Myles Turner​


27 minutes, 13 points, 5 rebounds, 4/9 FG, 2/5 3P, 3/4 FT, +11

Though he didn’t register a block, he was pretty stout inside, and his minutes largely mirrored Giannis’. Chicago shot just 20/35 in the restricted area, and most of that had to do with him. Both of his threes came early in the third quarter, but were difference makers: each raised the Bucks’ win probability by 4–6%.

Grade: B+

Kevin Porter Jr.​


39 minutes, 8 points, 6 rebounds, 9 assists, 4 turnovers, 4 steals, 3/10 FG, 0/3 3P, 2/2 FT, +8

Another rough shooting night, but he was all over the passing lanes: three of his steals came in the second quarter and helped key the Bucks to their biggest lead of the night. At just 7/25 from the field in the last two games, I do wish he’d take fewer trips on the Tough Shot Express, but he’s finding his teammates in the right places so that makes up for it somewhat.

Grade: B

AJ Green​


28 minutes, 6 points, 2 rebounds, 2/9 FG, 2/8 3P, +14

Also not a banner night from the field, but I thought Green got better defensively as the game went on. Nice to see after he really struggled on that end in Memphis the other night. His second triple with just under three minutes left might have sealed the W.

Grade: B

Ryan Rollins​


35 minutes, 20 points, 7 rebounds, 5 assists, 1 turnover, 2 steals, 4 fouls, 7/12 FG, 5/9 3P, -2

The plus-minus gets this one wrong. A sublime second half for Rylo: his consecutive threes on either side of the five-minute mark of the fourth decisively swung the momentum back towards the Bucks after the Bulls cut it to one. Not to be outdone, he snagged two critical offensive boards in the last four minutes; the first may have been just as big as one of the treys. These are veteran plays. Big-time plays. Winning plays. To top it off, he did the lion’s share of work on Josh Giddey, teaming with KPJ to hold the Aussie to 13 points on 4/10 shooting. THIS IS WHY YOU START HIM.

Grade: A+

Kyle Kuzma​


23 minutes, 12 points, 2 rebounds, 4 assists, 1 block, 4/10 FG, 0/2 3P, 4/4 FT, –2

When Giannis sat, Kuz was generally taking charge of the offense in the first half, even bringing the ball up a bit. He managed to be a steadying presence in those minutes. But like against the Grizzlies, he ends up on the floor way too much after attacking the rim, looking for fouls. It just didn’t burn them last night.

Grade: B

Bobby Portis​


24 minutes, 17 points, 11 rebounds, 2 steals, 7/16 FG, 2/3 3P, -9

Pretty aggressive in looking for his own shot and very strong on the boards (four of the offensive variety). Rim protection wasn’t half bad either, and he too found his way into the passing lanes. The plus-minus kind of misses here too; I thought he helped more than he hurt.

Grade: B

Jericho Sims​


17 minutes, 4 points, 6 rebounds, 2/2 FG, +4

KPJ found him for lobs a couple times, and he was no small part of the rim protection success. Just needs to control the ball a bit better inside and not take as many—or any—dribbles.

Grade: B-

Gary Harris​


22 minutes, 3 points, 1 steal, 1/3 FG, 1/3 3P, x/x FT, +10

Nothing really stood out positively, but definitely nothing stood out negatively either. He guarded up pretty well on the larger Bulls’ wings like Kevin Huerter.

Grade: B-

Doc Rivers​


Before the game, Doc talked about why Rollins had been playing comparatively less in recent weeks:

“I split him and Scoot up. I like him and Scoot together when Giannis plays. But when Giannis doesn’t play, I don’t like him and Scoot together. We need that separation, and so starting Scoot means Rollins off the bench.”

Well, this certainly proved as much, though I don’t see why they couldn’t have been staggered, or still getting 30+ minutes for Rollins even as Porter continues playing 38–39 every night. Otherwise, good timeout, challenge usages, and the rotations worked well enough even with Giannis on a minute restriction.

Grade: B+

DNP-CD:
Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Cole Anthony, Amir Coffey, Andre Jackson Jr., Pete Nance

Inactive: Alex Antetokounmpo, Taurean Prince, Mark Sears, Gary Trent Jr.

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • Rollins hit the deck hard on defense late in the second, limped a few times down the court before a stoppage allowed him to sub out. The replay showed knee-to-knee contact; he didn’t head to the locker room until half, though, with a brace on his left knee. But he came out for the second half and shedded the brace, saying post-game that it was only a bruise.
  • This wasn’t a terrible rebounding game for Milwaukee (52-47), and while Chicago had a 16-11 edge on the offensive glass, they doubled them up 6-3 in the fourth quarter. Portis and Rollins had four of them. Definitely a reason the Bucks held on.
  • Giannis threw down a windmill with two seconds left, and the Bulls (and their fans) took exception to what one could say is poor sportsmanship, resulting in a postgame skirmish. Here’s why Giannis said he did it:
“What, we’re 11th in the East?… 12th? Just gotta keep finding our identity. And if that is to get a little bit scrappy at the end, so be it. Like, we’re not the champs. Why should we play the clock out and have respect and fair play?We’re fighting for our lives right now. This is real talk. I’ve been [in the league] 13 years; if we keep losing, brother, probably half of the team’s not gonna be here. I really don’t care. At the end of the day, I just want to be available, be healthy, and help my team win. And if that’s what has to happen for them—everybody—to wake up and understand we’re fighting for our lives and we gotta get our hands dirty, so be it.”

  • Doc excused it too, saying that while Giannis should have dribbled it out, he’s just “happy to be back.”
  • It seems unlikely much will come of the “fight” as far as punishment. Coby White and Nikola Vucevic got in Giannis’ face about it, then Portis barreled in as he’s wont to do, but no one swung or made much physical contact. Postgame, Doc called it a “2026 fight” and “far from the Malice at the Palace.” But it will juice up a rivalry that’s never been very bitter (at least on the court) between these two franchises, so that’s fun.

Up Next​


Milwaukee will try once again to win consecutive games for the first time since October as they head to Charlotte on Monday. Tip vs. the Hornets is 6 p.m. Central on FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...ades-stats-giannis-antetokounmpo-ryan-rollins
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Charlotte Hornets Preview & Game Thread: Taking advantage of opportunity

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The Milwaukee Bucks tonight do battle with the much-improved Charlotte Hornets, who sit just below the Bucks in the standings. The season series between these teams is 1-1, with Charlotte taking the first game by double digits and the Bucks taking the second in an OT thriller.

Where We’re At​


The Bucks have a long way to go, but Saturday’s win against the Bulls was a step in the right direction. Giannis returned and looked as good as ever, dropping 29 points (on 10/15 shooting) and eight rebounds. Of course, the Bucks were blown out by the Grizzlies (who just lost to the Wizards) the night prior and have given fans little reason to believe as of yet. Fun fact: the Bucks are now the only team that has not won back-to-back games since October—that needs to change soon (hopefully tonight).

Unlike past seasons, the Hornets have looked like a functional NBA team this year. Their core of LaMelo Ball, Brandon Miller (who they just got back), Kon Knueppel, and Miles Bridges just makes sense. Thus, it’s no surprise that this team just beat the Orlando Magic (without the services of Rookie of the Year contender Knueppel for the entire second half, I might add). Simply put, the Hornets are dangerous, having beaten the Cavs, Raptors, and Hawks this season. The Bucks must be ready.

Injury Report​


For the Bucks, Taurean Prince (neck) is out. Gary Trent Jr. (calf) is questionable.

For the Hornets, Ryan Kalkbrenner, Kon Knueppel, Mason Plumlee, and Grant Williams are all out. Sion James is questionable.

Player To Watch​


Let’s go with Myles Turner. His shooting has improved significantly when he plays alongside Giannis. Turner has a 62.5% true shooting percentage with GA on the court (363 minutes), which drops to 53.0% with him off (530 minutes); credit to Nathan Marzion on Twitter for that nugget. We’ve all been somewhat disappointed in Myles thus far, but the whole point of him was that he would work well with the big fella. Let’s hope for some better play going forward.

How To Watch​


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


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...scussion-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
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