Milwaukee Bucks vs. Chicago Bulls Preview & Game Thread: Bull in the headlights

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MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - FEBRUARY 03: Kyle Kuzma #18 of the Milwaukee Bucks shoots the ball against Matas Buzelis #14 of the Chicago Bulls during the first quarter at Fiserv Forum on February 03, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Milwaukee Bucks leave home briefly to take on the struggling Chicago Bulls in the Windy City this afternoon. The Bucks have won each of the three matchups this season, with this one wrapping up the season series. On its face, this game looks like a gimme for Milwaukee, but Chicago is on a huge losing streak and thus will probably come out with extra juice.

Where We’re At​


After winning eight of 10, the Bucks were brought back down to earth in their last game against the Knicks, losing by nearly 30 points. Milwaukee’s offence—which had been keeping them afloat—failed to fire against New York, leaving them dead in the water. They have been shooting the cover off the ball, with the highest effective field goal percentage in the NBA over the past 10 games, but they still need their defence to turn up—we’ll see if that happens today.

The Bulls… well, things have gone downhill fast (though that seems to be the goal). This team lost 11 straight games in February, the worst month in franchise history. The front office finally decided to bite the bullet and trade away franchise cornerstones Nikola Vucevic, Coby White, and Ayo Dosunmu at the deadline for a bunch of seconds, hitting the eject button on this season in the process. How much higher will they be able to get in the lottery with so few games left? Probably not much, but hey, at least they’ve chosen a direction?

Injury Report​


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

For the Bulls, the following players are out: Zach Collins, Noa Essengue, Jaden Ivey, Anfernee Simons, Jalen Smith, and Patrick Williams.

Player To Watch​


After a mixed bag of games, I’m watching for what Ousmane Dieng can do today. Theoretically, this game should provide him a runway to explore more on offence than he’s been doing. In particular, I’m watching his free throw attempts. Dieng has taken a total of 10 free throws in eight games with the team. The criticism of him in OKC was that he didn’t play with enough force and aggression, and that hasn’t really changed with the Bucks—let’s hope it does today.

How To Watch​


FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin at 2:30 p.m. CST.


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...scussion-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Bucks vs. Bulls Player Grades: Kevin Porter Jr. and Cam Thomas dribble into blowout

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CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - MARCH 1: Head coach Doc Rivers of the Milwaukee Bucks looks on during the first half against the Chicago Bulls at the United Center on March 1, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Geoff Stellfox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

March came in like a lamb for the Bucks at the United Center today: a 16-point first-half lead turned into a 120-97 laugher, thanks to a catastrophic 27-0 Bulls run and a 33-8 fourth quarter in the home team’s favor. Still, the Bucks finished the season series 3-1 over the Bulls. 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​


21 minutes, 8 points, 7 rebounds, 2 steals, 1 block, 3 turnovers, 3/10 FG, 2/5 3P, 3/4 FT, -20

Scoreless after the first quarter, and only five further shot attempts. In his defense, Doc wasn’t playing him much for whatever reason. Probably could have used his rim protection for more than nine second-half minutes, given that Chicago outscored Milwaukee 34-10 in the paint after half.

Grade: D+

Kevin Porter Jr.​


32 minutes, 10 points, 6 rebounds, 4 assists, 4/16 FG, 0/1 3P, 2/2 FT, -23

A lot of really tough shots and few fell, especially inside. What I liked the least, though, was the open threes he passed up over and over again in the second half. Couldn’t stop Josh Giddey, who had a triple-double (and a surprising 14 rebounds).

Grade: D

AJ Green​


30 minutes, 13 points, 2 assists, 4 fouls, 4/11 FG, 4/11 3P, -20

Again, all his points in the first half. 0/3 in the second. Made some important ones early, but then disappeared. Offered next to nothing on the other end.

Grade: D+

Ryan Rollins​


34 minutes, 11 points, 7 rebounds, 7 assists, 5 turnovers, 2 steals, 5/11 FG, 1/6 3P, -19

The counting stats are decent until you get to the turnovers, which are a real problem of late with Rylo. His passing in the second quarter was outstanding, but his second half was a brickfest. Starting 4/4 and then going 1/7… hardly alone among the starters today.

Grade: C-

Kyle Kuzma​


23 minutes, 10 points, 4 assists, 4 turnovers, 4/5 FG, – 24

I’ll give him credit for being the only Buck to make any hay inside, but otherwise, nothing positive from Kuz today. Seemed too cavalier when he entered in the fourth quarter, and the Bucks continued getting wrecked.

Grade: D

Bobby Portis​


24 minutes, 18 points, 5 rebounds, 7/14 FG, 3/8 3P, +1

Too many middies (more on that later) and settling for jumpers, but at least they were falling. A key part of the Bucks’ second-quarter success, but also part of the unit that started to let the game slip away early in the fourth before checking out.

Grade: B

Cam Thomas​


18 minutes, 15 points, 3 assists, 3/11 FG, 8/10 FT, +2

The type of scoring line that looks really efficient if you only look at the free throws. Dribbled the air out of the ball, gets to the line, took ill-advised jumpers… the Cam Thomas experience.

Grade: C

Jericho Sims​


24 minutes, 2 points, 11 rebounds, 1/1 FG, +1

Excellent on the glass in the first half and five offensive boards for the game, but—stop me if you’ve heard this before—didn’t do anything after half. Also part of the unit I mentioned with Portis above, and was hardly near the rim when the Bulls started yamming on them.

Grade: C-

Ousmane Dieng​


21 minutes, 7 points, 1 rebound, 3 assists, 3 steals, 3/12 FG, 1/6 3P, -1

Dieng’s three-point shooting has cratered the last three games (2/14), but a chunk of his misses came in garbage time after the Bucks went down 19. Wasn’t on the floor for too much of the early fourth quarter cataclysm.

Grade: C

Doc Rivers​


Oh boy, where do I start? I’ll just give one of his postgame comments, but I have a lot more to say about today, which I’ll do in a separate place. Anyway, the Bucks missed 18 consecutive field goals from the third into the fourth quarter, and a lot were clean looks. Here’s what Doc had to say:

“I don’t care if it’s not in the paint. We’re getting wide-open threes. We’re one of the best shooting threes in the NBA. So if we take 30 of those, I can live with it. What I didn’t like is (that) we didn’t get the right shots. Half of them were twos, contested. That’s what bothered me in the game. Honestly, if we’d have got all those plays and they were wide-open threes and we had two points in the paint, but they were wide-open threes, I could go to sleep tonight. Because I know our guys got the right shots. I thought by the time we got the right shots, it was too late.”

Doc had earlier mentioned that “the good looks came after crappy basketball for the first 11 minutes of the third quarter.” Not addressing crappy basketball is bad enough. Moreover, shooters shoot, but to completely abandon anything inside?

Not that it was even a priority: the Bucks were 6/6 in the restricted area in the first half and 2/7 in the second half. Chicago had three injured in their frontcourt (Zach Collins, Jalen Smith, and Patrick Williams), so Nick Richards and Leonard Miller were their only guys above 6’8”. Matas Buzelis and Guerschon Yabusele rounded out an already-thin Bulls frontcourt post-deadline. Even without Giannis, Doc has five players 6’9” and up at his disposal, enough size and talent to deal with Chicago’s four. Not caring if their shots aren’t in the paint? To quote my colleague Jack Trehearne: diabolical.

Grade: F

Garbage Time:
Gary Harris, Andre Jackson Jr., Pete Nance, Gary Trent Jr.

Inactive: Giannis Antetokounmpo, Alex Antetokounmpo, Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Taurean Prince, Cormac Ryan

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • Eight points is the lowest any NBA team has scored in a regulation quarter this season. Milwaukee was 2/21 from the floor in the period.
  • The Bulls’ 27-0 run was a franchise record. And that was the second-largest run the Bucks have ever given up: the worst was a 29-0 Cavs run at the Bradley Center in December 2009, as we found out postgame. For what it’s worth, the NBA record is 30-0.
  • Portis asked us assembled reporters in the locker room post-game if we’d ever seen anything like that run. He hadn’t, and none of us had either—at least not in person.
  • A few more stats on the Bucks’ epic drought: the 18 straight misses came between Cam Thomas’ lay-in at 1:23 in the third and Dieng’s dunk with 3:12 left in the game. That’s 10 minutes, 11 seconds.
  • They also missed 15 consecutive threes across a slightly longer span. At half, they were 10/23 from deep, a nice 43.5%. In the second half: 3/23, 13%. 13/46 overall is 28.3%. Barf.
  • There were seven minutes and 32 seconds between Bucks points, and it took them just over six minutes to register a point in the fourth.
  • But the most damning thing: of those 18 straight misses I mentioned? They took only one shot within 10 feet: a Portis driving hook.
  • For the game, they took 30 attempts in the paint, and the Bulls outscored them there 50-26. The disparity was particularly bad in the second half: Chicago was 17/20 in the paint, and Milwaukee shot just 5/17.
  • It was a sloppy game overall with 37 combined turnovers (19 for Milwaukee, 18 for Chicago), and Chicago scored six more points off them than Milwaukee’s 14.
  • Strangely enough, the Bucks had a sizeable shot advantage with 11 more field goal attempts than the Bulls. Part of that can be chalked up to the Bucks’ 11-7 edge on the offensive glass. Free throws were 23-17 in favor of the home team.
  • Milwaukee racked up 19 first-half assists—their highest total in a half since opening night—on 25 made baskets. Then seven on 10 makes in the second half. I’m no Red Auerbach, but I’d say that means you should probably pass the ball more.
  • In checking the shot chart, I was struck by this: the Bulls took only two shots between nine feet and the three-point line. The Bucks took… a whole lot more.
  • Matas Buzelis put Portis on a poster early in the fourth, but it’s all love: the two exchanged jerseys after the game. Bobby says he may need another room at home in Arkansas for the collection he’s amassed from opponents.
  • There was a baby race at halftime in the United Center. Only two of seven even made it off the starting line (the charity stripe), and one only made it a few feet. Everyone else just sat there. 11-month-old Will—the only one who truly crawled—annihilated the competition and was scooped up at midcourt by Benny the Bull after his victory. He was interviewed by the Bulls’ in-game emcee, and after showing brief tactile interest in the foamy microphone screen, he pushed it away.

Up Next​


This was the front end of a back-to-back, with a quick trip back to Milwaukee tonight to face the Boston Celtics tomorrow evening. Tip is 6:30 p.m. Central on Peacock and FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...layer-grades-stats-kevin-porter-jr-cam-thomas
 
Rapid Recap: Bulls 120, Bucks 97

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CHICAGO, IL - MARCH 1: Collin Sexton #2 of the Chicago Bulls shoots the ball during the game against the Milwaukee Bucks on March 1, 2026 at United Center in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jeff Haynes/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

An absolutely, unequivocally, monstrously disastrous—which still might be putting it mildly—second half by the Milwaukee Bucks snapped the Chicago Bulls’ 11-game losing streak Sunday afternoon at the United Center. The Bucks scored eight points in the fourth quarter. Eight. It’s the first win for Chicago since January 31. They went 0-for-February, for crying out loud! Bobby Portis led Milwaukee with 18, and Collin Sexton had 22 for the victors.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


Myles Turner opened the game with back-to-back catch-and-shoot triples, propelling an early 8-0 Bucks run. Chicago tied the game midway through the period and were briefly in front, but Ryan Rollins and Cam Thomas splashed consecutive threes to stake Milwaukee ahead again. The Bulls knotted it up again twice inside the three minutes, though AJ Green and Cam Thomas answered each time to avoid falling behind. After one, the visitors led 32-30. Chicago took 21 shots in the first, and 18 came from deep.

Both sides mostly traded buckets in the opening two minutes before a 17-0 Milwaukee run gave them their largest margin yet at 16, forcing a Billy Donovan timeout at the 6:34 mark. All five of the Bucks’ field goals during that three-and-a-half-minute stretch were assisted. In the ensuing two minutes, the Bulls reduced their deficit to 10 thanks in part to two Bucks turnovers and a Bulls offensive rebound. Doc Rivers reassembled his starting lineup, and they suffered a couple similar miscues as Chicago cut it to seven… before a fast-break three from Green, plus the foul. He’d hit another in the final minute, part of an 11-2 Bucks run that cemented their 66-51 halftime edge.

After coughing the ball up seven times in the first half, the Bucks had six turnovers in the third’s opening five minutes. Chicago capitalized, whittling Milwaukee’s advantage to eight before Rivers finally called a timeout at 7:12. The starters kept bleeding points, and a couple missed layups by Kevin Porter Jr.—who got T’d up as he was subbed out—didn’t help, making it a one-point game inside five minutes, all part of a 22-7 Bulls run. A sloppy game at that: the Bulls made a number of gaffes too. Bobby Portis scored 11 in the next three-ish minutes, helping them rebuild an eight-point lead. But poor defense in the final minute made it 89-87 Bucks entering the fourth, a 36-23 quarter in Chicago’s favor.

Matas Buzelis immediately evened the score, and Collin Sexton’s jumper gave the Bulls their first lead since the clock read 10:57 back in the second. That was part of a 16-0 Chicago run spanning the quarter break, punctuated by Buzelis posterizing Ports at the rim, and Doc called his second timeout of the fourth exactly a minute after the first. The Bulls’ run extended to 27-0—twenty-seven to zero—before a KPJ free throw finally gave the Bucks their first points in 7:32 of gameplay. More stinky defense and shot selection put Chicago up 19 before Doc waived the white flag as Gary Trent Jr. and Gary Harris came to the scorers’ table with under five minutes to go. The Bulls kept mopping the floor with the Bucks, finishing the game on a 39-8 run going back to the final minute of the third.

Stat That Stood Out​


There are several ways to go here, but we’re going with Milwaukee’s utter ineptitude shooting the ball in the second half: 10/47 from the floor. “Good” for 21.3%.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...cago-bulls-final-score-recap-blowout-27-0-run
 
Rapid Recap: Celtics 108, Bucks 81

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MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MARCH 02: Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks dribbles the ball against Luka Garza #52 of the Boston Celtics during the second quarter at Fiserv Forum on March 02, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The return of Giannis wasn’t enough to propel the Milwaukee Bucks over the Boston Celtics (who were missing All-Star wing Jaylen Brown and starting center Neemias Queta), losing 108-91. It’s the third straight loss by 20 or more for the Bucks. Payton Pritchard led the Celtics with 25 points on 5/10 shooting from beyond the arc. Giannis carried a sluggish Bucks offense with 19 points and 11 rebounds on 7/18 shooting.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


Ousmane Dieng was tapped to join the starting five in Giannis’ return, with Ryan Rollins heading to the bench. The Ous got loose early, scoring five of Milwaukee’s first seven. Following Giannis’ first bucket in 38 days, the Bucks went up seven on the Celtics. Boston responded with a 10-0 run, with Hugo González converting two baskets inside, followed by threes from Sam Hauser and Derrick White. After Dieng’s second three of the quarter with 5:36 to go, Milwaukee’s offense went into a nearly three-minute dry spell; Boston took advantage, going up six before Bobby Portis finally got the Bucks back on the board. The Celtics scored the last three buckets of the opening frame, with Hauser capping it off with a mid-range buzzer-beater, putting the visitors ahead 30-20.

Boston kept the pedal to the metal to open the second quarter, going on an 8-0 run to put them up 18. Giannis returned and finally ended the run with a dunk, but that didn’t slow down the Celtics one bit, as they drilled four straight threes to take a 22-point lead with about six minutes left. The Bucks were able to chip into that lead slightly in the final three minutes, though, responding with a 10-3 run, with Giannis, Dieng, and Myles Turner all converting on much-needed buckets. Turner found the bottom of the net once again to close the half on a three-pointer, as the Bucks went into the locker room down 57-43.

Giannis stepped on the gas to open the third, scoring seven straight and cutting Boston’s lead to single digits in just over two minutes! González and Hauser responded, however, torturing the Bucks from three-point range; the pair combined for three triples as part of a 15-0 run for the visitors, growing their lead to 24. It was an unlikely hero that brought Milwaukee life, though, with Pete Nance—who had gotten two DNP-CDs and garbage time minutes in the last four games—helping spark a 9-3 run with a pair of corner threes. But of course, White and Payton Pritchard scored the final six points of the period, with the latter draining a high-arching mid-range shot in the dying seconds. The bucket put Boston ahead 83-65 after three.

The Celtics made sure there was no chance of a Bucks comeback early in the fourth quarter. Pritchard continued to make triples, converting two more as part of a 13-4 opening run, ballooning Boston’s lead to 27, before the Bucks called a timeout. Pritchard splashed home another, making it an even 30-point lead with 4:47 left as Doc called another timeout to empty his bench. Another tough L for the Bucks.

Stat That Stood Out​


Despite being relatively the same in size down low, the Bucks were dominated on the inside. The Celtics outscored them 34-22 in the paint and outrebounded them 63-47.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...e-dieng-hugo-gonzalez-sam-hauser-paint-points
 
Bucks vs. Celtics Player Grades: Giannis’ return spoiled in third straight blowout loss

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MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MARCH 02: Bobby Portis #9 of the Milwaukee Bucks dribbles the ball against Sam Hauser #30 of the Boston Celtics during the second quarter at Fiserv Forum on March 02, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Even with Giannis returning and the Boston Celtics being without Jaylen Brown, the Milwaukee Bucks dropped their third straight game, losing in ugly fashion, 108-81. It’s the second straight game that the Celtics have held the Bucks to 81 or fewer points, after Milwaukee scored 79 on February 1 in Boston. Read our full summary of the game here and catch a six-minute audio recap on the Bucks+ podcast, Bucks In Six Minutes, below.

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Player Grades​

Giannis Antetokounmpo​


25 minutes, 19 points, 11 rebounds, 2 assists, 3 turnovers, 1 block, 7/18 FG, 2/5 FT, -8

Despite some rust, there were some vintage Giannis moments, displaying his usual aggressiveness in the paint. Maybe just leave the mid-range jumpers off the shot diet moving forward.

Grade: B-

Kevin Porter Jr.​


31 minutes, 8 points, 4 rebounds, 2 assists, 3 steals, 3 turnovers, 3/6 FG, -8

The Celtics did a great job of forcing KPJ into contested looks. After starting the game 3/4 from the field, with a layup and dunk in there, Boston made him take just two shots for the rest of the game.

Grade: C-

AJ Green​


18 minutes, 0 points, 4 rebounds, 0/3 3P, -4

The seven games since the All-Star break haven’t been very good for Green. He’s averaging a paltry 6.6 PPG (well below his season average of 10.3) and is shooting 31.8% from three-point territory. Tonight was another example of the opposition going out of its way to prevent Green from shooting, with Sam Hauser even swatting one away.

Grade: F

Ousmane Dieng​


30 minutes, 13 points, 2 assists, 1 rebound, 5/10 FG, 3/7 3P, -8

Dieng’s second start in a Bucks uniform was a bit of a shock, but there were things to like. He displayed an ability to play off of Giannis and convert from deep, while also not letting up on defence; that’s the 3-and-D archetype he has to fit into moving forward. That said, Dieng had a few ill-timed shots and didn’t break the paint all that often.

Grade: B-

Myles Turner​


18 minutes, 5 points, 4 rebounds, 3 assists, 1/6 3P, -6

It was another rough outing for Turner. He couldn’t buy a three in the first quarter, and just looked overmatched when the Celtics went small. Many of the Bucks’ best runs came when he was off.

Grade: D-

Ryan Rollins​


24 minutes, 5 points, 3 rebounds, 2 assists, 2 steals, 2/11 FG, 1/5 3P, -23

There might have been a reason why Doc chose Rollins as the one who got benched in favor of Dieng. He looked dreadful on both ends, and Doc was visibly upset with some of the shots he was taking. After averaging 20+ PPG in February, he’s off to a bad start in March.

Grade: F

Bobby Portis​


23 minutes, 12 points, 1 rebound, 1 assist, 4/7 FG, 3/4 3P, -21

Bobby’s defensive issues reared their ugly head, and he couldn’t out-rebound some of the smaller Boston players. Portis continued to space the floor, but man, the other side of the ball was a train wreck.

Grade: C-

Cam Thomas​


11 minutes, 2 points, 2 rebounds, 1 assist, 0/3 FG, 2/2 FT, -18

The Bucks opted not to convert Pete Nance for this? Doc admitted that if Thomas is not scoring, he’s not really going to be out there—last night was proof of that.

Grade: F

Jericho Sims​


22 minutes, 3 points, 6 rebounds, 2 assists, 1/1 FG, 1/2 FT, -13

The only Buck besides Giannis who seemed to have a pulse on the glass. Sims looked solid on both ends of the floor and has really played well these last few weeks after a poor stretch before that.

Grade: C+

Pete Nance​


15 minutes, 6 points, 3 rebounds, 2/2 3P, -4

Welcome back to the rotation, Pete! He was a good floor spacer and showed why he should be in the mix moving forward. The Bucks need all the shooting and length they can get.

Grade: B

Gary Harris​


13 minutes, 6 points, 1 rebound, 2/4 3P, -15

With Kyle Kuzma inexplicably out of the rotation, Doc opened the door to Harris. That door should be shut moving forward. Before garbage time, Harris played 7:52 and was a -18. Need I say more?

Grade: F

Doc Rivers​


Doc had a rough night. I thought the idea to start Dieng was solid, but the rest of the rotations just made no sense (Kuzma’s DNP-CD being the best example of that). Doc also brought up the offense getting stagnant again. Listen, I know it’s up to the players to execute the plays, but the coach is responsible for creating them. Van talked about Doc’s glaring flaws in his article, and everything he wrote rang true last night.

Grade: D

Garbage Time:
Andre Jackson Jr., Gary Trent Jr., Thanasis Antetokounmpo

DNP-CD: Kyle Kuzma

Inactive: Alex Antetokounmpo, Taurean Prince, Cormac Ryan

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • After his first game back, Giannis talked at length about how this rehab stint was different for him and how he had to approach mentally as well as physically. He also said he doesn’t feel like he’s playing at a deficit anymore:
“I have a lot of smart people around me who tell me the truth, tell me what to do. At the end of the day, I’ve been in this position in life by fighting through things, and I just listen to my gut, and I fight through adversity. Sometimes that’s smart, sometimes that’s not smart. Things I was able to do in the past, maybe I can’t do no more. I just got to be smarter, I’m not old, I’m older for sure. I’m not 24 years old no more. I’ve been dealing with a lot of soft tissue injuries, and if you’re not able to take care of them, they can linger, and I think that’s what happened this year. I feel like I’ve been playing the whole year at a deficit, but now this is the first time where I have a little bit in my tank, that I’m not risking anything, so I’m happy that I’m here.”
  • Doc had mentioned pre-game that now that Giannis is back, they have to figure out what pieces to put out there when he’s not on the floor. It’s safe to say that wasn’t achieved; after Giannis subbed out with 6:13 left in the first quarter, the Bucks went from down two to down 17 by the time he checked back in. They did get better in the non-Giannis stretches throughout the rest of the game, but were starting so far behind the eight ball that it didn’t even matter.
  • Once again, the Bucks lost the numbers battle. They were outshot by 21 (95-74), lost the turnover battle (16-10), and were out-rebounded 63-47. On the offensive glass alone, it was a 19-9 Celtics advantage.
  • Bobby Portis was asked about why the Bucks have turned so sharply from a team that won eight out of 10 to a team that’s lost the last three games by a combined 79 points:
“We’re just playing better teams, kind of fool’s gold, for real. We won eight out of 10, playing against teams that are trying to lose. (Now we’re) playing for teams that are jockeying for position (in the playoffs). We used to be in that position too, jockeying for position, you got games on your schedule you can’t lose. Guys are circling us as the can’t lose team, so they’re coming in trying to win that game. Credit the other team for locking in and getting a dub.”
  • Doc said the decision not to play Kuzma was a coach’s decision. Per Keith Smith, this is the first DNP-CD of Kuzma’s nine-year career.

Up Next​


The Bucks will get their first look at Jonathan Kuminga in his new threads, as the Atlanta Hawks make their way to Fiserv Forum on Wednesday night for an 8:30 p.m. Central tip-off. Catch the game on ESPN and FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...grades-stats-giannis-ousmane-dieng-kyle-kuzma
 
Bucks Reacts Survey: Do you even want to make the play-in?

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Mar 2, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo (34) comes out of the game near the end of the second quarter and walks past Milwaukee Bucks head coach Doc Rivers as they compete against the Boston Celtics at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Michael McLoone-Imagn Images | Michael McLoone-Imagn Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NBA. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Bucks fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Giannis returned to the Bucks’ lineup last night, but it wasn’t enough to take down the East’s current second seed. Monday’s defeat caps off a three-game losing streak that has them eight games under .500 with 22 games remaining, exactly where they were when Giannis’ most recent injury occurred on January 23rd. They’re 3.5 games back of Charlotte (with whom they hold a tiebreaker) for 10th and four games behind Atlanta (who the Bucks could gain the tiebreaker over with a victory tomorrow) for ninth. Orlando and Miami (season series with each is tied 1-1) are 5.5 games ahead.

Not impossible hills to climb, but ones that only get harder the further back they slip as the season gets closer to its conclusion. This all begs the question: do we, as fans, even want a play-in/playoff spot at this point? Unfortunately, losing/tanking doesn’t really help Milwaukee, as they’re pretty certain to finish no ”better” than 10th in the lotto standings, especially with a healthy Giannis. Chicago, Memphis, and Dallas are “ahead” of them because they leaned into tanking post-deadline while Giannis-less Milwaukee was surprisingly thriving. So… what are they playing for here?

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-polls/61686/milwaukee-survey-nba-playoffs-play-in
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Atlanta Hawks Preview & Game Thread: Play-in showdown

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ATLANTA, GA - JANUARY 19: Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks dribbles the ball during the game against the Atlanta Hawks on January 19, 2026 at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Todd Kirkland/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Milwaukee Bucks face off with the Atlanta Hawks tonight as both teams battle for play-in positioning. The Bucks (four games back) sit at 11th, while the Hawks are tied with the Hornets for 10th; a Bucks win means they would gain a full game on the Hawks. This will be the second matchup between these teams this season, with Milwaukee taking the first on MLK Day in Atlanta. With just one more matchup to come, the Bucks can claim the season series tonight.

Where We’re At​


As I explained on today’s episode of Deer Diaries, the Bucks have lost three straight because their offence—which had been sustaining them—has deteriorated rapidly. Their defence has been consistently weak all season (even during the recent winning streak), so that was never going to bail them out. If they can’t recover their previous level of offensive efficiency, they’re finished. On the positive side, Giannis returned and, while he appeared rusty, I thought he looked solid athletically. Hopefully, he continues to improve in all facets as the games progress.

The Hawks are in a much better spot than they were when these teams last met, having won five of their last six games (granted, three of those came against the Wizards and Nets). The newly acquired Jonathan Kuminga has shocked everybody with his performance since getting dealt to Atlanta at the deadline, scoring a combined 64 points in his three games in a Hawks uniform (again, though, two came against the tanking Wiz). They’re also finally getting solid contributions from CJ McCollum, who had a rough start with the team since arriving.

Injury Report​


For the Bucks, Taurean Prince (neck) is out. The Hawks have a clean bill of health.

Player To Watch​


Giannis. Not because he’s the best player on the team, but because he’s coming back off a long injury-induced break. While GA looked decent athletically in his return, he went 7/18 from the floor (including some bad misses) and had three turnovers. How does he look tonight with the return game out of the way?

How To Watch​


ESPN and FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin at 8:30 p.m. CST.


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...scussion-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Rapid Recap: Hawks 131, Bucks 113

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MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MARCH 04: Dyson Daniels #5 of the Atlanta Hawks defends Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks during the second quarter at Fiserv Forum on March 04, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

For the second time this week, the Milwaukee Bucks blew a 16-point first-half lead and ended up getting blown out, this time to the Atlanta Hawks at Fiserv Forum, dealing a serious blow to their play-in hopes. Their losing streak is now at four games, and their average margin of defeat has been 24.2. Giannis Antetokounmpo had a game-high 24 points, while Nickeil Alexander-Walker paced Atlanta with 23.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


Giannis scored eight of Milwaukee’s first 13 points with a couple dunks and swished a 17-footer to boot. After his first career DNP-CD on Monday, Kyle Kuzma was the Bucks’ first sub as Giannis exited. Ousmane Dieng then got cooking, matching the superstar’s 10 points before he had to exit with two fouls. The second unit was able to separate, spearheading a 15-4 run over the first’s final five minutes. Thanks to 72.7% shooting from the floor (6/9 from three), the home side led 38-25 after one.

Bobby Portis maintained the Bucks’ momentum in the second, dropping their first seven points en route to an early 16-point edge. Atlanta sliced that to seven pretty fast with a 9-0 run, fueled by a couple bad Milwaukee turnovers. The Hawks got as close as two as a lineup led by Buck-killer CJ McCollum abused an all-bench Bucks fivesome, but a Ryan Rollins jumper and a Portis three kept the visitors at bay as Giannis checked back in. Unfortunately, the reassembled starters struggled mightily on defense. Despite continued Giannis production, Atlanta tied the game with 2:21 left in the half and moved in front about a minute later, capping off their 41-point quarter, one-upping Milwaukee with 74% shooting in the period. Milwaukee got triples from Rollins and Myles Turner in the final minute, though, heading into the locker room ahead 71-66.

As has been the case recently, the starters came out flat in the third as the Hawks retook the lead with a quick 10-0 run, featuring the 2025–26 Bucks’ greatest hits: bad defensive rebounding, turnovers, and missed free throws. Frigid shooting was a bigger problem, though: Milwaukee missed nine of their first 10 attempts, and Atlanta went up 10 at the 4:54 mark, on a 20-5 run out of half. The Hawks led by as many as 13 as the Bucks kept leaving shooters wide open, often in the corner, and couldn’t corral defensive boards. With 12 minutes remaining, the visitors held a 98-89 advantage, outscoring the Bucks 32-18 in the third.

While it was still too easy for the Hawks from deep with wide-open shots galore, the Bucks were only down seven when Giannis reentered at 9:23. Milwaukee defensive miscues didn’t end with him on the floor, nor did their inability to put the ball through the hoop, and they fell behind by 14 not even three minutes later. The starting lineup got one more crack at it but had no success, falling behind by as much as 21. The last 2:27 was garbage time.

Stat That Stood Out​


On Sunday in Chicago, the Bucks scored just 31 points in the second half as the Bulls ran them over. Tonight, the Bucks had just 36 once the starters began checking out, totaling just 42 points after halftime. Unacceptable.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...is-antetokounmpo-blowout-fourth-straight-loss
 
Wisconsin Herd Weekly Recap: The end is near

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SOUTHAVEN, MS - FEBRUARY 27: Mark Sears #19 of the Wisconsin Herd looks to pass the ball during the game against the Memphis Hustle on February 27, 2026 at Landers Center in Southaven, Mississippi. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Wisconsin Herd went 1-2 over last week’s slate of games as the Bucks filled their final two-way slot. With just ten games remaining in the season, the Herd is 5.5 games out of a playoff spot.

Wisconsin Herd 104, Windy City Bulls 112


Cormac Ryan: 43 minutes, 36 points, 4 rebounds, 4 assists, 12/19 FG, 6/10 3FG, -3

Alex Antetokounmpo: 15 minutes, 2 points, 2 rebounds, 0/3 FG, -10

Pete Nance: DNP

The Herd continued their losing streak with an away loss to the Windy City Bulls. Led by new two-way player Cormac Ryan, the Herd established an early lead over the Bulls. However, the Herd went cold after the game’s first fiery moments and couldn’t fire back against the Bulls’ frequent scoring runs. Despite solid inside defense, their inability to stop Mac McClung (42 points) was the primary cause of their Tuesday loss.

Ryan’s 36-point outburst may have gotten him signed to the Bucks on Thursday. The North Carolina alum has steadily proved his worth for the Herd: averaging 21.8 points per game on .489/.434/.859 shooting splits. Yet, Ryan’s strengths extend outside of his shooting. He’s a solid rebounder, an imposing defender, and versatile on both sides of the ball. Although his fit with the Bucks remains to be seen, Ryan’s role with the Herd is well-known: to shoot the leather off the ball.

Wisconsin Herd 97, Memphis Hustle 117


Cormac Ryan: DNP

Alex Antetokounmpo: 21 minutes, 14 points, 4 rebounds, 5-7 FG, -11

Mark Sears: 35 minutes, 25 points, 3 rebounds, 5 assists, 12-22 FG, 1-7 3FG, -21

With Ryan out, likely finalizing the terms of his two-way contract in Milwaukee, the Herd pushed their losing streak to nine games. The Herd continued their struggles of finding momentum. The Hustle started the game with a 24-7 run, and after the Herd fought back to close the lead to four, extended their lead to over 20 points in the second half. The Herd, who shot just above 22% from deep and were comprehensively outrebounded, ended their Thursday night game with a 20-point loss.

Without Ryan, we learned more about two-way player Alex Antetokounmpo and former All-American guard Mark Sears. Antetokounmpo found his shooting rhythm in a season where he has lacked it. His confidence surged on Thursday as he shot 2/4 from distance. His surprisingly solid shooting could inspire hope in Bucks execs worried about his poor long-range shooting and commitment to the three. In a limited time, Antetokounmpo has shot just over 24% from three on 2.6 three-point attempts per game.

Wisconsin Herd 134, Memphis Hustle 126


Cormac Ryan: 38 minutes, 28 points, 4 rebounds, 7 assists, 8-16 FG, 3-9 3FG, 4 turnovers, +13

Alex Antetokounmpo: 23 minutes, 7 points, 2 rebounds, 3-6 FG, 1/4 3FG, -14

Mark Sears: 39 minutes, 30 points, 9 rebounds, 12 assists, 10/15 FG, 2/2 3FG, 6 turnovers, +14

The Herd claimed their first win since January in the second game of a back-to-back against the Hustle. With Ryan back, the Herd shot well from downtown (14/30) while exerting their control over the glass through the efforts of Lacey James (8 rebounds), Kira Lewis Jr. (7 rebounds), and more. In a season where the Herd has struggled to string together scoring runs and summon momentum when they need it, they got it in the final minutes of Friday night’s game. The Herd used incisive drives to the basket and physical defense to string together several key baskets and pull away from the Hustle in the final moments.

Three Notes​

Cormac Ryan signs two-way deal​


Cormac Ryan signed a two-way deal with the Bucks, meaning he’ll be eligible for the Bucks’ second half of the season. It’s been obvious that Ryan would get the call-up; not only has he established himself as the team’s star, but he also helps address the team’s struggles on defense. Ryan likely won’t see a lot of minutes behind wings like AJ Green, Ousmane Dieng, Gary Trent Jr., etc., but his length and versatility could make him an appealing shot of energy off the bench.

Sears keeps scoring​


Mark Sears has been the Herd’s most unlikely star in 2026. Since being waived by the Bucks in January and signing a full-time contract with the Herd, Sears has averaged 17.0 points, 5.9 assists, and 3.6 rebounds per game. The 6’0” guard has proven himself to be a polished guard with a natural scoring instinct and solid playmaking, and his 30-point outburst in the Herd’s Friday night win shows he can be a real game-changer. However, Sears still faces a long climb back to an NBA roster. He can be a streaky shooter, and his relatively small size makes him a liability on defense. Although the Bucks don’t have a present need for Sears’ role as an attack-minded floor general, he could be a G League player to watch as multiple teams close in.

Herd reveal Aztec-inspired jerseys​


2014 LeBron, anyone? The Herd is auctioning off game-worn Hispanic Heritage Jerseys to help support the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh’s Chicana/o & Latinx Studies Program. The “El Herd” jerseys are pretty sick; they feature Aztec-inspired designs, intended to “reflect and honor the indigenous roots of Hispanic heritage.” The Herd will wear the jerseys ahead of their back-to-back games against the Mexico City Capitanes on Friday and Saturday.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...cap-cormac-ryan-alex-antetokounmpo-mark-sears
 
Bucks vs. Hawks Player Grades: Starting lineup struggles again

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Mar 4, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Atlanta Hawks guard Dyson Daniels (5) dunks the ball against Milwaukee Bucks center Myles Turner (3) in the fourth quarter at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-Imagn Images | Benny Sieu-Imagn Images

Another bad loss where the Milwaukee Bucks had immense trouble scoring in the second half, but against the Atlanta Hawks—who have now tied their season series at a game apiece—defense was probably the larger issue. With 21 games remaining, the Bucks fall to five games back of the Hawks for the East’s 10th seed. 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​


26 minutes, 24 points, 5 rebounds, 4 assists, 10/15 FG, 4/8 FT, -24

Looked great early, having little difficulty slicing his way through Atlanta’s interior, and even got a middie to fall. But as we’ve seen throughout the year, he got frustrated with the way he was being officiated again, throwing the ball off the stanchion in the fourth and receiving a tech. Defensive engagement was just ok. Postgame, Rivers talked about how he’s forcing things a bit during his early-half shifts, knowing he has 0nly five minutes on the floor due to his minute restriction.

Grade: B

Myles Turner​


22 minutes, 8 points, 3 rebounds, 2 steals, 0 blocks, 3/6 FG, 2/5 3P, -18

Again, Turner isn’t getting minutes commensurate with his contract and talent level, though Jericho Sims is outplaying him on defense and on the boards right now. The offensive scheme just sends him to the corner every time, so he’s neither in the best position to succeed in terms of physical location on the floor, nor in an appropriate role, being relegated to a spot-up shooter only.

Grade: D+

Ryan Rollins​


35 minutes, 13 points, 8 rebounds, 12 assists, 1 turnover, 3 steals, 4 fouls, 4/11 FG, 2/7 3P, -22

Resuming his starting backcourt spot with KPJ out, Rylo had nine first-half assists and no turnovers, the latter a welcome sign after recent issues. Sneakily close to a triple-double and had some good on-ball moments when the game was still close.

Grade: B-

AJ Green​


24 minutes, 7 points, 3/9 FG, 1/6 3P, -21

Kept getting switched onto larger Hawks, and even if he stayed with them, they had no trouble scoring over him. Beyond the bad three-point shooting, Green drove to the rim multiple times for some reason, resulting in missed layups and a turnover. He oddly clogged up the floor near the nail a couple times too.

Grade: F

Ousmane Dieng​


28 minutes, 14 points, 4 rebounds, 0 assists, 3 turnovers, 6/14 FG, 2/7 3P, -25

10 of those points came in Dieng’s opening shift with the starters before picking up an early second foul. The jumper looked good again, but he was pretty anonymous as the game wore on.

Grade: C

Bobby Portis​


24 minutes, 13 points, 4 rebounds, 4/8 FG, 3/6 3P, +0

BP provided some desperately needed scoring punch in the second and third as the Bucks tried to claw back into the game. Across this losing streak, he’s surprisingly been a life preserver from the bench after the starters struggle (and struggle they have).

Grade: B

Kyle Kuzma​


22 minutes, 16 points, 7/8 FG, +2

After his first career DNP-CD on Monday, Kuz threw down a nice driving one-handed jam for his first points. He also made hay inside, but few of his buckets felt helpful, if I’m being honest.

Grade: B

Cam Thomas​


18 minutes, 11 points, 3 assists, 3/9 FG, 4/4 FT, +10

Got to the line and made a tough three, but foul-baited a little bit too. Not a terrible game by any means, though.

Grade: C+

Jericho Sims​


23 minutes, 4 points, 11 rebounds, 2/2 FG, -1

Great on the glass during his first-half shift on his way to his fourth double-digit rebounding night in his last six outings. Five of those were offensive boards. But Doc Rivers highlighted one of his defensive miscues in the second half which led to an open Atlanta three:

“Jericho had a young moment. He got switched on McCollum and went to trap off of McCollum.That’s just a young big learning the game.”

Grade: B-

Pete Nance​


14 minutes, 3 points, 1/1 3PA, +1

Saw first-half minutes after a nice second-half showing on Monday as Rivers went 10 deep, but didn’t do much with them.

Grade: C-

Doc Rivers​


Two things stuck out from Rivers’ postgame comments: first, when acknowledging all the open threes the Bucks allowed in the second half, he thought they simply needed to play bigger players. Rotation changes ahead, perhaps? Speaking of changes, he also mentioned they’ve changed defensive schemes five times this season. Seems like a lot.

Grade: D

DNP-CD:
Gary Harris

Garbage Time: Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Andre Jackson Jr., Gary Trent Jr.

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

Bonus Bucks Bits​

  • Kevin Porter Jr. was a late scratch this afternoon with right knee swelling. That’s the knee in which he underwent meniscus surgery earlier this season, and it sounds like it could keep him out again. Here’s what Doc said pregame:
“They’re gonna do more stuff tomorrow to check, but it’s a lot of swelling and then you have concerns… it’s been bothering him the last couple of weeks… but it just hadn’t swollen up the way it has, so there’s some concern there.“

  • Jonathan Kuminga missed with left knee inflammation for Atlanta. He’d been averaging 21.3 PPG across his first three appearances with his new squad.
  • I don’t even think Fiserv Forum was half full. That’s what happens when you schedule a game at 8:30 on a school night. Thanks, Adam Silver.
  • Here are the Bucks’ scoring totals in their last four second halves, coinciding with this four-game losing streak: 41, 31, 38, 42. Teams average about 56 second-half points this season.
  • CJ McCollum has played the Bucks five times this year (thrice with the Wizards) and still has one more appearance on the docket next weekend.
  • Many of Atlanta’s three-point looks after halftime were room service, but it was more than just hot shooting. On consecutive possessions in the third, they got wide-open looks from the far corner and cashed them in. They were 3/7 from that area in the period; postgame, Doc blamed overhelping for how easy those looks were, and also the clean looks Atlanta got from the top of the arc:
“You remember the two wide-open threes from the weak side top? And that was a no-help situation. And somehow our bigs got overlapped twice, you know?… But the corner threes we don’t give up, we gave up. And then the top threes where the big had no reason to help we gave up.”
  • The Hawks scored 26 points off the Bucks’ 15 turnovers, while the Bucks only managed 15 points off the Hawks’ 11.
  • Atlanta outshot Milwaukee from deep, 20/45 versus 13/39. Might be the difference right there.
  • Ball movement has been a problem of late, but the Bucks had 18 assists on 28 made shots in the first half and nine on 15 in the second. Sometimes the ball just doesn’t go in, I guess.
  • Maybe the only plus this game was that the boards weren’t an issue. Milwaukee won the rebounding battle 41-40, also grabbing 12 on the offensive glass, one more than Atlanta.
  • About the only thing fans had to cheer about after half was a Thanasis block at the rim during the final minute, but the already sparse crowd had emptied out even further by then.

Up Next​


The Bucks get two days off at home before facing the Utah Jazz for the first time this season on Saturday evening at Fiserv. Tip is 7 p.m. Central on FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin and the following local stations:

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

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-anal...unmpo-myles-turner-doc-rivers-starting-lineup
 
Milwaukee Bucks Quarter 3 Player Grades

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MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MARCH 02: Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks looks on during the fourth quarter against the Boston Celtics at Fiserv Forum on March 02, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After each game, Brew Hoop evaluates each Buck’s individual performance with a letter grade. At this season’s 25% mark, we decided to check the Bucks’ grades as a progress report. We also had a midseason report, but now that we have hit the 75% point of this slow torture that is the season, it’s time to see how the grades turned out since the last check. Below are the players’ first-quarter averages, midseason averages, third-quarter average, their most common grades, and their highs and lows. You will probably notice a trend.

Giannis Antetokounmpo​

  • Q1 average: A-
  • Midseason average: B+
  • Current average: B+ (Q3 is an incomplete since he missed the majority of the quarter due to injury)
  • Most common grade: A (nine games)
  • Best grade: A+ on October 26 (Cavaliers) and November 17 (Cavaliers)
  • Lowest grade: D on January 15 (Spurs)

Myles Turner​

  • Q1 average: B-
  • Midseason average: C+
  • Current average: C+
  • Most common grade: B- (nine games)
  • Best grade: A on November 7 (Bulls) and December 29 (Hornets)
  • Lowest grade: F on January 15 (Spurs)

Ryan Rollins​

  • Q1 average: B+
  • Midseason average: B
  • Current average: B-
  • Most common grade: B (eleven games)
  • Best grade: A+ on October 28 (Knicks), October 30 (Warriors), and December 27 (Bulls)
  • Lowest grade: F on March 2 (Celtics)

Kevin Porter Jr​

  • Q1 average: Incomplete
  • Midseason average: B-
  • Current average: B-
  • Most common grade: A (seven games)
  • Best grade: A+ on December 6 (Pistons)
  • Lowest grade: F on January 15 (Spurs)

AJ Green​

  • Q1 average: B-
  • Midseason average: C+
  • Current average: C+
  • Most common grade: B+ and B (nine games)
  • Best grade: A on October 26 (Cavaliers), November 29 (Nets), December 3 (Pistons), January 19 (Hawks), and February 12 (Thunder)
  • Lowest grade: F on December 21 (Timberwolves), January 4 (Kings) and 15, (Spurs), March 2, (Celtics) and March 4 (Hawks)

Gary Trent Jr.​

  • Q1 average: C+
  • Midseason average: C
  • Current average: C (Q3 incomplete)
  • Most common grade: C+ (six games)
  • Best grade: A- on February 3 (Bulls)
  • Lowest grade: F on October 26 (Cavaliers), December 21 (Timberwolves), January 2 (Hornets), January 15 (Spurs), and February 1 (Celtics)

Bobby Portis​

  • Q1 average: C+
  • Midseason average: C+
  • Current average: C+
  • Most common grade: B (11 games)
  • Best grade: A on November 24 (Blazers)
  • Lowest grade: F on February 11 (Magic)

Kyle Kuzma​

  • Q1 average: B
  • Midseason average: C+
  • Current average: C+
  • Most common grade: B+ (four games)
  • Best grade: A+ on November 14 (Hornets)
  • Lowest grade: F on November 15 (Lakers) and January 13 (Timberwolves)

Jericho Sims​

  • Q1 average: C+
  • Midseason average: C+
  • Current average: C+
  • Most common grade: C and C+ (two games each)
  • Best grade: A+ on December 3 (Pistons) and February 11 (Magic)
  • Lowest grade: D- on February 27 (Knicks)

Gary Harris​

  • Q1 average: B-
  • Midseason average: C+
  • Current average: C
  • Most common grade: C (six games)
  • Best grade: A- on November 14 (Hornets) and January 7 (Warriors)
  • Lowest grade: F on March 2 (Celtics)

Pete Nance​

  • Q1 and midseason averages: Incomplete
  • Current average: B-
  • Most common grade: A- (three games)
  • Best grade: A on January 19 (Hawks) and January 30 (Mavs)
  • Lowest grade: C- on March 4 (Hawks)

Ousmane Dieng​

  • Current average: C+
  • Most common grade: C- (two games)
  • Best grade: A+ on February 12 (Thunder)
  • Lowest grade: D on February 27 (Knicks)

Cam Thomas​

  • Current average: C
  • Most common grade: C- (three games)
  • Best grade: A+ on February 11 (Magic)
  • Lowest grade: F on March 2 (Celtics)

Doc Rivers​

  • Q1 average: B-
  • Midseason average
  • Current average: C
  • Most common grade: D (six games)
  • Best grade: A on October 30 (Warriors), November 7 (Bulls), February 20 (Pelicans)
  • Lowest grade: F on December 14 (Nets), January 13 (Timberwolves), January 15 (Spurs), and March 1 (Bulls)

The following received incompletes due to injury and/or lack of playing time: Andre Jackson Jr., Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Alex Antetokounmpo, and Taurean Prince. Meanwhile, Cole Anthony and Amir Coffey traded classrooms, but new students Ousmane Dieng and Cam Thomas take their place. Pete Nance also makes an appearance after cracking through the rotation during Q3

No player was able to raise their grade, but only Ryan Rollins and Gary Harris saw their overall grades dip. If we didn’t include the last week of games, his average grade would have ended up with a B, but those hot/cold streaks come and go. Gary Trent Jr. finally got his first grade with an A next to it, but then had two uninspiring performances, and with the arrival of Thomas and Dieng, he lost his spot in the rotation, collecting plenty of DNPs and garbage time. The new additions all had moments of brilliance, earning As, but also had some duds.

Some of the worst games of the season, like losses against Brooklyn, Minnesota, and San Antonio, really hurt the averages with plenty of D or F grades. Doc Rivers somehow didn’t see his average drop, but he can be thankful for the Bucks’ hot streak in the month of February to thank for that. In the last week, Doc hasn’t gotten a grade higher than D+, and at this point, I cannot handle the unserious incompetence. Forget the IEP, I will just be counting down the days he is no longer in my class. Truly having to pull the No Child Left Behind card on Doc in 2026 is a statement of failure.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-analysis/61823/milwaukee-quarter-3-player-grades-nba-season
 
Milwaukee Bucks Poll: Fans think play-in chances are gone

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Mar 4, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Bucks forward Ousmane Dieng (21) looks to pass the ball away from Atlanta Hawks guard Corey Kispert (24) in the second quarter at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-Imagn Images | Benny Sieu-Imagn Images

In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, we asked about the Bucks’ projected finish in the East and the starting lineup now that Giannis is back. Here are the highlights:

  • Almost 56% of voters now believe the Bucks will miss the play-in, while 30% cling to hopes they’ll make it in as the 10 seed. Just a week ago, only 16% thought they’d miss while 51% thought they’d finish ninth or higher. What a difference this four-game losing streak has made.
  • Similarly, 52% of fans polled believe the streak has torpedoed their chances of making the play-in completely. I guess about 4% of our votes think they will miss the play-in, though their chances are not completely shot?
  • An overwhelming majority (77%) of our voters want Ousmane Dieng to remain the starter in the frontcourt with Giannis. 64% also want to go back to the Kevin Porter Jr. and Ryan Rollins starting backcourt, though KPJ’s right knee swelling makes that unlikely in the coming days, at least.
  • About 32% of respondents think the Bucks’ play-in/postseason seeding would improve if Doc Rivers was dismissed, even this late in the season.
  • While he lost about 12% in the approval column, Milwaukee’s poor stretch still has a plurality of fans surveyed approving of Jon Horst’s job performance.


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

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-poll...dieng-ryan-rollins-kevin-porter-jr-doc-rivers
 
Bucks Reacts Survey Results: Fans say shut it down

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Mar 4, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo (34) rest his calf in the fourth quarter against the Atlanta Hawks at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-Imagn Images | Benny Sieu-Imagn Images

While a deliberately tanking opponent is in town tonight that may end it, the Bucks’ highly dispiriting four-game losing streak has put a series damper on fan enthusiasm, despite the eight-wins-in-10-games stretch that came before. Two weeks ago, in the midst of that stretch, nearly 70% of voters on our Tuesday Tracker wanted Milwaukee to go for it. At that time, the Bucks were 1.5 games back of the 10 seed and five back of the seven seed. Giannis wasn’t back yet. Only 20% of fans wanted to fold up shop and tank.

Even though Giannis has returned to the team, this week it’s a vastly different story…

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To be fair, about a third of our respondents want the Bucks to keep pushing, and a not insignificant 42% want to make the play-in at a minimum. But that is pretty daunting after the loss to Atlanta—who has now won five straight—on Wednesday. They and Charlotte are in the final two play-in spots, and while Milwaukee owns the tiebreaker over the latter, they are currently 4.5 games back of Charles Lee’s .500 squad. The Bucks’ season series is tied at one with the Hawks, and they have one more shot in a week. A win tomorrow over the Magic—a full seven games up on the Bucks right now in the eight seed—would claim that tiebreaker.

But most fans seem to recognize that this stretch doomed their playoff odds and want to maximize their lottery pick. Right now, Milwaukee is a game behind Chicago for ninth in the lottery standings and three games ahead of Memphis, so it’ll be hard to fall much further. New Orleans, who is currently sixth, has the right to swap picks with them thanks to 2020’s Jrue Holiday trade. If the season ended today with those standings, the Bucks would have only a 15.7% chance of moving up from 10th in the draft, factoring in the swap. Should they “rise” to nine, that number goes up to 19.5%.

Check out FanDuel, the official sportsbook of SB Nation.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-poll...cts-survey-nba-playoffs-play-in-draft-tanking
 
Rapid Recap: Bucks 113, Jazz 99

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MILWAUKEE, WI - MARCH 7: Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks drives to the basket during the game against the Utah Jazz on March 7, 2026 at Fiserv Forum Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images). | NBAE via Getty Images

In the first half of a weekend back-to-back at Fiserv Forum, the Milwaukee Bucks snapped a four-game losing streak, taking out perhaps the most unabashed tankers in NBA history, the Utah Jazz. In his most extensive action since returning Monday from a calf strain (27 minutes), Giannis Antetokounmpo poured in a game-high 27 for the victors. Keyonte George paced the visitors with 22.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


A jumbo starting lineup, including Ousmane Dieng and Kyle Kuzma, began this one on a 10-3 run. Giannis’ initial shift was his longest since January at just under eight minutes, and in that time, he got to the line seven times. It was 23-8 when he subbed out at 4:35, but the second unit couldn’t extend what was then a 13-2 run any further. In fact, Milwaukee didn’t score a point for over three-and-a-half minutes as Giannis sat, though Utah couldn’t get closer than 10. They’re that bad: the Bucks went ice cold, and all the Jazz managed was five points. With a quarter in the books, it was 24-13 Bucks. Gripping stuff.

The Jazz finally started to find nylon in the opening stages of the second, amid the Bucks’ continued offensive struggles. A 10-2 Utah run made it a two-point game just over three minutes in, and Giannis re-entered perhaps sooner than anticipated. Still, the Milwaukee offense remained sluggish as Utah tied it at 35 just past the midpoint. It wasn’t until the last three minutes that they strung together some makes and re-established the double-digit lead, ironically after Giannis checked back out. The home team went to the locker room ahead 51-44.

Much like in their Wednesday defeat, the Bucks opened the second half poorly. Two early turnovers shrank the Bucks’ halftime advantage to one, and thanks to early foul trouble, they barely managed to stay in front—by no more than six—for the next few minutes. Once Giannis exited, Utah grabbed their first lead of the game inside the five-minute mark. Basket-trading followed, including AJ Green’s first three of the night (he had been 0/4 overall prior), then another shortly after. That, plus a Jericho Sims fastbreak dunk, seemed to break Milwaukee out of it a bit. Closing the period on a 9-2 run, they led 83-76 through three.

Bobby Portis took matters into his own hands with a pair of early buckets as the Bucks soon went up 11. He even added a block to his six quick points. That bought some more time for Giannis, who was reinserted with 7:30 left, up six. Utah closed within one, though, and it appeared the usual Jazz tanking mass exodus wasn’t coming. Giannis went to work with a personal 6-0 run, but Milwaukee struggled to stop Utah on the other end without fouling. It was 97-95 inside five minutes, but then the Bucks finally got serious and put the game away as the Jazz misfired just enough. They finished on a 16-4 run.

Stat That Stood Out​


The Bucks were just brutal at the line, and it made this game a lot closer than it needed to be: 16/28 at the charity stripe is just 57.1%. Until Giannis made a few as they made their closing run, Milwaukee was under 50% for the game.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...re-recap-giannis-antetokounmpo-keyonte-george
 
Milwaukee Bucks vs. Orlando Magic Preview & Game Thread: Season Saving Time

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ORLANDO, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 11: AJ Green #20 of the Milwaukee Bucks looks to shoot a three-pointer as Desmond Bane #3 of the Orlando Magic guards during the first quarter at Kia Center on February 11, 2026 in Orlando, Florida. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Rich Storry/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Two titans walk into a ring: the Milwaukee Bucks and the Orlando Magic. Having split the season series thus far, who will win the season series??

Where We’re At​


To All Who Are Concerned about the Bucks’ recent woes:

View Link

Look, Van is absolutely right: it will be hard for the Bucks to “catch” anyone below them in the standings, many of whom are actively trying to lose (unlike the Bucks, of course). But nothing easy’s worth doing, and the further they fall in the standings, the slightly better their chances of a better pick come June. And the alternative—getting pantsed in the 9/10 game by an alt-right rookie—is gonna help their chances to keep the big man? Psh.

But hey, there’s something to be said for not being the Magic. Pegged by this “pundit” to finish third in the conference, they’re mired in sixth after an up-and-down stretch, behind the Raptors (!) and the Sixers (:P). Look, they’re higher than the Bucks, but they had expectations after splashing four firsts on a spot-up shooter, and now Milwaukee just might have to take their coach off their hands and call it even.

Injury Report​


UPDATE: Giannis is out for this one for right calf injury management. Kyle Kuzma is questionable with a thoracic spine contusion. Kevin Porter Jr. (right knee synovitis) and of course Taurean Prince (neck surgery) are out.

For the Magic, Franz Wagner is out (left high ankle sprain injury management), and Anthony Black (low back strain—me too bro), Jonathan Isaac (left knee strain), and Jase Richardson (low back spasms) are questionable (one moreso…).

Player To Watch​


Since the Magic can’t shoot to save their lives, here’s hoping for a big game inside from the Bucks’ pricey acquisition, “I Would Walk 500” Myles Turner.

How To Watch​


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


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Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-game...scussion-start-time-tv-schedule-injury-report
 
Rapid Recap: Magic 130, Bucks 91

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Mar 8, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Bucks center Jericho Sims (00) dunks the basketball in the second quarter against the Orlando Magic at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-Imagn Images | Benny Sieu-Imagn Images

The Milwaukee Bucks lost 130-91 to the Orlando Magic on the second night of a back-to-back for the home team, who played shorthanded without Giannis Antetokounmpo and Kevin Porter, Jr. Bobby Portis led the Bucks’ attack with 18 points and 10 rebounds. Paolo Banchero cooked the Bucks with a game-high 33 points for the Magic.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


The first quarter saw the Bucks’ limited offensive options on full display. The Magic jumped out to a 7-0 start and largely held serve as both teams shot poorly and generally showed limited interest in playing an NBA basketball game. After one, it was Magic 25, Bucks 15.

Quarter Two presented the fans with the illusion that this would be a game worth staying past halftime for. The teams both found their offensive rhythm after the doldrums of the opening frame. An entertaining, back-and-forth affair it was. Of note, Ousmane Dieng connected with Jerico Sims on four highlight dunks, and Bobby Portis poured in most of his team-high 18 points. The Bucks had no answer for Paolo Banchero, who headed to the locker room with 26 points on near-perfect shooting. Orlando led 67-55 at half.

The Bucks forgot to show up for the third quarter again, allowing the Magic to stretch a 12-point halftime lead into a 30-point beatdown as the matchup limped to the final frame. The quarter started with a 16-3 Magic run and largely continued in that vein. Bucks turnovers became uncontested dunks, or three-pointers, for the Magic. The rout was on, and the home team needed their crying towels. Orlando was ahead 100-70 entering the final period.

Among the few remaining people in Fiserv Forum, Thanassis Antetokounmpo entered the game with 9:22 left. He provided an emotional lift to the 17 remaining fans.

Stat That Stood Out​


46.2%. That’s the Bucks’ free-throw shooting percentage. On a night that saw the team find many ways to embarrass themselves, this one was particularly brutal.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...o-magic-final-score-recap-loss-paolo-banchero
 
Momentum Moments: Vol. 8

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MILWAUKEE, WI - FEBRUARY 24: Kevin Porter Jr. #7 of the Milwaukee Bucks talks to the media after the game against the Miami Heat on February 24, 2026 at Fiserv Forum Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images). | NBAE via Getty Images

The Bucks get up in Volume 8, new recruits Cam Thomas and Ousmane Dieng making immediate impressions in Milwaukee and claiming their first momentum moments. But sometimes you can fly too high, too quick. Icarus and all that. Relive the last thirteen games—the sun, the sea—and the moments that defined them.

@ Magic​


Sometimes it’s quiet and sometimes it’s loud. Tonight it’s both. With 4:04 left on the clock in the third quarter, rising star Anthony Black makes a driving layup that puts the Magic up six, 73-67. This is the quiet. But Doc Rivers has his ear to the ground—senses the subtle—and calls for a timeout. The response is immediate, AJ Green swishing a three from the right wing. Then it gets loud. Franz Wagner is the culprit, turning the dial up with an assist to his brother Mo for a three of his own. And when Kevin Porter Jr. fails to get enough spring on his bounce pass to Jericho Sims, it gets really loud. The ball bangs off Sims’ shins and then Franz turns the dial some more, feeding Jase Richardson for another bomb that hurts twice as much when you remember you used to watch his dad do the same thing. Ultimately, the explosion is too deafening, too deadly, and the Bucks lose on the road, end their three-game win streak.

Win probability prior to Anthony Black’s layup: 23.3%

Win probability after Jase Richardson’s three: 10.4%

@ Magic​


“I’m a bucket.” The words could never be more honest, not when they come from Cam Thomas’ mouth. But these are post game. First, rewind the tape. Stop with 1:42 left to go on the third, Bucks up 79-76. Press play.

It starts with free throws, both of them pure. Then it gets ridiculous. Thomas catches one from KPJ at the top of the three-point line and rises up en pointe so well you think he’s part of the ABT. Jalen Suggs buys the ticket and watches in awe as Thomas finishes at the rim. From the gallery, Giannis does too. The tension continues to rise as Thomas follows it up with a grand jeté past Suggs for another two. Then the coda. With the help of Bobby Portis, Thomas rips the ball from Suggs and pushes it the other way. Determined to make amends, Suggs cuts him off at the three-point line, but Thomas sees it coming, leaning into Suggs to set up a step-back. After it splashes through the net, putting the Bucks up eight, Lisa Byington’s commentary says it all: “He’s on a heater!” But Thomas just shrugs, gets back on D. After all, this ain’t new. He’s a bucket.

Win probability before Thomas’ free throws: 59.1%

Win probability after Thomas’ three: 72.4%

@ Thunder​


Before he makes a driving layup, before he blocks Aaron Wiggins at the rim, before he grabs his 11th rebound, before he finds Portis for an 18-footer, before he blocks Isaiah Joe’s layup, before he drills a 25-footer, before he splashes a middy, before he hits a step-back three, before he blocks Chet Holmgren and Kenrich Williams just 26 seconds apart, before he finds AJ Green for three, before he cans an 11-foot fadeaway, before he drops a 6-foot pull-up, before he cashes free throws, before he rips a Jaylin Williams pass, before he assists Portis for three, before he drains one from a Kuzma feed, before he hits the offensive glass, before he finds Cam-I-Am for a middy, and before he feeds KPJ and Sims for dunks… Ousmane Dieng pulls down three defensive boards in the opening three minutes against his former squad—the Oklahoma City Thunder. It’s a small stat, but one that’s become a telling part of his impact on the Bucks. Ranking 26th in rebound percentage at 48.1% prior to acquiring Dieng, the Bucks rank seventh (53.6%) over their last three games. Prior to all of this, Trader Jon Horst acquires Dieng for Nick Richards, and before that—four years and seven months earlier—draft savant Sam Presti selects him 11th overall. Now? Now we get to see that potential come to fruition. One moment at a time.

Win probability before Trader Jon makes the call: 0.0% (unofficially)

Win probability after Dieng’s third rebound: 25.8%

@ Pelicans​


Up just six in the fourth after a Zion Williamson basket and Pelicans defensive stop, Pete Nance—nearly forgotten in all the Cam Thomas and Ousmane Dieng hype—teams up with Dieng to force a Derik Queen turnover. It’s enough to cause a minor scuffle, Lisa Byington proclaiming it’s “Getting physical here in NOLA!” KPJ and Herb Jones feel it too, jockeying for the ball outside the sideline. But when the refs signal Bucks ball and call New Orleans for a delay of game violation, KPJ feels it even more, applauding the call and then dapping up Nance for his efforts. KPJ takes the energy into the next play, feeling the momentum, looking for his man. After he sheds one defender and draws another, he finds him. Nance catches it in the corner and does what he does best—makes an immediate decision. This one’s to let it fly, and by the time it’s through the net and Nance scurries back on defence, the sting is all but gone. This one’s done. But Nance sure ain’t.

Win probability before Nance and Dieng team up for the stop: 74.9%

Win probability after Nance’s three: 87.2%

vs. Raptors​


Pre-game, I dropped a message in the Brew Hoop staff thread: “No Scottie Barnes is handy.” As it turns out, Immanuel Quickley must be on the payroll because he was on one from the moment he took his first field goal attempt—a 13-foot runner. Nylon. He’d finish with a game-high 32 points, just his third 30-piece of the season, but he’d also finish with nine assists, one shy of KPJ’s game-high total. His fourth would break the Bucks’ backs. Up six, the Bucks had their best play of the night: Rollins collapses the paint and kicks it to Turner in the corner who swings it to KPJ on the wing. He’s wide open. But instead of letting it fly he gives it back to Rollins who’d relocated to his left. Butter. Tres bien. Just one possession in it. Time out, Raptors.

On the bench, Quickley clenches his jaw. He forages through a bag. Pulls out a phone. Reads the message once again. “No Scottie Barnes is handy.” The words ring through his mind. Again. And again. And again.

Moments later, when the ball comes to him off a broken play, he’s locked in, delivering a no-look laser straight to Jamal Shead who goes pure. Raps back up six, 65-59. From there, it’s an avalanche—Toronto goes 60-35 the rest of the way—and all I can say in the thread, to you, is “My bad.”

Win probability when Quickley makes his first basket: 49.0%

Win probability after Shead’s three: 27.1%

vs. Heat​


116-114, Heat lead. 4:10 left on the clock in the fourth. KPJ receives the inbounds pass and brings it across half court. He passes to Sims, then screens for Rollins. Defence too tight, KPJ curls back to the ball, then gets it to Rollins. 14 left on the shot clock. Rollins surveys the scene. Looks for a curling AJ Green. It’s too disjointed—no flow. He gives it up to the Mayor instead. Gets it right back. Now just 10 on the shot clock. Gotta make a move. And he does, getting into the paint. 5 seconds turns to four as the defence swarms, the heat thick. In the background, KPJ senses the need for help—hears every damn coach he’s ever had—and creates a passing lane. Rollins sees it, finds him in the corner. Four ticks to three. KPJ catches, checks his toes—the clock turning to two—then rises up and releases…

By the time the clock ticks over to one, the whistle has gone, the ball is through the net. The Bucks have taken the lead. After KPJ converts the four-point play, they’re up two, and they never look back—icing the game with an 11-1 run. The lid is off.

Win probability prior to KPJ’s three: 34.9%

Win probability after he converts the free throw: 57.4%

vs. Cavs​


This one’s a picture. In the background, BP provides a bail-out option. Top right, Rollins stands alone, hands up in communication. In premature celebration. Behind him, they stand. AJax, Taurean Prince in street clothes. The rest of the bench. Doc Rivers is even upright. On the baseline, Sims wrestles with Schroder. In the foreground, Sam Merrill is mid stride, desperately trying to stick with AJ Green behind the three-point line. Official Evan Scott is just to Green’s right. Beneath them, planted across the screen, the game details: 116-116, 21.8 left in the fourth. In the middle of it all, Keon Ellis and Jaylon Tyson dig back in help. It’s too late. Jarrett Allen is airborne, arm fully extended. But it doesn’t matter. KPJ is airborne too, fading back at 60 degrees. Braids flowing in the still. The ball just off his fingertips. Just out of Allen’s reach. And when you click play, it does what the picture promises.

This one’s a picture. Hang it on the wall.

Win probability prior to KPJ’s release: 47.5%

Win probability after the fadeaway: 63.5%

vs. Knicks​


At the 10:51 mark of the first quarter, the Bucks leave forward-guard Josh Hart, generously listed at 6’5”, wide open. He’s on the right wing, above the break, and no other player is even on that side of the court. His defender, 6’11” centre Myles Turner, is below the dotted line in the paint. It’s a bold strategy, one Doc Rivers and his team clearly planned in advance. Of course, Hart goes on to net the shot. Still, Milwaukee sticks with it, and while Hart doesn’t go on to punish it directly—he finishes just 4/11 from the field (2/7 from three)—he becomes a pressure release valve that gets the Knicks in an offensive flow. By the time Rivers waves the white flag with over five minutes left in the fourth, the Knicks are 20/34 from three and have only five turnovers. Back to the drawing board.

Win probability prior to Hart’s three: 29.4%

Win probability after it: 25.3%

@ Bulls​


So much for a moment; how about a whole quarter of momentum-destroying ineptitude? That’s exactly what the Bucks chucked up in fourth after starting it with an 89-87 lead. They would end with just eight more. Eight. Yes, you read that correctly. So few I have to write out the word. In fact, Milwaukee didn’t score a single point until a KPJ free throw with 5:51 left in the quarter. They didn’t even make a field goal until an Ousmane Dieng dunk with just 3:12 remaining. Of course, by that point, it was garbage time, the Bulls had already scored 26 points of their own, and the Bucks had found a way to make history. Of the worst kind.

View Link

Win probability at the start of the fourth quarter: 59.7%

Win probability after the Bucks’ first field goal of the fourth—Dieng’s dunk: 0.1%

vs. Celtics​


Giannis is back. Jaylen Brown and Neemias Queta are out. But that doesn’t change a damn thing for the imploding Bucks and the rampaging Celtics. Just 57 seconds into the game, 19-year-old rookie Hugo González—in just his third career start—rips the game away from Milwaukee, crashing the offensive glass like a wrecking ball. He does so between the entire Bucks’ front court—Turner, Giannis, and Dieng. Oh, and he’s just 6’6”. González goes on to grab a career-and-game-high 16 rebounds, including five on the offensive end, leading to a 54-41 rebounding edge for the Celtics that screams effort. Guts. Pride. The little things. None of which these Bucks are showing.

Win probability at the start of the game: 34.7%

Win probability after González’s rebound: 39.4% (the rare occasion the numbers don’t match the moment)

vs. Hawks​


It’s a battle for the 10th se… Blah blah blah. The Bucks put up another stinker. There is no momentum, only brakes: Milwaukee’s season coming to a grinding halt.

View Link

Win probability at the start of the game: 40.1%

Playoff probability after it: <13.0%

vs. Jazz​


The Bucks are bad but they don’t want to be. The Utah Jazz are bad and they certainly do want to be. In fact, they’ve so intentionally been bad they got fined $500,000 for it. So, when Kuzma finds Giannis for a dunk and Giannis reciprocates the favour, finding Kuz for a layup that puts the Bucks up 13 with less than seven minutes of action played in the first quarter, both sides are happy. From there, they follow the script, keeping the game close enough for it to feel like the result is in doubt. It’s even just a two-possession game with less than two minutes left in the fourth! Won’t someone be a hero? Kuz puts on the costume cape, nailing back-to-back threes that put the game out of reach, but make no mistake, this was decided a long time ago. And everyone goes home smiling, patting themselves on the back.

Win probability at the start of the game: 77.9%

Win probability after Giannis and Kuzma play your turn, my turn: 92.6%

vs. Magic​


The first half isn’t pretty, and it’s a 67-55 lead for the Magic at the break, but the Bucks are still in with a chance. All they need is a strong start to the third—a couple of baskets, a of couple stops. Instead, the Bucks’ offensive play-by-play reads:

  • Turner miss
  • Rollins turnover
  • Rollins turnover
  • Rollins three
  • Turner miss
  • Turner miss
  • Rollins turnover
  • Turner miss
  • Dieng turnover
  • Thomas miss
  • Green miss
  • Dieng miss
  • Turner turnover

Just like that, it’s a 26-point Magic lead and Cam Thomas is dribbling into behind-the-backboard, fadeaway three-point attempts from the corner just to beat the shot clock.

View Link

Win probability at the start of the third: 11.6%

Win probability after Turner’s turnover: 0.3%



Which moment hit hardest? Cast your vote below and, as always, add your thoughts in the comments.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-feat...me-8-cam-thomas-ousmane-dieng-kevin-porter-jr
 
Bucks Injury Report: Taurean Prince upgraded, nearing return

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MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - NOVEMBER 01: Taurean Prince #12 of the Milwaukee Bucks dribbles the ball against the Sacramento Kings during the second quarter at Fiserv Forum on November 01, 2025 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

There’s a surprise inclusion on the Bucks’ initial injury report ahead of tomorrow night’s matchup with the Suns: forward Taurean Prince is questionable to play. Prince has missed the last four months after appearing in Milwaukee’s first eight contests off the bench. That’s 55 games in total.

You’ll recall that TP, a major fixture of last year’s starting lineup, underwent neck surgery on November 13th. He’s seen zero action since their loss to Toronto on November 4th, after which he was listed as out with a neck strain. From what it sounded like in Doc Rivers press conferences, they thought it was serious, and sure enough, it turned out to be a herniated disc. A few weeks post-operation, the soon-to-be 32-year-old vowed that he’d play again.

In December, the Bucks reportedly applied for a disabled player exception in light of Prince’s surgery, indicating they believed he could be done for the season. For the exception to be granted, an NBA-designated physician must determine that the player is “substantially more likely than not” to be out through at least June 15th of any league year. Now, most of these exceptions—if approved—are never used because they do not grant teams an additional standard roster spot. They only allow teams to sign a replacement player for the lesser of 50% of the injured player’s salary or the non-taxpayer’s mid-level exception. The latter is $14.1m, and given Prince’s $3.6m salary, Milwaukee’s exception would have been worth only $1.8m, only about $600k more than the rookie minimum salary.

Since they applied, there’s been no word on whether their request was approved or denied, but we can close the book on it now. Perhaps a physician determined that Prince could play again this season, which may prove correct very soon. TP’s done on-court work at practices and before games for a while now, though there had been no rehab assignment to the G League or any indication he was getting close. For a Bucks team that isn’t as starved for wing depth as they were to begin the year, he’s still a welcome body who maybe defends a little, but definitely shoots. On 4.2 attempts per game, he shot 43.9% from three last year, good for third-best leaguewide.

Prince is in the first year of a two-year, veteran’s minimum contract, with a $3.8m player option for 2026–27. He’ll certainly face a minute restriction, and the Bucks’ 19 remaining games may not give him much chance to reestablish enough value for a trip to the open market, so he may opt in once that decision is due in late June. On the other hand, his projected minimum salary for next year is $3.9m—an $85k raise—and all 30 teams can pay him that money with the minimum salary exception. Despite the long injury layoff, he still seems likely to find a minimum deal somewhere if he chooses to leave, given the recent shooting prowess.

Regardless, congrats to Prince for completing his rehab and seeing an NBA floor again before the season is out. Neck injuries, especially when a disk is involved, have curtailed many careers—just ask Marques Johnson. I doubt TP displaces Ousmane Dieng or Kyle Kuzma from the starting lineup or rotation, but Milwaukee will at least now have the size to avoid playing guards like AJ Green out of position as often.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-inju...prince-neck-surgery-disabled-player-exception
 
Milwaukee Bucks Poll: Turner or Sims?

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ORLANDO, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 11: Paolo Banchero #5 of the Orlando Magic drives to the basket against Myles Turner #3 and Jericho Sims #00 of the Milwaukee Bucks during the third quarter at Kia Center on February 11, 2026 in Orlando, Florida. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Rich Storry/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NBA. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Bucks fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

We’re combining this week’s tracking poll with the Reacts survey, soliciting your opinions on the state of the Bucks’ frontcourt. Jack and I discussed Myles Turner’s usage by this coaching staff on the most recent episode of Deer Diaries, including how Jericho Sims continues receiving more minutes. That’s inversely proportional to their contract sizes, but the two bring pretty different skillsets on both ends at the five.

While Sims is definitely the switchier option, which is important, the Bucks are too small and routinely get abused on switches. I certainly wouldn’t abandon switching altogether because it’s needed, especially in late-game situations, but I contend that it shouldn’t be their base scheme, preferring drop coverage with Turner. We’ve seen next to no drop from the Bucks this year, and despite a younger team which should theoretically switch better, this is their worst defense since the Jason Kidd years.

When that was their primary defensive look in the Brook Lopez years, Milwaukee always ranked among the top defenders of roll men, even last season. This year, they’re in 29th. If Turner wasn’t being switched off every pick-and-roll, or he wasn’t heading to the corner every time up the floor offensively and thus needing to cover more ground to get back on defense, I don’t think they’d be that bad. Maybe even solid. Essentially, use Turner like Brook Lopez, as we assumed they would, then use Sims when you need to switch, which shouldn’t always be their look.

In this week’s Tuesday Tracker, weigh in on Turner vs. Sims. We’re also keeping an eye on the Pelicans, who keep moving up the standings and are just a game away from seventh in the lottery standings; how should that impact the Bucks, given the swap rights they hold? For reference, here are the chances Milwaukee ends up at various draft positions if they remain in 10th and New Orleans is either sixth or seventh, factoring in that the better pick ends up in The Big Easy (though it then becomes property of Atlanta) via the swap:

Bucks’ pickif Pelicans are 6thif Pelicans are 7th
10.0%0.0%
20.6%0.5%
31.5%1.2%
42.6%2.3%
50.0%0.0%
60.0%0.0%
73.2%0.0%
85.9%5.4%
92.1%5.4%
1060.7%61.5%
1121.4%21.5%
121.7%1.7%
130.0%0.0%
14<0.1%<0.1%
Average pick9.79.8


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...o-sims-nba-draft-lottery-new-orleans-pelicans
 
Rapid Recap: Suns 129, Bucks 114

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MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MARCH 10: Kyle Kuzma #18 of the Milwaukee Bucks scores on a lay up during the first half against the Phoenix Suns at Fiserv Forum on March 10, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by John Fisher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Milwaukee Bucks lost 129-114 to the Phoenix Suns to drop their fourth of the last five games, ending a disappointing home stand. The game saw the return of Giannis Antetokounmpo after a one-game absence and Taurean Prince after he had missed most of the season with a neck injury. Devin Booker led the Suns with 27 points, while Kyle Kuzma paced the Bucks with 33 points and a big milestone, passing 10,000 career points.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap​


The Bucks limped out of the locker room once again, surrendering easy buckets amid a 9-2 start for the Suns. The home team quickly found its offense, though, climbing back to tie it up 9-9 as Giannis Antetokounmpo and Ousmane Dieng found their scoring groove. It was largely back and forth for the rest of the frame, with a brief Bucks’ lead peaking at 19-14. The Suns decisively won the battle of the Greens: Jalen Green finished with 14 points, while AJ Green was scoreless and committed a foul on a made 3-pointer to close the first and help the visitors pad their lead. After one, it was Suns 36, Bucks 30.

Quarter two continued in an even-steven manner, with runs by both teams that largely canceled each other out. The Bucks went on a 9-0 mid-quarter run off three quick three-pointers, two by Myles Turner that bookended one by Ryan Rollins. The visitors were helped by a reawakened Devin Booker, who found his groove late in the quarter for 13 points to send him to the locker room with a game-high of 20. Kyle Kuzma also got cooking late in the quarter, pouring in nine points in the final two minutes, including a 28-footer at the buzzer to send the Bucks hootin’ and hollerin’ into the break. Halftime: Bucks 65, Suns 62.

The Bucks were the aggressors coming out of the half for a change, jumping to a 73-62 advantage. But prosperity just can’t last for this squad. The Suns roared back, with a 15-4 midquarter run clawing them back to even, 77 all, at the 7:38 mark. The remainder of the quarter was the battle between two unlikely gunslingers. Kyle Kuzma ended the frame with 16 points to push him to 31 for the game. Royce O’Neale managed to outduel him, finishing the frame with 18 points, including a buzzer-beating three-point make. Phoenix was ahead 100-97 entering the final period.

Phoenix came out feisty to start the fourth, starting with a 7-0 run to push their lead to 10. They held onto a double-digit lead throughout the final frame, as the Bucks seemed to run out of gas on what started as a promising night for the beleaguered squad.

Stat That Stood Out​


17. That’s the Bucks’ turnover total. Those gifts resulted in 22 points for the visitors.

Source: https://www.brewhoop.com/bucks-scor...x-suns-final-score-recap-giannis-booker-kuzma
 
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