LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — Before the Milwaukee Bucks labored through a stretch of basketball that could wind up altering their future, Giannis Antetokounmpo did something that he tends to do well: He elevated for a dunk, a brief burst of explosiveness that gave the Bucks a fourth-quarter lead against the Miami Heat in Game 3 of their Eastern Conference semifinal series.
But upon landing, Antetokounmpo grimaced. He had rolled his right ankle in the first quarter, and perhaps it was bothering him even if he would later refuse to admit it. But in that moment, his expression — his face contorted in pain as he turned to get back on defense — was, in its own way, a sign of so much more misery to come.
The Bucks went the rest of the game without making a field goal, and their 115-100 loss to the Heat on Friday night put them in the deepest hole imaginable. Miami will have a chance to sweep the top-seeded Milwaukee in the best-of-seven of series on Sunday afternoon, while thorny questions are already percolating about the Bucks — and the uncertainty that looms.
For the second consecutive year, the Bucks entered the playoffs with the league’s best regular-season record. Last year, their championship hopes were extinguished by the Toronto Raptors in the conference finals. (The Raptors went on to win it all.) This year, the Bucks’ stay inside the N.B.A.’s so-called bubble at Walt Disney World is on the cusp of being prematurely popped.
“They made every play,” the Bucks coach, Mike Budenholzer, said of the Heat, “and we didn’t make enough, obviously.”
An early exit would be less forgivable this time around. Antetokounmpo, 25, a dynamic force whom the Bucks drafted and groomed, is the favorite to collect his second consecutive N.B.A. Most Valuable Player Award sometime in the coming days. But his contract situation — he can become an unrestricted free agent in 2021 if he refuses to sign an extension this off-season — has been brewing like a storm cloud, rumbling closer with each blown postseason opportunity.
And while this series is not over, most of the stories about this game will read as epitaphs (including this one) for good reason: No team in N.B.A. history has come back from a three-games-to-none deficit in a best-of-seven series. The Bucks would need to become the first, to sustain their title dreams.
“Might as well make history,” the Bucks’ George Hill said. “First time in the history of the N.B.A. that we’re playing in a bubble. First time that a team can come back from down 3-0. We’ve got to trust each other and continue to believe.”
But do they believe? The Bucks missed their final 10 shots as the Heat closed out Friday’s game with a 17-1 run. All told, Miami outscored Milwaukee by 40-13 in the fourth quarter, which was the most lopsided fourth quarter of a playoff game since the advent of the shot clock, according to ESPN. For his part, Antetokounmpo rattled through a long list of problems, starting with the twin observations that the Bucks could neither rebound nor score. And while the Heat played with discipline, he said, the Bucks lost their composure.
“They’re a great team, and you know they’re going to play hard,” Antetokounmpo said of the Heat. “They play hard for 48 minutes. For you to beat them, you have to match that. You cannot play hard for 36 minutes. You cannot play hard for 24 minutes. You have to play hard for 48 minutes to beat a team like that. We knew that coming into the series, and they played harder than us.”
Sports and the Virus
Updated Sept. 4, 2020
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- The most complicated puzzle in sports is the return of college athletics during a pandemic. The University of California, Berkeley is allowing The Times an inside look at their journey’s ups and downs.
The idea that the Heat had “played harder” than the Bucks was a theme for Antetokounmpo: He mentioned it 16 times over the course of a six-minute news conference. Jimmy Butler, in particular, left his imprint all over the game for Miami, finishing with 30 points, 7 rebounds and 6 assists.
Antetokounmpo collected 21 points, 16 rebounds and 9 assists but shot 7 of 21 from the field. He also played just 35 minutes in a game that the Bucks desperately needed to win, and started the fourth quarter on the bench. He said he could have played more. His ankle, he said, was “great.” Budenholzer indicated that he had no regrets about limiting Antetokounmpo’s playing time.
“If you’re going as hard as these guys are in a playoff game — 35, 36 — I think that’s pushing the ceiling,” Budenholzer said, referring to the minutes he wanted his best players to supply.
When the season was suspended in March because of the coronavirus pandemic, the Bucks were 53-12 and looking primed for a title run. But they have not been able to reassemble the pieces in the bubble. In eight seeding games, they went 3-5, then lost the first game of their first-round playoff series with the Orlando Magic before winning the next four.
At the same time, the Bucks have been at the center of various tensions and challenges for players here. It was Hill, one of the team’s veteran leaders, who led his team to boycott one of their playoff games against the Magic after the police shooting of Jacob Blake, a 29-year-old Black man, in Kenosha, Wis. It led to a wave of disruptions and protests across multiple sports leagues.
On Friday, Hill was asked whether the team was struggling to focus on basketball with so much else going on.
“There’s no excuses,” he said. “We’re here in the bubble, and we’re playing. We can’t make excuses why we’re not playing good, quality basketball right now. You’ve still got to go out on that court and lace your shoes up just like every other team here.”
In the face of the longest odds, Antetokounmpo seemed to be doing what he could to remain upbeat.
“I believe in my teammates,” he said. “I trust my teammates. I love my teammates, and I want my teammates to be confident. I’m confident.”
The Bucks have another opportunity to prove it. They may not have many more.
Source: Basketball - nytimes.com