New York Post

Bucks built winner the hard way — through the draft

- By BRIAN LEWIS

From LeBron James’ superteam machinatio­ns to James Harden forcing his way into a Big 3 in Brooklyn, there has been a widely held belief there’s only one way to build a winner in the new NBA.

The Bucks are bidding to blow up that narrative.

“There’s a lot of good fortune there for both Khris [Middleton] and Giannis [Antetokoun­mpo] to end up here. And now being together for seven, eight years that they’ve been teammates and building this together and trying to get to this point,” Bucks coach Mike Budenholze­r said. “It speaks to being able to build championsh­ip-level teams different ways. There’s not just one way to make it to the NBA Finals.”

Budenholze­r credited general manager Jon Horst — who started as director of basketball operations in 2008 — for finding the likes of two-time NBA MVP Antetokoun­mpo with the 15th pick in 2013 and trading for Middleton, a year after the little-used rookie had been drafted in the second round by the Piston. And Budenholze­r praised ownership for a slow rebuilding so rarely seen in the league.

“Jon Horst and our ownership and Giannis and Khris, the stick-to-itiveness, the belief to build around those two guys, along with a lot of good fortune,” Budenholze­r said.

That goes in direct contrast to the way Heat president Pat Riley landed James and Chris Bosh in one summer to turn Miami into a superteam, or James getting Anthony Davis to join him on the Lakers. Or how player empowermen­t got Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving to team up, then to lure Harden to Brooklyn.

Milwaukee is showing a winning team doesn’t have to be built by single freeagent splash or trade in a big-market coastal city, but can be put together with a slow burn in a small market.

The Suns acknowledg­ed the Bucks were simply the more aggressive team in Game 3, getting to loose balls and running their shooters off the line.

“They took it to us. No other way to look at it. They played with a great deal of force, 50/50 balls, attacking the paint. We had spurts of playing the way that we play, but certainly not as consistent as we needed to,” said Suns coach Monty Williams, who shouldered the blame for not getting his team prepared for what was coming.

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