The wink said it all.
When Giannis Antetokounmpo drilled his career-high fifth 3-pointer on Thursday night, it’s understandable that he had to give the crowd a little something extra as he retreated back on defense.
As if the home team didn’t already give their fans enough in the most anticipated game of the season.
Antetokounmpo and the Bucks put on a master class in defensive dominance and offensive excellence and the sold-out Fiserv Forum crowd ate it up. On Thursday night, Milwaukee appeared to be a varsity troupe devouring an awkward, uncoordinated JV team – except that junior team was home to LeBron James and Anthony Davis, two of the most talented basketball players in the world.
Both teams entered the game with the exact same record of 24-4, tied for the best in the league. Both teams were coming off losses – the Bucks lost to the Luka Doncic-less Mavericks on Monday and the Lakers lost to the Victor Oladipo-less Pacers on Tuesday. Both teams’ stars – James and Antetokounmpo – had vowed that their goal was not to drop two games in a row.
The crowd buzzed – always excited, but only reaching an ear-splitting pitch when Antetokounmpo thundered down a dunk or made a three. A sprinkling of Lakers faithful dressed in yellow broke up an otherwise sea of Milwaukee fans in forest green Bucks jerseys, hats and sweatshirts. When the Lakers scored, there were enough Los Angeles supporters to make the arena hum slightly.
But this was Milwaukee’s night.
The beginning of the second quarter was silly. After a slow start, Milwaukee found its footing and went on a 6-0 run to start off the period. Lakers’ coach Frank Vogel quickly called a timeout in an attempt to squash any momentum the Bucks’ were building. From there, the game began to teeter on absurdity. Milwaukee erupted, extending their run to 20-7.
By the end of the first half, Milwaukee’s dominance had reached absurd levels. The Bucks finished the first half with 10 made threes and held a 19-point lead at the break. The Lakers whittled Milwaukee’s out-of-this-world lead to a manageable eight points by the end of the third.
In the end, Milwaukee would come out on top, catapulting themselves to the sole owners of the NBA’s best record at 25-4. At least for now.
— Malika Andrews
Our NBA experts’ biggest takeaways
Giannis shows off the range
Giannis Antetokounmpo has made a name for himself as a complete the improbable, cross-the-court-from-end-to-end-in-three-steps-and-dunk-on-you type of player. He’s uniquely nimble for his 7-foot frame and can handle the ball like a guard.
Antetokounmpo’s 3-point shooting, however, has been historically spotty. In the past, opposing teams have purposely tried to run the Greek Freak out to the 3-point line in hopes that would slow down his offensive production.
So when he drilled his career-high fifth 3-pointer on Thursday night, Antetokounmpo threw the crowd a wink and appeared to put an imaginary crown atop his head.
“[I’ll] keep shooting it. Doesn’t matter if I make one, two, five I just want to be better and keep getting better,” Antetokounmpo said after the game. “I’ve been working on my game and there’s gonna be some nights where I make zero, there’s gonna be some nights where I make five, but I got to keep shooting because that’s what my team wants me to do.”
The days of sagging off Antetokounmpo might be over. According to Second Spectrum, the leading MVP candidate is making 45% of his 3-pointers in December when the closest defender is at least 6 feet away. That is up from 33% in November and 17% in October.
–Malika Andrews
Lakers bench a non-factor
Rajon Rondo stood in the right corner early in the third quarter. There was plenty of space between him and the closest defender when he received a pass from LeBron James. Rather than launch the open shot, Rondo put the ball on the floor, driving into traffic along the baseline. When the Bucks’ defense cut him off, Rondo was unable to muster an attempt before the shot clock expired, ultimately costing L.A. a turnover.
It was a moment that encapsulated the night for Rondo and the Lakers’ bench. L.A. reserves, missing Kyle Kuzma for the fifth straight game as he rests his sprained left ankle, were nowhere to be seen in Milwaukee. For a team that’s touted its depth this season, Thursday’s dearth of production from the second unit was particularly disheartening. The Bucks’ bench outscored them 36-4, with L.A. going just 2-for-9 from the field (0-for-4 from 3) with 10 turnovers (five belonging to Rondo). The Lakers’ starters were offered precious little relief on the final night of a five-game road trip, with Davis and James forced to play a combined 80 minutes.
— Dave McMenamin
The Bucks run deep
With Eric Bledsoe (right leg injury) sidelined for the third consecutive game, the Bucks were looking for a spark. Donte DiVincenzo has rightfully earned the starting nod, without Bledsoe, but George Hill was automatic off the bench. The veteran point guard put up 10 of his 21 points and a pair of treys in an opening quarter in which Milwaukee used 11 different players.
Hill’s 10 first-quarter points led the team, marking the first time Antetokounmpo wasn’t the Bucks’ scoring leader after 12 minutes of a game when he was active since the Dec. 6 blowout win against the LA Clippers.
The Bucks won’t need Hill to produce at this high level of scoring on a nightly basis, even with Bledsoe out, but he has the potential to be one of their most consistent bench contributors during the playoffs. Hill and Kyle Korver are the only players on the Bucks roster who’ve played in the NBA Finals.
Missing Bledsoe isn’t necessarily a good thing, but it’s given the Bucks a chance to develop increased trust in their bench options. DiVincenzo, Hill, Korver, Pat Connaughton, and Ersan Ilyasova have all fulfilled key bench roles. All-Star swingman Khris Middleton also missed seven games in November with a left thigh bruise. The Bucks won them as part of an 18-game win streak, and the experience those players earned with increased roles will be invaluable as the season goes on.
“With Khris going out at the start, I got all the starting jitters out so when (Bledsoe) went down, it’s kind of easy to step into that role and I know what I need to do,” DiVincenzo said Thursday at shootaround.
— Eric Woodyard
Still the NBA’s best
The new-look, big, physical Lakers played well on defense; they held Milwaukee to just 34 points in the paint (they average 52.8). Antetokounmpo, who leads the league by averaging 18.9 points per game in the paint, only got 10 in that key area. Normally, that would spell trouble for the Bucks, but they won the 3-point battle thanks in large part to a career-best long-range shooting night from their MVP.
The Bucks also looked good on defense. Wesley Matthews drew the LeBron assignment and he did well. The Lakers only scored 36 points on the 46 possessions when Matthews guarded James.
But here’s my second takeaway. Do the Lakers have enough?
Led by George Hill, who scored 21 points on just 12 shots, the Bucks bench torched the Lakers bench 34-4, and if Thursday night raised any real questions about either team, it’s this. Are the Lakers deep enough to win it all?
— Kirk Goldsberry
