USA TODAY US Edition

Every Buck gets to defend Durant

- Jim Owczarski

MILWAUKEE – The start of the second-round playoff series between the Bucks and Nets on Saturday at Barclays Center in New York will finally satiate the anticipati­on of an Eastern Conference match long in the making, namely since Khris Middleton’s potential gamewinnin­g 3-pointer rattled off the rim on Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

A Bucks sweep of a two-game miniseries at Fiserv Forum on May 2 and 4 by three and six points, respective­ly, only added to the hunger.

Yet there is one huge unknown heading into this series: How will the Bucks handle the Nets’ “Big 3” of Kevin Durant, James Harden and Kyrie Irving? The trio did not play together in any of the games (Harden missed two, Irving one) and the loss of starting guard Donte DiVincenzo complicate­s matters for the Bucks.

But there was one constant for Brooklyn, and that was Kevin Durant.

In those three games, Durant scored 104 points on 37 of 76 (48.7%) shooting, including 13 for 25 (52%) from behind the 3-point line. He tied a career high with seven threes May 2. He shot 17for-20 from the free-throw line, pulled down 28 rebounds and had 14 assists.

The Bucks also forced him into 11 turnovers.

And while this isn’t meant to overlook Harden and Irving, how the Bucks can counteract Durant’s sheer scoring ability will play a big role in if they can advance out of the series.

To be clear, the Bucks know they cannot stop one of the game’s all-time elite scorers from filling up the basket.

Their one goal, recited over and again from head coach Mike Budenholze­r down to the Bucks’ own “Big 3” of Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, Khris Middleton and Jrue Holiday before and after each of the regular-season games, is to simply “make it tough” on the 32-year-old four-time scoring champion.

Now, there is technical nuance in that of course.

“He’s 7-feet with a clip,” Holiday said.

“Obviously you just gotta do what you can. Keep your hands back, but at the same be aggressive. Any chance you can get to kind of get a hand on the ball or shade him a certain way that for us might be more comfortabl­e, try to get little advantages like that.”

While there may be a plan for specific coverages, that can all go out the window once the game goes live because: A) Durant can break a coverage on his own and B) Harden and Irving could collapse it in another area.

So, really, defending Kevin Durant over the course of a series requires effort and help.

“We gotta show a lot of bodies, we gotta show hands, be active, and when we see him pulling up we gotta try to contest it with the closest man,” Antetokoun­mpo said.

And while it will be unknown how the Bucks use their personnel and when with Irving and Harden on the court with Durant, it’s safe to say that Antetokoun­mpo, Middleton, Holiday and P.J. Tucker will all get their shots at him.

In the first game in Brooklyn, Holiday and Middleton had their turns. On May 2 it was Holiday, Middleton and Tucker.

On May 4 it was Antetokoun­mpo, Middleton and Tucker.

Of course, other Bucks were mixed into defending Durant depending on the flow off transition or switches – and they will be in this series – but those four players will likely get the bulk of the work.

For what it is worth, Durant’s fieldgoal percentage dipped in each regularsea­son game played against the Bucks, from 50% on Jan. 18 to 48.5% on May 2 to 47.6% on May 4.

“It’s extremely tough,” Middleton said of defending Durant. “You’ve got a guy who’s pretty much the same size as Giannis with unlimited range. He’ll shoot over you. I don’t know if Giannis will shoot over you from three unless he has to, but you’ve got a guy like KD, he’s a guy who that will just pull up in your face like you’re not there. All you want to do is try to contest and try to change his shot and hope he misses.”

It may not seem like much, but in a regular-season series decided by an average of 3.6 points, one extra miss can make all the difference in going home or heading to the Eastern finals.

“We have to show our length, be physical without fouling just to make it tough in every type of situation,” Middleton said.

An intangible that will make this effort perhaps that much more difficult than the regular season is that Durant is also one of the game’s all-time playoff performers.

He’s played in four NBA Finals with two different franchises, won two titles, earned two Finals MVP Awards. To go with his 29.2 career playoff scoring average, he’s scored 30 or more points 65 times. He’s also had 39 double-doubles.

Lest anyone think he wouldn’t score as much with Harden and Irving on the court, Durant started off his Brooklyn playoff career by averaging 32.6 points per game on 54.6% shooting from the field and 50% from behind the 3-point line against Boston.

Perhaps the one thing the Bucks can do that they didn’t show a ton of in the regular season is have Antetokoun­mpo spend time defending Durant. It’s a tall ask, but it was one he embraced May 4.

“It’s part of who I am and it’s part of growth,” Antetokoun­mpo said after that game. “And at the same time there’s going to be time that I’ve got to guard the best player on the other team and I was able to do that to start of the game and take the challenge of guarding him and tried to make it as tough as possible on him.”

Now, he and the Bucks will have to do it again.

“But now, going against KD, James Harden and all those guys, I think everybody’s going to have a chance on them,” Antetokoun­mpo said. “When you go against them, it’s a challenge. As I said, it’s going to hurt to do it, but at the end of the day greats can never get bored.”

 ?? STACY REVERE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Brooklyn’s Kevin Durant is averaging 32.6 points per game thus far in the playoffs.
STACY REVERE/GETTY IMAGES Brooklyn’s Kevin Durant is averaging 32.6 points per game thus far in the playoffs.

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