USA TODAY US Edition

Bucks’ march hits a road bump

Who will step up in Milwaukee after Giannis’ injury?

- Jeff Zillgitt Columnist

ATLANTA – The Bucks had a path with fewer obstacles once the Hawks declared point guard Trae Young out for Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals series.

Then, an avalanche of boulders tumbled into that path when Milwaukee All-NBA forward Giannis Antetokoun­mpo crumpled in a heap of limbs, screaming in pain and grabbing his hyperexten­ded left knee.

The direction of a playoff series can change in the time it takes for Antetokoun­mpo to jump and defend a Clint Capela alley-oop dunk, get tangled on the way down and land awkwardly.

Atlanta, which controlled the game from start to finish, defeated Milwaukee 110-88 on Tuesday, evening the series at 2-2.

Antetokoun­mpo missed the final 19 minutes, but the Bucks were in trouble with him on the court before the injury. The Hawks led 51-38 at halftime and were up 62-52 when Antetokoun­mpo suffered his injury.

It was just a four-possession game, but the Bucks hadn’t displayed any indication they were capable of a comeback. They had a bad start to the game, were limited by the defense and had trouble slowing the Hawks’ it-takes-avillage approach without Young.

“To come out and be flat like that and not give the energy, effort, to be able to win this game ... it was a very winnable game even when we got down early,” Bucks forward P.J. Tucker said. “For us to not turn it on and be able to get over that hump and be able to give ourselves a chance to win this game is disappoint­ing. It can’t happen.”

Bucks coach Mike Budenholze­r will address that during film sessions in Milwaukee on Wednesday. The more pressing topic is Antetokoun­mpo’s availabili­ty for the remainder of the series and beyond the conference finals.

“Obviously Giannis is a big part of our soul and our fiber,” Budenholze­r said Tuesday.

Antetokoun­mpo, who sprained the same knee earlier this season and missed two games in late March, had the knee scanned to determine the extent of the injury.

ESPN reported Wednesday that he did not suffer structural damage to his left knee and that there was no timetable on a return. The Bucks host the Hawks at 8:30 p.m. ET Thursday (TNT).

Whether you root for the Bucks, Atlanta or have no rooting interest other than seeing good basketball, this is a rotten injury to a player who worked incredibly hard from his days as a kid in Athens, Greece, to his back-to-back MVP seasons to an All-NBA player trying to reach his first NBA Finals.

The hope is that it is not a devastatin­g season-ending injury.

After Antetokoun­mpo left the game, he headed to the locker room, came back to the bench and then headed back to the locker room.

“I don’t want to speak for him,” Budenholze­r said. “I know just historical­ly it’s impossible to keep him off the court. It’s impossible to keep him away from his teammates, keep him away from his team. So my guess is he probably wants to play and trying to play, and if not, let his teammates know that he’s there for them.”

Once play resumed, the Hawks extended the lead to 74-54.

“I’m sure there’s the human element where the concern, care, for him is real,” Budenholze­r said. “But they are in the heat of the battle. They are playing. They are competing. They are trying to get stops, trying to get rebounds, trying to do things, trying to find a way to be there for him while he’s not able to be on the court, and I’m sure that’s what they will do.”

Still, the Bucks looked dazed.

“It’s not good losing anybody on your team,” Tucker said. “Losing a player stinks.

“But we didn’t come out with energy tonight. We just thought we was going to walk in and win the game. We didn’t do anything to show that we wanted to win this game tonight. We were flat, and our guy’s injury was just another piece of the puzzle to us losing.”

If the Bucks are without Antetokoun­mpo for any games, they coincident­ally will have to draw inspiratio­n from the Hawks, who won without Young.

“We’ll just take everything as it comes,” Budenholze­r said. “We’ll evaluate it, and we’ve got a heck of a team, a heck of a roster. The guys will be ready to compete and play. That’s what it’s about.

“So we’ve got a Game 5. We’ll watch the film. We’ll prepare. We’ll get ready. The guys love competing. They love playing. That’s what it’s all about.” Tucker was blunt.

“As players, you just look at each other and whoever we got out there, that’s who we’re going with and we’re going to go out and fight,” Tucker said. “Like to me, all that other stuff goes out the window and it comes down to being able to go out and give the effort every play, lay it on the line, and go out there and take it, because tonight, that’s what Atlanta did. They took it.”

Can the Bucks do the same?

 ?? BRETT DAVIS/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The Bucks listed Giannis Antetokoun­mpo as doubtful for Game 5 Thursday because of the hyperexten­ded left knee injury.
BRETT DAVIS/USA TODAY SPORTS The Bucks listed Giannis Antetokoun­mpo as doubtful for Game 5 Thursday because of the hyperexten­ded left knee injury.
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 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON/AP ?? Bucks coach Mike Budenholze­r said of Thursday’s Game 5, “The guys will be ready to compete and play.”
BRYNN ANDERSON/AP Bucks coach Mike Budenholze­r said of Thursday’s Game 5, “The guys will be ready to compete and play.”

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