Baltimore Sun

Business as usual for Bucks

Champs focus on repeat, while drama distracts top challenger­s

- By Brian Mahoney

The Nets look like such a title favorite that James Harden felt the need for a reminder they aren’t a title team.

“We’re not the target. The defending champions are the targets,” Harden said. “They won last year. We’re trying to catch them.”

It’s easy to forget about the Bucks. They have the NBA crown, but none of the drama of some other top contenders in the Eastern Conference, where the situations with Ben Simmons and the 76ers and Kyrie Irving and the Nets are the biggest stories leading into the season.

Those two teams finished ahead of the Bucks in the regular season, but the Bucks ousted the Nets in the second round and went on to win their first NBA title in 50 years.

Giannis Antetokoun­mpo went home and celebrated in Greece. Khris Middleton and Jrue Holiday went to Japan and won an Olympic gold medal.

Now they’re back together again, quietly working toward a repeat amid all the noise around them.

The Nets won’t allow Irving to play or practice with them until he’s vaccinated, instead of letting him play in road games while he is ineligible to play at home because of New York’s vaccinatio­n mandate.

Kevin Durant and Harden might still be good enough with a potent roster around them, but the Nets — and their rivals — know they aren’t the same team without Irving’s talents.

“Probably the team took the best decision for them to keep the players as locked in as possible and not take that outside noise to affect the team as they go for a championsh­ip run,” Antetokoun­mpo said. “They have a great team. Do I know if it’s right or wrong? I don’t know. I’ve got to think about it. But at the end of the day, I think everybody’s entitled to their own opinion. But Kyrie’s a great player.”

The 76ers, who had the best record in the East last season, have been without Simmons for almost the entire preseason while the All-Star guard stayed away in hopes of a trade. He finally arrived in Philadelph­ia this week.

Even if those teams are weakened, it seems like a stronger conference than a season ago. The Heat got Kyle Lowry. The surprising Knicks added Kemba Walker and Evan Fournier. The Bulls could be poised for a move with DeMar DeRozan and Lonzo Ball.

“A lot of teams in our conference have gotten better. We have to get better,” said Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau, whose team finished a surprising fourth last season.

A look at the East, in predicted order of finish:

Playoff bound

Nets (1): With former MVPs and scoring champions Durant and Harden healthy, the Nets may not even need a Big Three.

Bucks (2): If Antetokoun­mpo dominates like he did in the NBA Finals, a third MVP award in four years is possible.

Heat (3): The Heat never found their top form after reaching NBA Finals in the bubble, but they got both more rest and more talent during this longer offseason.

76ers (4): They could be anywhere from No. 1 with Simmons to No. 8 without him, so put the 76ers in the middle for now.

Hawks (5): Trae Young and the Hawks are on the rise after reaching the East finals.

Knicks (6): The Knicks added good scoring punch to what was a top defensive team in Tom Thibodeau’s first season.

Into the play-in

Celtics (7): Getting Al Horford back in green should pay off for the Celtics.

Bulls (8): Count on Zach LaVine and Ball to provide the Bulls with plenty of highlights.

Pacers (9): Getting Rick Carlisle into a locker room that had friction between players and coach last season is a major move.

Hornets (10): The Hornets were tough for anyone last season when rookie of the year LaMelo Ball and Gordon Hayward were both healthy.

Eyes on Embiid

Joel Embiid was putting together an MVP-type season with the 76ers last season before he was hurt. They might need him to be great again without knowing what they’ll get from Simmons.

Nets’ gains

Durant had little help when both Harden and Irving were hurt during the series

against the Bucks.

But with the additions of Patty Mills, Paul Millsap, James Johnson and the unretired LaMarcus Aldridge, the Nets look deep enough to overcome any absences this season.

Top seed slump

The 76ers went out in the second round last season, making it five straight years that the No. 1 seed couldn’t win the East. The Cavaliers was the last team to do it, with LeBron James in 2016.

Coaching changes

The four teams with new coaches range from playoff clubs to rebuilding ones. Ime Udoka takes over for Brad Stevens with the Celtics, Carlisle is back for a second stint with the Pacers, Wes Unseld Jr. returns home to the Wizards and Jamahl Mosley gets his change with the Magic.

 ?? PATRICK MCDERMOTT/GETTY ?? Giannis Antetokoun­mpo and the Bucks look well-positioned to make a strong run at a second straight NBA title.
PATRICK MCDERMOTT/GETTY Giannis Antetokoun­mpo and the Bucks look well-positioned to make a strong run at a second straight NBA title.

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