USA TODAY International Edition

Are Bucks worthy of being NBA champs?

The Brooklyn Nets are showing that Milwaukee is a team that doesn’t have what it takes to win a championsh­ip, Jeff Zillgitt writes.

- Jeff Zillgitt Columnist

The Bucks just don’t have problems with Brooklyn’s Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving.

Milwaukee has a problem when Bruce Brown is outplaying Khris Middleton. The Bucks have a problem with Blake Griffin playing like Los Angeles Clippers Blake Griffin.

It seems Milwaukee’s issues are compoundin­g exponentia­lly. Every Nets starter had more points than Giannis Antetokoun­mpo in the first half.

Another problem: Right now, the Nets don’t need James Harden to defeat the Bucks. Harden played just the first 43 seconds of Game 1 and he sat out Game 2 because of a hamstring issue.

At halftime, TNT’s Charles Barkley said the Bucks should be embarrasse­d, and that was before Brooklyn opened a 30- point lead in the third quarter.

The Nets bulldozed the Bucks 125- 86 on Monday in New York in Game 2 of their Eastern Conference semifinals series.

Durant scored 32 points, Irving had 22, Brown had 13 points, six assists and four rebounds, Blake Griffin contribute­d seven points and eight rebounds, and Mike James had 10 points.

It’s as lopsided as a 2- 0 series can be, and the Bucks are facing short- and long- term questions about their championsh­ip chances.

Over the past few seasons, a dis

couraging trend has emerged for Milwaukee. Under coach Mike Budenholze­r, Antetokoun­mpo and the Bucks are a great and sometimes dominant regularsea­son team, but they do not have what’s required to win a championsh­ip. In a seven- game series deeper into the playoffs, their offensive and defensive shortcomin­gs are exposed.

Against the Nets, they are shooting 44.3% from the field, 28.5% on 3- pointers and 53.6% on free throws – compared to Brooklyn’s 49.5%, 44.4% and 87.5%, respective­ly.

Stopping Brooklyn is a challenge even for a supposedly good defense like the Bucks. But Milwaukee should be able to score against Brooklyn, which finished with the league’s 23rd- ranked defense and was only marginally better in the final two months of the season.

Antetokoun­mpo didn’t make a shot outside of the paint in Game 2, and his 18 points and 11 rebounds were obscured by Brooklyn’s offense.

The two- time MVP should be able to take over and put his team in position to win these games. He has had memorable playoff performanc­es. He needs more.

And, of course, Antetokoun­mpo needs help. Those team shooting stats won’t beat many teams in a playoff series.

Barkley isn’t wrong. Milwaukee’s performanc­e is disappoint­ing.

Understood, it’s just two games, and just two seasons ago the Bucks were up 2- 0 against Toronto and a double- overtime loss in Game 3 from a 3- 0 series lead. And the Raptors won the series. So, it’s possible. Budenholze­r believes it’s possible. “They’ve won two games at home,” the Bucks coach said. “Now, it’s our turn. We’ve all seen it a thousand times before. You’ve all heard it. We’ve got to go and protect our home court just like they protected theirs. ...

“We’ve got to go home and play better.”

But nothing has happened in two games that indicates Milwaukee has what it takes.

The Bucks made moves – adding Jrue Holiday and P. J. Tucker and signing Antetokoun­mpo, Middleton and Holiday to long- term deals – they believe made them a championsh­ip contender. They are not right now and brings into question issues beyond this season.

This isn’t about wanting it more or playing with more heart or soul searching. Certainly, more made shots and a flicker of competitiv­e fire would help.

This is about being overmatche­d and not having the answer to combat it.

“The loss sucks,” Holiday said. “It’s very frustratin­g to lose like that or even lose at all. We feel we’re better than we’ve played. We know that. But that at this point, you can’t really be down and you have to stay positive. We’ve got to be able to just lock in, go back and look at the film, pay attention to detail, especially defensivel­y.”

The series everyone wanted to watch three days ago is now the series everyone thinks is over.

 ?? GIANNIS ANTETOKOUN­MPO BY BRAD PENNER/ USA TODAY SPORTS ??
GIANNIS ANTETOKOUN­MPO BY BRAD PENNER/ USA TODAY SPORTS
 ?? WENDELL CRUZ/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The Nets’ Nicolas Claxton blocks a shot taken Monday by the Bucks’ Bobby Portis.
WENDELL CRUZ/ USA TODAY SPORTS The Nets’ Nicolas Claxton blocks a shot taken Monday by the Bucks’ Bobby Portis.
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