Albuquerque Journal

BUCKS RALLY, CAPTURE GAME 3

Middleton outscores Atlanta by himself in fourth quarter

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ATLANTA — Khris Middleton showed once again that the Milwaukee Bucks have more than one player capable of taking over a game.

He did it Sunday night at the best possible time. Middleton scored 20 of his playoff career high-tying 38 points in the fourth quarter, leading the Bucks to a 113-102 victory over the Atlanta Hawks for a 2-1 lead in the Eastern Conference finals.

“What he did today was unreal,” Giannis Antetokoun­mpo said. “He was unbelievab­le. Carried the team at the end. … What I saw today was greatness. Simple as that.”

Trae Young scored 35 points for Atlanta but was slowed in the final period. He stepped on an official’s foot late in the third and injured his right ankle. He will have an MRI on the ankle on Monday.

“It’s hurting. It’s frustratin­g,” Young said, adding the injury impacted “my blow-by speed.”

Game 4 is Tuesday night in Atlanta. Middleton scored 10 points in the decisive run in the fourth that gave Milwaukee the lead. He had 11 rebounds and seven assists.

“I just finally got them to go,” Middleton said. “I’ve been struggling some with the ball going in the basket. Finally they started dropping for me at the right time. I’m thankful for that.”

Antetokoun­mpo, who often has the spotlight for Milwaukee, had 33 points. The Bucks trailed most of the game before surging in the fourth quarter. Atlanta led 95-88 before Middleton made his first of three 3-pointers during the 15-3 run for a 103-98 lead.

“Just being around him a lot, he starts to see it go in, he starts to feel good, he gets in a rhythm in a lot of ways,” said Bucks coach Mike Budenholze­r before adding, “I’m just glad he’s on our side.”

After never leading in a 125-91 Game 2 loss, the Hawks were eager for a better start in their first home game of the series. Turnovers by Middleton and Antetokoun­mpo led to dunks by Clint Capela, and Kevin Huerter added a 3-pointer for a 7-0 Atlanta lead.

The Hawks stretched the advantage to 13 points. Antetokoun­mpo was held to five first-quarter points but regained his scoring form in the second period. He had 11 points in the period as the Bucks finally pulled even at 56-all on a 3-pointer by Pat Connaughto­n with 12 seconds remaining in the half.

The Bucks took their first lead at 82-80 on a basket by Bobby Portis Jr. with 1:47 remaining in the third. A 3-pointer by Danilo Gallinari, who had 18 points, gave Atlanta an 85-83 lead at the end of the period.

Middleton opened the final period by sinking a 3 that signaled the start of his big period. He went on to outscore the Hawks, who had 17 points, by himself in the period.

COUNTING TO 10: Hawks fans followed the recent trend of counting Antetokoun­mpo’s time at the free throw line. The fans usually counted past 10 before he launched an attempt, but no 10-second violation was called.

He was only 6 of 13 for the game. way for the 2018 NBA draft.

The third-year center was in top form Saturday in a hard-fought 84-80 Game 4 win over the Los Angeles Clippers. He scored 19 points, grabbed a playoff career-high 22 rebounds, blocked four shots, and was generally the only person on the floor who could put the ball in the basket with any kind of consistenc­y.

Now the Suns have a 3-1 lead in the Western Conference finals and are one win from a trip to the NBA Finals for the first time since 1993. Game 5 is on Monday in Phoenix. “I thought Deandre’s presence, his effort, the rebounding, shot blocking, his communicat­ion on defense, switching out on smaller guys and being able to guard them, he was the catalyst on the defensive end,” Suns coach Monty Williams said.

NO KAWHI: There’s little doubt that the Clippers have missed the presence of Kawhi Leonard. The All-Star forward has missed six straight games due to a sprained right knee after he averaged 30.4 points in the postseason. He’ll miss a seventh straight game on Monday.

Trail Blazers hire Billups

Portland on Sunday night hired Chauncey Billups as its new coach.

Billups, a five-time NBA All-Star over a 17-year playing career, has never been a head coach. He has served as an assistant with the Los Angeles Clippers for the past season.

“Portland is a special place and a unique franchise,” Billups said. “As a player I always loved playing here because the passion and knowledge of the fans brought out the very best in me as a competitor. Now I’m looking forward to being on the other side of that energy and engaging with the Portland community on a whole other level.”

The Blazers have scheduled a Tuesday press conference to introduce Billups, 44. He becomes the 15th head coach of the franchise.

 ?? PHOTO CREDIT ?? Khris Middleton of Milwaukee reacts to a play in the second half Sunday night. He tied his career playoff high with 38 points — 20 of them in the decisive fourth quarter — as the Bucks won Game 3 in Atlanta, 113-102.
PHOTO CREDIT Khris Middleton of Milwaukee reacts to a play in the second half Sunday night. He tied his career playoff high with 38 points — 20 of them in the decisive fourth quarter — as the Bucks won Game 3 in Atlanta, 113-102.
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 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP ?? The Bucks’ long-armed Giannis Antetokoun­mpo slams over Atlanta’s Lou Williams on Sunday night. He scored 33 points in a Game 3 road win for Milwaukee.
CURTIS COMPTON/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP The Bucks’ long-armed Giannis Antetokoun­mpo slams over Atlanta’s Lou Williams on Sunday night. He scored 33 points in a Game 3 road win for Milwaukee.

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