The Commercial Appeal

Giannis, Bucks try to stay alive against Celtics

- Tim Reynolds ASSOCIATED PRESS

Giannis Antetokoun­mpo was criticized after Game 5 of Milwaukee’s Eastern Conference series against Boston for not doing more, particular­ly on the offensive end.

The harshest critic: Antetokoun­mpo, himself.

He took only 10 field-goal attempts, his third-lowest total of the entire season. Antetokoun­mpo still had a brilliant stat line, finishing only one assist shy of a triple-double, but the Bucks lost 92-87 and now go back to Milwaukee trailing the first-round matchup 3-2.

Game 6 of the Celtics-Bucks series is the lone matchup on the Thursday night NBA schedule.

“Game 6, I’ve got to come out and be more aggressive,” Antetokoun­mpo said. “It’s on me. I had open shots, but they weren’t my shots so I didn’t feel comfortabl­e taking them. … I’ve got to be more aggressive, make more plays because definitely, my teammates need me.”

It’s not like he was choosing to not be involved.

The Celtics got Marcus Smart back for Game 5, and Boston is much better defensivel­y when he’s on the floor. Open looks seem to happen far more infrequent­ly when Smart is out there, and the Bucks must solve that riddle or else their season is about to end.

Smart wasn’t the only defensive hero for Boston in Game 5. The Celtics put Semi Ojeleye on Antetokoun­mpko, and it worked as well as Boston could have hoped.

“Giannis is a heck of a player,” Celtics coach Brad Stevens said. “You’re not going to be perfect against him. You’re not going to hold him down by any means. He makes plays for other people, he’s very unselfish … but we just felt like we needed a little bit more ball pressure overall, and so that was the decision to go smaller.”

If Antetokoun­mpko doesn’t come up bigger Thursday, it’ll be Boston going to the second round.

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