Los Angeles Times

More bang for the Bucks

Milwaukee coach created a style tailor-made for team’s tantalizin­g star. The results are stunning.

- DAN WOIKE ON THE NBA dan.woike@latimes.com Twitter: @DanWoikeSp­orts

OAKLAND — Mike Budenholze­r, the new coach of the Milwaukee Bucks, was speaking to basketball’s most tantalizin­g new star, Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, about a plan for the future.

He’s nearly 7 feet tall, with arms that seem to stretch sideline to sideline and are covered in chiseled muscles. He dribbles like a guard and looks like a center. He’s a two-time All-Star and a trendy pick to win the most valuable player award this season. He won’t turn 24 for another month.

Budenholze­r was named the Bucks coach largely because management believed he could fully unlock Antetokoun­mpo’s potential, a belief that’s already been confirmed in the NBA’s first month.

The Bucks are the only team to beat Toronto, while their only losses have been in Boston, in Portland and on Saturday afternoon to the Clippers at Staples Center. On Thursday night, the Bucks beat the stuffing out of the two-time defending champion Golden State Warriors in Oakland.

The plan, it’s working. But before it could, Budenholze­r had to sell it to his best player.

When the two men spoke this summer about Budenholze­r’s vision for the Bucks, the player with the 13-letter last name asked a three-letter question.

“My first question to him was ‘Why?’ ” Antetokoun­mpo said. “Why are we going to play this way?”

Antetokoun­mpo wasn’t professing loyalty to the way things used to be. The Bucks had made three consecutiv­e trips to the playoffs, but they also had three straight firstround exits.

He just wanted to fully buy in, and to do that, he had to understand it.

So Budenholze­r got to work, painting a picture of a freeflowin­g offense with tons of three-point shots and tons of trips to the rim, all revolving around Antetokoun­mpo.

“Every coach has a philosophy, but at the end of the day, you’ve got to play under that philosophy. He said we’d have a lot of open threes, that he was one of the best coaches to provide open looks, corner threes,” Antetokoun­mpo said. “And I said, ‘OK.’ And he said if that happens, you’re going to have more driving lanes, more gaps to make plays. And, the way we’d play would be kind of easy.”

So far, they’ve made it look that way.

Milwaukee looks every bit like an early season title contender. After Thursday’s win against the Warriors, the Bucks lead the league in net rating, the difference between points scored per 100 possession­s and points allowed per 100 possession­s. They’re second in offensive efficiency and third in defensive efficiency. No other team is in the top five of both categories.

“We just move the ball, move our bodies,” Antetokoun­mpo said. “Whoever is open, shoot the ball. Whoever, is not open, make a play. And I think it was easy to adjust and pick it up from day one.”

Under Jason Kidd, the Bucks were allergic to the three-point line, never finishing higher than 24th in the league in three-point attempts during Kidd’s tenure — a time that coincided with an explosion of three-pointers everywhere else in the league.

“We knew change was coming after last season,” Bucks forward Khris Middleton said. “And I thought guys did a good job of keeping an open mind and trying to learn something new, trying to take grasp of it.”

The three-point line is greener than their jerseys. Under Budenholze­r, the team is taking more than 40 a game after shooting a hair less than 25 last season. They’re making 15 a night, almost twice as many as last season.

They’re faster (fifth in pace) and doing it in a brand new downtown arena in some of the best uniforms in the NBA.

“There’s so much excitement in Milwaukee right now. Fans are excited about the team. We’re excited about the season,” Antetokoun­mpo said before Thursday’s game against the Warriors.

“We’ve been playing good basketball. This is the 11th game of the season, and it feels like it’s the first, like the season hasn’t even started. It flows so easy.”

Antetokoun­mpo is averaging 25.6 points and 12.9 rebounds. Middleton’s been rock solid, scoring more than 19 a game. Three other players are scoring in double figures. Everyone who plays regular minutes is averaging more than two three-point shots a game, “whether they should be shooting them or not,” as one rival NBA source put it.

So, why? Why are they winning, why are they shooting? Why are they looking like a legitimate threat to the Warriors, playing with length, pace and space?

It all traces back to the conversati­on Budenholze­r had with Antetokoun­mpo.

“The great thing about Giannis is that he’s like a sponge. He’s someone who is on a constant quest to learn and grow and get better,” Budenholze­r said. “I think sometimes it’s overstated, but it’s different for him, a different way of playing. It’s learning different spots to attack, a different pace. I told him how I thought it could be great. It could be great for him, but it would help him raise the guys around him and making everyone surroundin­g him even better. In theory, it lifts everyone up.

“I tried to paint that picture for him.”

And maybe, just maybe, it might end up being a masterpiec­e.

 ?? Michael Dwyer Associated Press ?? “THERE’S SO much excitement in Milwaukee right now,” says the Bucks’ Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, driving on Boston’s Gordon Hayward during a Nov. 1 game. “Fans are excited about the team. We’re excited about the season.”
Michael Dwyer Associated Press “THERE’S SO much excitement in Milwaukee right now,” says the Bucks’ Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, driving on Boston’s Gordon Hayward during a Nov. 1 game. “Fans are excited about the team. We’re excited about the season.”

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