Balance, grit put Bucks on verge of 1st title in 50 years

Updated Jul. 18, 2021 2:39 p.m. ET
Associated Press

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Giannis Antetokounmpo believes it’s the tenacity of the Bucks that has Milwaukee a game away from its first championship in a half century.

That persistence has enabled the Bucks to rally from a 2-0 deficit in the NBA Finals. The Bucks lead the Phoenix Suns 3-2 as they return home to seek a potential title-clinching victory in Game 6 on Tuesday.

“I feel like we don’t stop,” Antetokounmpo said. “I’ve been a part of different teams. Usually when you’re down 15 or 16 or whatever, down 0-2 or whatever the case might be, you kind of like stop. You kind of like, you kind of stop competing in a way. But I feel like this team, we don’t do that.”

The Bucks took the finals lead with a

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Milwaukee averaged120.1 points per game in the regular season to become the

In their

Holiday delivered again Saturday after the Suns slashed a 108-94 fourth-quarter deficit to a single point.

“Honestly, it was great team defense,” Holiday said. “I feel like we knew Booker wanted to take that last shot and played great defense on him and made him turn his back, and he turned right into me. I guess I was just in the right place at the right time.”

as they

Holiday responded by earning first-team All-Defensive honors. He’s played outstanding defense throughout the finals but struggled to shoot before coming through with 27 points and 13 assists Saturday.

His presence alongside Antetokounmpo and Middleton enables the Bucks to win games in a variety of ways.

The Bucks have scored at least 120 points in six playoff games, but they probably never would have gotten this far without

“I do think that we always have our mindset on defense,” Holiday said. “But when we get rolling on both ends, I feel like that’s where we kind of get into our groove.”

They’re in that groove now and are a win away from accomplishing something this franchise hasn’t done since

“But the job is not done,” Antetokounmpo said. “We have to realize that. We have got to stay in the present.”

BROTHERLY CONCERN

Antetokounmpo celebrated the Bucks’ victory Saturday by communicating via FaceTime with older brother and reserve forward

Thanasis Antetokounmpo generally is the most demonstrative cheerleader among Bucks reserves. Giannis could only imagine how his brother reacted during Game 5.

“He’s probably screaming in front of the TV,” Giannis Antetokounmpo said. “Probably in the last possession, he probably took his shirt off and started playing defense, sweating, jumping on the bed.”

SHOWTIME FOR BUCKS EMPLOYEES

While the two teams traveled on Sunday, Bucks and Fiserv Forum president Peter Feigin invited his team’s staff employees to attend a screening of “Space Jam: A New Legacy” at a suburban Milwaukee theater.

The film is directed by Malcolm Lee, who has been a good friend of Feigin since they were both 10 years old. They grew up in New York playing basketball together with Feigin’s twin brother, Daniel Feigin.

Lee attended Game 4 in Milwaukee.

“As coincidence happens, it’s probably one of the biggest period of days in both of our lives with the Bucks in the NBA Finals and he’s premiering his first big tentpole movie,” Feigin said.

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