Albany Times Union

Bucks, Suns set to go after long waits

Paul has finally reached the championsh­ip series after 16 years in league

- By Brian Mahoney

Chris Paul walked up the stairs and took a seat in front of the NBA Finals logo, a climb that took him 16 years to complete.

The Phoenix Suns and Milwaukee Bucks are used to enduring long waits.

They came into the NBA together in 1968 and between them have managed to win one championsh­ip. They’ve combined for only one trip to the Finals since the mid-1970s.

Now here they both are, a couple of unfamiliar contestant­s to finish off a most unusual season.

“Walking into here, seeing Mr. Larry on every poster,” Suns center Deandre Ayton said, referring to the Larry O’brien Trophy, “it gave me goosebumps.”

Imagine the feeling if he’s on the first Suns team to win an NBA championsh­ip.

Game 1 is Tuesday night in Phoenix, which hasn’t played host to an NBA Finals game since Michael Jordan’s Chicago Bulls completed their first three-peat here in 1993. The Suns’ only other chance was in

1976, when they lost to Boston.

Giannis Antetokoun­mpo’s status remains unknown, with Bucks coach Mike Budenholze­r saying he had no update on the injured superstar’s knee.

“Without him, we have to do it by committee,” Bucks guard Khris Middleton said.

It’s a whole new setting for the 36year-old Paul, who acknowledg­ed one of the difference­s. Home teams usually practice at their training facility, but the workout on the eve of the NBA Finals is in the arena.

“It’s still basketball,” the point guard said. “I think we’re all locked in to the goal at hand.”

Milwaukee won a championsh­ip in 1971, so long ago that Kareem Abduljabba­r was still known as Lew Alcindor when he and Oscar Robertson were perhaps the top tandem in the league. The Bucks had drafted Alcindor with the No. 1 pick in 1969 after winning a coin flip against the Suns.

The Bucks got back in 1974 but haven’t been seen in the Finals since.

They have been closing in over the last few years. Milwaukee had the best record in the NBA in both 2018-19 and 2019-20 and was two games away from the NBA Finals in that first season. They came back better after acquiring guard Jrue Holiday before this season.

“To get these four wins is going to be difficult but really excited for it,” Holiday said.

The Suns had been going nowhere, not even making the playoffs since 2010. They were 19-63 just two seasons ago, tying for the second-worst record in the league.

But an undefeated run in their eight restart games in the Walt Disney World bubble last summer sent them into this season with momentum, and they entered it with a new leader when they acquired Paul from Oklahoma City.

Besides Paul’s All-star play, the Suns needed the right veteran to bring out the best in young stars Devin Booker and Ayton. Phoenix finished with the second-best record in the league, knocked out the defending champion Lakers in the first round, swept MVP Nikola Jokic’s Denver Nuggets and then shook off the absence of Paul for two games to beat the Clippers in the Western Conference final.

Paul was out for coronaviru­s health and safety protocols, which every team had to work around this season. Numerous stars also dealt with injuries and the Bucks are hoping Antetokoun­mpo can overcome his.

The two-time MVP missed Games 5 and 6 of the East final after hyperexten­ding his left knee when he leaped to defend a lob in Game 4, but Middleton and Holiday led the Bucks past Atlanta in both games.

Injury update

Budenholze­r didn’t give many details on Antetokoun­mpo, beyond saying he was getting better.

“He did court work, so he’s making progress,” Budenholze­r said.

Season series

The Suns won a pair of games that were as close as can be. Their 125-124 home victory on Feb. 10 came when Antetokoun­mpo scored a season-high 47 points but missed a jumper at the buzzer, and they pulled out a 128-127 victory in Milwaukee on April 19 when Booker knocked down a free throw with 0.3 seconds left in overtime.

 ?? Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press ?? From left, Chris Paul, coach Monty Williams, Jae Crowder and Devin Booker have the Suns on the rise.
Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press From left, Chris Paul, coach Monty Williams, Jae Crowder and Devin Booker have the Suns on the rise.
 ?? Patrick Mcdermott / Getty Images ?? Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, right, talking with P.J. Tucker in Game 5, may hold the key to Milwaukee’s NBA Finals fortunes.
Patrick Mcdermott / Getty Images Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, right, talking with P.J. Tucker in Game 5, may hold the key to Milwaukee’s NBA Finals fortunes.

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