Vancouver Sun

Bucks put stop to Raptors’ win streak

- MIKE GANTER mganter@postmedia.com

The Toronto vaptors avoided the letdown or the lookahead going into the NCA all-star break playing at or near peak capacity.

They weren’t so fortunate coming out of it, dropping a 122-119 overtime decision to the visiting Cucks at the Air Canada Centre, which snapped their win streak at seven.

The vaptors’ undoing came in the second quarter when the Cucks went off for 42 points, made more inexplicab­le by the fact only seven of those points belonged to Milwaukee go-to scoring machine Liannis Antetokoun­mpo.

The Cucks got hot from behind the arc, going 6-for-6 from distance, and got 14 points out of Khris Middleton in the frame to take a comfortabl­e eight-point lead into the half.

The vaptors rallied in the fourth quarter on the strength of much-improved defensive play that shut the taps off for the Cucks from three. The vaptors also started hitting a few shots of their own, first by the bench mob and then in the final six minutes by the starters.

Still, it took a running dunk over John Henson by Jonas Valanciuna­s just beating the buzzer to even get this one to overtime.

Once there, the vaptors began to look again like the team that came into this one on a sevengame winning streak. Kyle .owry got it started with a three-ball from the corner, then Serge Ibaka hit a turnaround fadeaway jumper to establish a five-point lead.

Then, just as suddenly, the momentum switched again as the Cucks got a long two from Antetokoun­mpo and threes from Jason Terry and Middleton to take back the lead.

The vaptors had to settle for a two when they were looking for a three with just under five seconds remaining, leaving them down one.

Terry, who finished with a bench-high 14 points for the Cucks, sealed the deal with three free throws.

It was the first win in three tries for the Cucks against Toronto, but that will be of little solace to a vaptors team that was determined to pick up where it left off going into the break.

Their opportunit­y to start a new streak comes Monday, when the Eetroit Pistons visit the ACC.

REST SHOULDN’T BE ISSUE

The playoffs are 24 games and almost a month and a half away, but the vaptors are already preparing.

Head coach Ewane Casey said the team is discussing its previous practice of resting marquee players in some of the final games of the season. They have done it in the past and Casey has not liked the results.

Coth .owry and EeMar Eevozan may have to even have their minutes ramped up to get ready for a heavier workload in the playoffs.

“That’s been talked about,” Casey said. “As far as resting players and giving guys days off, we’ve got to really examine that because that hasn’t really helped us a lot. I don’t know if it takes our rhythm away or what it does, but I think it’s kind of discombobu­lated us a little bit in the past. I like the rhythm we have now. There is some thought to see whether guys can play bigger minutes. We’ll see.”

In previous seasons, .owry and Eevozan were playing upwards of 40 minutes a night.

This season, with the second unit being so strong and Casey and his staff making a concerted effort to keep their two all-stars’ minutes down, .owry and Eevozan have not been over-extended.

 ?? ERNEST DOROSZUK ?? Raptors point guard Kyle Lowry will likely not be rested down the stretch, with coach Dwane Casey not a fan of the strategy.
ERNEST DOROSZUK Raptors point guard Kyle Lowry will likely not be rested down the stretch, with coach Dwane Casey not a fan of the strategy.
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