Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

THIS WEEK IN THE NBA BY CHARLES F. GARDNER

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TOP BUCKS PLAYER Jabari Parker

continued his strong play as he averaged 25.7 points in three games last week, including 27-point showings against Portland and Atlanta. Parker also had 23 points and eight rebounds in a 97-96 loss to San Antonio on Monday. If anything, Parker’s performanc­es have come under the radar with all the attention on teammate Giannis Antetokoun­mpo. But his teammates have noticed, and Antetokoun­mpo went out of his way to praise Parker after a 115-107 victory over the Trail Blazers on Wednesday.

BUCKS LOOK AHEAD

Milwaukee faces three tough games, beginning Monday night in Toronto against the Raptors. The Bucks lost a close one against Toronto at home last month, and they know they face a talented backcourt duo in Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan. On Thursday night the Bucks get some national attention with a TNT-televised home game against Chicago, a chance for Parker and Antetokoun­mpo to showcase their talents while facing Jimmy Butler and Dwyane Wade. Just 24 hours later, the teams meet again at the United Center.

BUCKS QUOTE

Center Greg Monroe, on the team blowing a 20-point halftime lead against Atlanta and losing, 114-110, on Friday: “It just can’t happen.”

TOP NBA PLAYER

Los Angeles Lakers super-sub scored 137 points over a four-game span, the most points off the bench by an NBA player since such statistics have been kept (the 1970-’71 season). Williams scored 40 points against Memphis on Dec. 3 and 38 on Monday against Utah. He added 24 against Houston and a game-high 35 vs. Phoenix on Friday, but all came in Lakers’ defeats. “It feels the same as not scoring a bunch of points and losing,” Williams said. “Losing is losing.”

TOP NBA TEAM

Memphis, despite playing without point guard Mike Conley, took a five-game winning streak into a home matchup with Golden State on Saturday night. New coach David Fizdale has provided inspiring leadership for the Grizzlies, who have 10 wins by five points or fewer. Big man Marc Gasol had 36 points and nine rebounds in the Grizzlies’ 88-86 victory over Portland on Thursday, the third straight time Gasol had scored more than 25 points.

NBA QUOTE

New York Knicks forward Carmelo Anthony, after responding on Instagram to Knicks president Phil Jackson’s comments that Anthony holds the ball too long: "I'm a big quote guy. Got a million quotes on my phone. Sometimes they come up at the right time."

NBA RANKINGS (through Friday) Top 10:

1. Golden State, 2. Cleveland, 3. San Antonio, 4. Toronto, 5. Houston, 6. Memphis, 7. Los Angeles Clippers, 8. Oklahoma City, 9. Boston, 10. Chicago. 11. Charlotte, 12. Utah, 13. New York, 14. Detroit, 15. 17. Portland, 18. Indiana, 19. Los Angeles

Middle 10: 16. Milwaukee,

Atlanta, Lakers, 20. Orlando.

21. Washington, 22. New Orleans, 23. Sacramento, 24. Denver, 25. Miami, 26. Phoenix, 27. Brooklyn, 28. Minnesota, 29. Philadelph­ia, 30. Dallas.

Bottom 10: Lou Williams ONE MAN'S OPINION

What can Antetokoun­mpo do to control his habit of committing silly fouls? He played only 24 minutes Friday night after getting into early foul trouble. Antetokoun­mpo missed a critical portion of the fourth quarter after picking up his fifth foul with 6:27 remaining. When he returned with 3:15 left, the Bucks’ lead was gone. The Bucks need Antetokoun­mpo to stay aggressive, and he will pick up some charging fouls while going to the hoop. But he can’t reach unnecessar­ily as he did in the aftermath of a jump ball near midcourt in the first half, with nothing to gain from the attempt. When the Greek Freak gets in foul trouble, it also affects the minutes he does play. He was discombobu­lated in an overtime loss at Dallas after early fouls, and it showed up again in the loss to Atlanta on Friday. The 22-year-old Antetokoun­mpo had just one assist against the Hawks, one game after posting a triple-double against Portland. It’s about finding the balance between aggressive play and smart play, something he will learn as he matures.

THREE TAKEAWAYS 1.

A group of fans from the University of Virginia sat in the lower level corner and cheered Malcolm Brogdon’s every move. And Brogdon played well enough to stay in the game for much of the fourth quarter as the Bucks built a small lead.

Bucks coach Jason Kidd went to Mirza Teletovic as his first substitute and the forward delivered with eight points in the first quarter. Teletovic was 3 for 3 in the quarter, including two triples. Teletovic had not played in the previous two games. “It was a back-to-back and when they (teammates) need rest, I’m going to be ready, and do what I do,” Teletovic said. He sank 5 of 6 three-point attempts.

Giannis Antetokoun­mpo made a concerted effort not to foul and was a bit sluggish in the first half. But he stayed out of foul trouble, not picking up his first until early in the third quarter. He finished with just three fouls. “My main focus in the first half was not to foul,” Antetokoun­mpo said. “In the second half I got my rhythm and my confidence up and I just tried to make plays for my team.”

2. 3. UP NEXT Teams:

Milwaukee Bucks (11-11) vs. Toronto Raptors (16-7). 6:30 p.m. Monday. Air Canada Centre.

Toronto rallied to beat Boston on Friday night, 101-94, behind 34 points from guard Kyle Lowry. The Raptors have won eight of their last nine games, with the only blemish being a home-court loss to Cleveland.

When: Where: About the Raptors:

Charles F. Gardner

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Bucks’ Giannis Antetokoun­mpo is a rising NBA star, but he struggles in games when he gets into foul trouble.
ASSOCIATED PRESS The Bucks’ Giannis Antetokoun­mpo is a rising NBA star, but he struggles in games when he gets into foul trouble.

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