Penticton Herald

Raptors upset by Greek Freak, Bucks in opener

- By The Canadian Press

Antetokoun­mpo puts on a show in Toronto as Milwaukee prevails

TORONTO — With under two minutes remaining Saturday, Raptors star DeMar DeRozan rose majestical­ly and extended the hand holding the ball towards the rim.

Beneath the basket, Milwaukee star Giannis Antetokoun­mpo elevated like Inspector Gadget and sent the ball flying with his right hand. Then as DeRozan fell away to the right of the basket, the Greek Freak celebrated to the left.

Leading by 19 points, Milwaukee had the game well in hand. But it was an exclamatio­n point for the young Bucks en route to their 97-83 upset win over Toronto in Game 1 of their first-round playoff series.

The 22-year-old Antetokoun­mpo pumped his right hand and gave DeRozan a look over his shoulder, earning a somewhat questionab­le technical foul.

Antetokoun­mpo, noting he hasn’t seen much of the playoffs, said afterwards he was just caught up in the energy of the sellout crowd of 20,133 at the Air Canada Centre.

“I wasn’t doing anything towards DeRozan. I was just excited,” he said. “But it was the right call. I’ll learn. Next time I’ll be less excited.”

That may be difficult. Antetokoun­mpo brings excitement — a 6-foot-11, 222-pound athletic splinter of a man who can do it all. He can bring the ball down the court at breakneck speed, slash through a defence, stop and put up a shot or feed a teammate.

The Bucks star finished with a careerhigh 28 points on 13-of-18 shooting from the field, adding eight rebounds and three assists.

“Giannis is a special player and he can cause a problem by getting two or three players on him,” said Milwaukee coach Jason Kidd.

“The defence just focuses so much on him,” echoed Thon Maker, a 7-foot-1 centre from South Sudan whose basketball journey took him to the Athlete Institute Basketball Academy in nearby Orangevill­e.

Milwaukee used the attention on Antetokoun­mpo to move the ball and get open looks, finishing with 22 assists. Plus they protected the ball, committing just five turnovers to Toronto’s 11.

Early on Saturday, Antetokoun­mpo put on a one-man show: two dunks, three rebounds, a layup and free throw as Milwaukee turned a 4-0 deficit into a 17-15 lead.

Antetokoun­mpo’s energy was equally high to start the second quarter, with a running layup, step-back jump shot, reverse dunk and driving dunk.

He also floored DeRozan late in the second quarter, collecting a foul to deny a dunk.

Opening the third, a Maker block led to a fast break with Antetokoun­mpo switching hands with the ball in midair to evade a defender and get a better look at the bucket for a finger-roll layup.

It was more of the same seconds later, with Antetokoun­mpo standing under the Raptors’ basket, hands in the air like the Empire State Building awaiting the pass for a layup. Then it was an assist for a Tony Snell three-pointer.

His teammates came to his rescue late in the third, when Antetokoun­mpo picked up a fourth foul. Toronto was unable to capitalize on his absence and the Bucks outscored the Raptors 11-5 to end the quarter up 75-70.

The Raptors’ start to the fourth was a nightmare of turnovers and missed free throws as Milwaukee increased its lead.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokoun­mpo dunks the ball as Toronto Raptors’ Serge Ibaka, left, DeMarre Carroll (5) and P.J.Tucker (2) look on during Game 1 of their first-round NBA playoff series in Toronto on Saturday.
The Canadian Press Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokoun­mpo dunks the ball as Toronto Raptors’ Serge Ibaka, left, DeMarre Carroll (5) and P.J.Tucker (2) look on during Game 1 of their first-round NBA playoff series in Toronto on Saturday.

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