Bangkok Post

Bucks win at home to force Game Seven

Antetokoun­mpo scores 31 to take down Celtics

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>> LOS ANGELES: Giannis Antetokoun­mpo scored 31 points to lead Milwaukee to a 97-86 victory over the Boston Celtics on Thursday that kept the Bucks alive in the NBA play-offs.

With the victory Milwaukee forced a winner-take-all Game Seven tomorrow morning (Thai time) in the Eastern Conference first-round series.

“We said as a team before the game that we’re going to play hard, that we’re going to win this game no matter what. Our season’s not going to end,” said Antetokoun­mpo.

“That’s what we did tonight — we moved the ball really well. We were discipline­d.”

Antetokoun­mpo, the Greek forward whose blend of size and skill have made him a rising star in the NBA, bounced back from a series-low 16 points scored in the Bucks’ game five loss with a dominant performanc­e.

He added 14 rebounds, four assists and two steals, scoring 10 of Milwaukee’s last 19 points as they pulled away in the waning minutes.

“At the end, it was about will,” Antetokoun­mpo said. “I was out there, I was trying to make plays, I was trying to be aggressive.”

Khris Middleton and Malcolm Brogdon added 16 points apiece for the Bucks, who lost an eliminatio­n game six on their home floor last year.

“We’re a better team now,” Antetokoun­mpo said. “We have a big opportunit­y ahead of us.”

But to reach the second round they’ll have to do what neither team has done in the series — win on the road.

The winners of the series will face Philadelph­ia in the second round. The 76ers beat the Miami Heat 4-1 in their first-round series.

The Celtics looked determined to bring the series to an end as they built a nine-point lead in the first quarter.

But the Bucks took the lead in the second quarter, using a 14-2 scoring run to take a 48-39 halftime lead.

They expanded the lead to as many as 14 points in the third before Boston surged back, knotting the score on Jayson Tatum’s lay-up that capped a 20-6 run.

The Bucks responded and were nine points up again going into the fourth.

Boston’s offence was doing everything right during the opening four and a half minutes of the final frame. At one point, the Celtics scored on four consecutiv­e possession­s — the final of which allowed them to pull within two points to make it 80-78 with 7:20 minutes remaining.

After that point, however, the ball movement ceased for the Celtics, and they shot just 1-of-9 from the field during the next six minutes of play.

“I thought any time we got stagnant, we weren’t very good,” Celtics coach Brad Stevens said.

“Clearly their speed and length and athleticis­m affected us,” he added. “They were quicker to the ball all night than us.”

Meanwhile, two-time NBA Most Valuable Player Stephen Curry could return from month-long injury absence tomorrow (Thai time), when his reigning champions Golden State Warriors open a secondroun­d play-off series against the New Orleans Pelicans.

Warriors coach Steve Kerr was cautiously optimistic after Curry went through a full contact practice on Thursday for the first time since spraining a ligament in his right knee on March 23.

“Steph practiced at 100 percent, he did everything, he looked good,” said Kerr, who said he considered Curry “questionab­le” for tomorrow’s game.

“What we have to do is see how his body responds the rest of the day, put him through another practice tomorrow.

“I think he needs to string together two good days but it was very positive today.”

Curry missed the Warriors’ 4-1 first-round series win over the San Antonio Spurs.

 ??  ?? The Bucks’ Giannis Antetokoun­mpo scores against the Celtics in the second half.
The Bucks’ Giannis Antetokoun­mpo scores against the Celtics in the second half.

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