The Province

Hard work key to series victory

Edge in talent and experience not enough to carry Raptors past the Bucks

- MIKE GANTER mike.ganter@sunmedia.ca

A seven-game series is reduced to three with two of the games on your home court.

You should feel good about your chances, whether you’re a member of the Toronto Raptors or just a fan of the team. But can you? A Game 4 win, 87-76, in which the Raptors re-establishe­d themselves as the team to beat, has to be a confidence boost. But it was just 48 hours prior to that when the Bucks turned the Raptors’ season on its head with an all-encompassi­ng tour de force that shook the confidence of even the most devout fans.

If the first four games have taught us anything, it is the team that plays the hardest is going to win.

That may sound obvious (and truthfully, it is), but far too often in dissecting a series, we get caught up in who has the most overall talent, who has the better depth, which team has the edge in experience, who has the fresher legs and a number of factors which matter a whole lot more when there is a sizable gap between the two teams taking part in the series.

The truth of the matter is the gap between these two teams is not that large at all.

Yes, the Raptors had nine more regular season wins than the Bucks and finished three spots higher in the conference. Yes, the Raptors have substantia­lly more experience than the young Bucks and yes, they have the edge in talent although no one comes close to the seemingly endless talent possessed within the 7-foot frame of 22-year-old Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, a.k.a. Greek Freak.

By our rough estimate, Raptors’ coach Dwane Casey has referenced on at least eight or nine occasions already how small the gap really is, not just between Toronto and Milwaukee, but from No. 1 through No. 8 in the Eastern Conference when it comes to the ability of winning basketball games.

The first seven or so times he said it, we nodded, all the while thinking he was just being compliment­ary towards his opponent. Turns out he wasn’t. Milwaukee is that good. Anybody who doubts that need only go back and watch any of the first three games in the series.

Now in Game 4, the Bucks came back to earth a little. They were no longer the 50 per cent three-point shooting team that looked locked in and ready to take down the No 3 seeded Raps.

But the make-or-miss league you hear about so often from coaches holds true because, for the better part of the first three games, the Bucks were makers and the Raptors were missers.

Toronto still isn’t hitting at a high clip, certainly not from three-point range, from where they’re shooting just 31.3 per cent. But at least they’ve put enough thought in the Bucks minds with their physicalit­y and hard play that they no longer look like a team of Ray Allens, just lining up and throwing down daggers from anywhere on the floor.

Bucks coach Jason Kidd, for the first three games at least, was winning the battle of which coach can get his team to play harder.

It’s debatable, but Casey probably got his first win on Saturday in that head-to-head matchup. Some will say he won it in Game 2 as well, Toronto’s first win, but it didn’t feel that way.

Still, no matter how you feel about it, the Raptors and Bucks have a brand new series.

The Raptors have learned, if they didn’t already know, that there is absolutely no quit in these Bucks.

A gutsy lineup change in Game 4 by the Raptors got another guard on the floor, got Jonas Valanciuna­s away from chasing down Thon Maker and freed DeMar DeRozan to be the scorer he’s been all season.

Norm Powell deserves a ton of credit, as does Valanciuna­s, for making this change so effective. Casey and his coaching staff similarly deserve a ton of credit for coming up with it.

Kidd said it was the move they were expecting coming into Game 4, so taking him at his word, it means the Bucks were prepared for the change and still didn’t react well to it.

That’s a huge win for the Raptors beyond the game result. Look for the Bucks to come in with a better answer for this manpower situation in Game 5.

But in the end, it’s still going to come down to the team that plays harder. Toronto may have got away with a win in Game 2, where they were beaten in the hard work game, but four games in, that’s unlikely to happen again.

These two teams know each other inside and out by now, and know each other’s tendencies enough that it’s going to come down to who wants it more. Talent and experience and youth will obviously play a role, but the team better able to both hand out and absorb punishment is going to win the series.

Game 5 tips off Monday night at the Air Canada Centre at 7 p.m.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? DeMarre Carroll of the Raptors drives past Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokoun­mpo during Game 4 action in their East Conference quarterfin­al series Saturday. Toronto registered an 87-76 win to square the best-of-seven series at two games apiece.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES DeMarre Carroll of the Raptors drives past Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokoun­mpo during Game 4 action in their East Conference quarterfin­al series Saturday. Toronto registered an 87-76 win to square the best-of-seven series at two games apiece.

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