Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Packers analysis

The Packers’ star against the L.A. Rams might have been Billy Turner, who played well at left tackle.

- Jim Owczarski

A trio of league most valuable players and another trio of all-stars lived up to their resumes and the Martin Luther King Jr. Day primetime billing on national television for the Milwaukee Bucks and the Brooklyn Nets on Monday night in Brooklyn, and James Harden and Kevin Durant combined for what proved to be the winning shot in a 125-123 Nets victory.

The addition of Harden to the Nets last week created an additional buzz around the matchup of Eastern Conference favorites – even if Brooklyn's all-star point guard, Kyrie Irving, was inactive – with the Bucks not shying away from the fact it would be a good litmus test.

It proved to be just that, as each team weathered lead changes, runs, and finally a tense final minutes that began when the Bucks took a 117-114 lead with 2 minutes 47 seconds to go. That was when Harden went to work.

After two previous misfires on lob attempts, Harden finally connected with DeAndre Jordan for a dunk and hit a short jumper to give Brooklyn a 118-117 lead. Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, Brooklyn's Joe Harris and Khris Middleton traded baskets to once again tilt the scoreboard to Milwaukee's favor at 123-122 with 55 sec

onds left, but Harden tracked down his own missed three and whipped it out to Durant who made his with 36.8 seconds left.

Middleton missed his own three, but the Bucks had a shot to tie or win the game in the final seconds after the ball slipped out of Durant’s hands with 3.8 seconds left. The Bucks felt like more time should have been put back on the clock, but in those final moments Middleton unleashed a step-back corner three over Bruce Brown, which rattled in and out as time expired.

Antetokoun­mpo (34 points), Middleton (25) and Holiday (22) combined for 81 points, 20 rebounds and 17 assists for the Bucks and Brook Lopez added 15 points. Donte DiVincenzo scored eight points on 3 of 9 shooting while the fourman Bucks bench scored 19 points. As a team, the Bucks shot 43.8% from the floor, including 29.7% from beyond the three-point line.

On Brooklyn’s side, Harden (34 points, 12 assists), Durant (30 points, 9 rebounds 6 assists) and Jordan (12 points, 12 rebounds) held up their end of the bargain but shooters Harris and Jeff Green were a combined 9 for 12 from three-point range and added 20 and 14 points, respective­ly. The Nets got just 15 points off their four-man bench, but they shot 54.8% as a team and made 15 of their 31 (48.4%) three-pointers.

The consistent shooting by the Nets mitigated 17 turnovers, which the Bucks turned into 18 points. And, it also prevented the Bucks from pulling down rebounds and getting out into the open court, as they had just eight fast-break points.

The difference in the game came in spurts, and largely centered around whether or not Holiday was able to be on the court to harass Harden and, at times, Durant. In stretches when Holiday had to get a breather, Harden would take advantage of his quickness to get into the paint for floaters or kicking out to open shooters.

And, those shooters often knocked down their looks.

The Bucks did rally from an 11-point third quarter deficit after a pair of Durant free throws made it 87-76 with 4:39 to go in the quarter. They cut it to 94-89 at the start of the fourth quarter and finally took a lead on a Pat Connaughto­n three-pointer with 10:11 to go in the game following a victorious challenge over a foul and a DiVincenzo victory on a jump ball.

The Bucks wouldn’t lead again until Connaughto­n hit another three to make it 113-112, a lead they then extended to 117-114 to set up Harden and Durant’s late heroics.

Brooklyn led 57-56 at the end of the first half – which featured eight lead changes – off the strength of a 14-8 stretch over six minutes in the second quarter, which flipped a 42-41 Milwaukee lead to a 55-50 Nets advantage with 3 minutes, 20 seconds to go in the half. Harden and Durant scored eight points in that run and combined to score 22 points and hand out 11 assists in the opening half.

Harris and Green had 11 apiece and went a combined 6 for 6 from threepoint range to complement the two former MVPs.

Milwaukee was paced by Antetokoun­mpo (16 points, five rebounds), Middleton (14 points, three steals) and Holiday (seven points, three assists) but really stayed in the game thanks to scoring 14 points off 12 Brooklyn turnovers. The Bucks shot just 43.1%.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Bucks forward Khris Middleton gets off a shot as Nets forward Kevin Durant pressures him Monday night.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Bucks forward Khris Middleton gets off a shot as Nets forward Kevin Durant pressures him Monday night.

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