Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Spending the night at Heartbreak Hotel

- Jim Owczarski

BOSTON – In an empty arena, no one heard Jayson Tatum call glass. But he went there, falling back from an outstretch­ed Giannis Antetokoun­mpo to hit an improbable three-pointer with four-tenths of a second left at TD Garden.

Nearly as improbably, Antetokoun­mpo had a chance to send it to overtime off an inbound lob from Jrue Holiday, as he drew a foul on Tristan Thompson. But after sinking the first attempt, the second knocked off the rim and the Bucks lost, 122-121, Wednesday night in the season opener.

“Aside from the ball going in the basket I'm not sure we could have defended Tatum much better than we did,” Bucks head coach Mike Budenholze­r said. “I thought Giannis did a great job individual­ly, great contest and you know, credit to Tatum, banked in a three at the end of the clock.”

The result had Antetokoun­mpo doubled over as buzzer sounded, as it was just his second missed free throw for the game.

The Bucks had come back from a 17point deficit to start the quarter by playing its strongest team defense of the night, but Tatum's heroic shot was just enough.

Early in the week Antetokoun­mpo smiled, and joked the Bucks should pack up their bags and call it a day when asked if he had concerns over the way the team played defense over the threegame exhibition schedule. The joke – and its intent – landed. It was early for true concern but added the team will move toward its standard after more time together.

But for three quarters the Celtics proved Antetokoun­mpo right, scoring 101 points. By the end of the game, the Bucks' new “big three” of Antetokoun­mpo, Holiday and Khris Middleton provided enough offense – and the Bucks made enough stops – to put the Bucks in position to win following a step-back three from Holiday with 1:10 left gave the Bucks a 120-119 lead.

The Celtics had taken a 101-84, but Antetokoun­mpo asserted himself in the post and behind the three-point line with 18 points while Holiday and Middleton combined for 15 as the Bucks erased that margin to tie it at 113 on a Brook Lopez putback.

Antetokoun­mpo went 3-for-8 from behind the arc and 6-for-8 from the free throw line to lead all scorers with 35 points. Middleton (27), Holiday (25) and Donte DiVincenzo (15) were the only other Bucks to score in double figures. Middleton added a team-high 14 rebounds.

Jaylen Brown led the Celtics with 33 and Tatum added 30. Jeff Teague scored 19 off the bench.

At times, the Bucks looked like their usual selves in closing the paint and forcing missed shots at the rim. They showed hard to the 3-point line to perhaps add a beat to the shooter. They forced turnovers and rebounded to quickly push the tempo the other way for transition baskets.

They took a 46-37 lead early the second quarter playing their style. But after a Boston timeout with 7 minutes, 49 seconds to go in the first half the Celtics took it to the Bucks.

Following that stoppage, the Celtics attacked the paint and found open threes while the Bucks turned the ball over and were called for an illegal defense during a 12-2 Celtics run.

A couple of Holiday baskets gave the Bucks a 52-51 advantage, but a threepoint­er by Brown followed by a layup led to Budenholze­r calling timeout – but the Celtics were on their way to taking a 65-59 lead at the break.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Giannis Antetokoun­mpo reacts beside Boston’s Marcus Smart after missing his second free throw with less than a second to play.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Giannis Antetokoun­mpo reacts beside Boston’s Marcus Smart after missing his second free throw with less than a second to play.
 ?? BRIAN FLUHARTY / USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Celtics forward Jayson Tatum, right, celebrates with guard Jaylen Brown after scoring against the Bucks during the second half
BRIAN FLUHARTY / USA TODAY SPORTS Celtics forward Jayson Tatum, right, celebrates with guard Jaylen Brown after scoring against the Bucks during the second half

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