Las Vegas Review-Journal

Antetokoun­mpo, Bucks serve notice

Blowout gives Milwaukee 2-0 edge on Raptors

- By Tim Reynolds The Associated Press

MILWAUKEE — Giannis Antetokoun­mpo started the game with an emphatic dunk. The next possession, a sprawling block to deny Marc Gasol. The next possession, another dunk.

The tone was set.

And it never changed.

The Eastern Conference doesn’t belong to Antetokoun­mpo and the Milwaukee Bucks — yet. But they’re two wins away, after Antetokoun­mpo had 30 points and 17 rebounds, Ersan Ilyasova came off the bench to add 17 points, and the Bucks never trailed on the way to a 125103 victory over the Toronto Raptors on Friday night and a 2-0 lead in the East finals.

“He plays so hard. He lays it all on the line, every time,” Bucks coach Mike Budenholze­r said. “It was a great start for us. I think everybody fed off of Giannis and how he started the game.” How he finished, too. Antetokoun­mpo scored 11 points in the fourth for the Bucks, who wound up with six players in double figures — three of them reserves. Nikola Mirotic scored 15, Malcolm Brogdon had 14, George Hill 13 and Khris Middleton 12.

“We really rely on each other … especially the bench,” Ilyasova said. “The starting five set the tone.”

Kawhi Leonard scored 31 points for Toronto, which gave up the game’s first nine points, never led and trailed by double digits for the final 39 minutes. Kyle Lowry scored 15, and Norman Powell had 14 for the Raptors.

“We didn’t do much well tonight, obviously,” Raptors coach Nick Nurse said.

Game 3 is Sunday in Toronto.

“We get to go back home and protect our home court, like they did these last two games,” Lowry said. “We’ve got a chance to go home, protect home court and do what we’re supposed to do.”

Milwaukee, an Nba-best 60-22 record during the regular season, became the 16th team to start a postseason with at least 10 victories in its first 11 games. Only three teams — the 1989 Los Angeles Lakers, the 2001 Lakers and the 2017 Golden State Warriors — opened the playoffs 11-0.

The Bucks led by as many as 28 before Toronto did just enough chipping away to keep some semblance of hope.

Eventually, Antetokoun­mpo decided enough was enough.

With 5:51 left to play Antetokoun­mpo backed Leonard down on the block, spun back toward the center of the lane, scored while getting hit and starting a three-point play. He yelled to the crowd and punched the air. The knockout blow was landed, and the Bucks are two wins from their first NBA Finals berth in 45 years.

“At times, I forget that I have to stay aggressive,” Antetokoun­mpo said.

Not in that moment, he didn’t.

Aggression wasn’t an issue for the Bucks at any point.

Milwaukee’s lead was 35-21 after the first, 64-39 at the half. It was the first time Toronto had been outscored by 10 or more points in each of a game’s first two quarters since May 25, 2016, against Cleveland and the 25-point halftime hole was, by far, the Raptors’ worst of the season. They trailed Houston 55-37 on March 5.

 ?? Morry Gash The Associated Press ?? Bucks star Giannis Antetokoun­mpo slams home two of his 30 points during Milwaukee’s 125-103 home victory over the Raptors in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference finals Friday.
Morry Gash The Associated Press Bucks star Giannis Antetokoun­mpo slams home two of his 30 points during Milwaukee’s 125-103 home victory over the Raptors in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference finals Friday.

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