China Daily

Antetokoun­mpo helps Milwaukee buck Cavs’ winning trend

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MILWAUKEE — Giannis Antetokoun­mpo made sure the Milwaukee Bucks delivered a win the night after their coach was fired.

Antetokoun­mpo recorded his third triple-double in his last four games, as the Milwaukee Bucks defeated Cleveland 126-116 on Wednesday night to snap the Cavaliers’ eight-game winning streak. The victory capped an emotional couple of days following the dismissal of Adrian Griffin on Tuesday.

The two-time MVP scored 35 points, matched a season high with 18 rebounds and had 10 assists for his seventh triple-double of the season. Antetokoun­mpo is one assist shy of having four straight tripledoub­les after having 31 points, 10 rebounds and nine assists on Saturday in a 141-135 triumph at Detroit.

“For a coach like Griff, from Day one, everything was about togetherne­ss,” Antetokoun­mpo said. “He was always leading this group in the direction we set at the beginning of the year. With him not being here, at the end of the day, we’re humans. It hurts everybody.

“But, we’ve got to keep on moving forward. We have a goal in our head, which is to be the best basketball team that we can be.”

Griffin was fired despite going 30-13 in his first season as a head coach. Joe Prunty, an assistant on Griffin’s staff, coached the Bucks on Wednesday, while team officials were finalizing negotiatio­ns with Doc Rivers to eventually take over, a person with knowledge of the negotiatio­ns told The Associated Press.

“I think our experience really worked in our favor in this situation,” said Damian Lillard, who scored 28 points for the Bucks. “We’ve all experience­d a lot of things. I think this was different for everybody, but I think we just understood we had a game tonight, and it was going to be a tough game against a really good team that kind of handled us the last time we played them.”

Prunty has plenty of experience in this role.

He went 21-16 with Milwaukee in 2017-18 and also coached the Bucks during their first-round, sevengame playoff loss to the Boston Celtics after the midseason firing of Jason Kidd. Prunty was 2-0 with Atlanta last season after the Hawks fired Nate McMillan and before they hired Quin Snyder.

“It’s not easy, but you do have a job to do,” Prunty said. “That’s one of the things that we talked about as a team, just talked about, ‘look, we still have responsibi­lities. We still have roles. We still have jobs that we have to do on the court’. So you just do. You move forward. But it’s not easy. It really isn’t.”

Milwaukee has the Eastern Conference’s second-best record, but the Bucks weren’t playing defense nearly as well for Griffin as they had under predecesso­r Mike Budenholze­r.

The Bucks’ last loss in Griffin’s 43-game tenure was a 135-95 blowout — their most lopsided defeat of the season — at Cleveland a week ago while Antetokoun­mpo was out with a bruised right shoulder.

Milwaukee looked much better Wednesday while cooling the NBA’s hottest team.

Cleveland had trailed for just 35 seconds over its last five games and had three straight wire-to-wire victories, but the Cavaliers never led in this one.

 ?? AP ?? Milwaukee Bucks' Giannis Antetokoun­mpo dunks against the Cavaliers on Wednesday.
AP Milwaukee Bucks' Giannis Antetokoun­mpo dunks against the Cavaliers on Wednesday.

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