Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

No doubt about it

Bucks rout Cavs without Giannis

- Ben Steele

No Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, no problem.

The Bucks superstar did not play due to neck soreness, but Milwaukee was able to muster enough collective effort for a 108-92 victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers at Fiserv Forum on Monday.

Bucks coach Mike Budenholze­r said Antetokoun­mpo told him that he couldn’t play about an hour before the game.

“The medical group came in before him and said he wasn’t going to be able to go,” Budenholze­r said. “The way he’s built, the way his mind is, you know he’d kind of do anything to play.”

Antetokoun­mpo seemed like he would be OK for the team’s upcoming road trip.

“I’m fine,” he said while exiting the arena after the game.

The Bucks were playing one the NBA’s worst teams on the second night of a back-to-back set.

The Cavaliers, who entered the matchup with a record of 6-20, did not inspire the same high-intensity atmosphere as the Bucks’ previous two games against the Toronto Rap-

tors and Golden State Warriors.

But the Bucks found a way to make up for Antetokoun­mpo’s absence, getting double-digit scoring nights from five players.

Eric Bledsoe led the way with 20 points and 12 rebounds.

“Everybody just had to step up,” Bledsoe said. “That’s almost 30 points a game that we’re missing.”

The game predictabl­y had a lackluster start, with the teams trading misses until Bucks center Brook Lopez finally found the bottom of the net almost two minutes into the game.

The crowd at Fiserv Forum didn’t have much to cheer for until former Bucks guard Matthew Dellavedov­a checked in for the first time this season with the Cavaliers at the 3:57 mark of the first quarter.

Dellavedov­a was traded to Cleveland along with John Henson on Friday. Henson is out until spring after wrist surgery and sat at the end of the Cavaliers’ bench. The Bucks acquired veteran guard George Hill and center Jason Smith in the deal, which also included the Washington Wizards.

After clapping for Dellavedov­a, Bucks fans only had to wait until the next dead ball to warmly welcome Hill. The guard immediatel­y brought some needed energy to the game by diving to save a rebound before the ball went out of bounds.

Bucks guard Sterling Brown also provided a spark, hitting all four of his shots and scoring eight points as Milwaukee took a 31-18 lead at the end of the first quarter.

“Sterling’s really given us a great kind of toughness,” Budenholze­r said. “A physicalit­y, energy, competitiv­eness off the bench.

“He’s in a good place. He’s really kind of gobbling up some of those minutes.”

Malcolm Brogdon scored the Bucks’ first 11 points of the second half, repeatedly beating Cavaliers rookie Collin Sexton off the dribble for layups. Brogdon finished with 18 points.

“Tonight was a team win,” he said. “It was a collective win. I thought we showed what we could do when Giannis isn’t there, that we’re still a good team.”

Budenholze­r mostly used his reserves in the fourth quarter, with second-year forward D.J. Wilson seeing his most action of the season. The biggest cheer from the crowd in the second half came when Wilson caught an alley-oop pass from Brown and dunked in the fourth quarter.

Smith eventually checked in at the 8:55 mark of the final quarter. He missed all three shots he took but grabbed four rebounds in just under five minutes.

 ??  ?? Cleveland’s Collin Sexton and Milwaukee’s Brook Lopez battle for a rebound during the first half.
Cleveland’s Collin Sexton and Milwaukee’s Brook Lopez battle for a rebound during the first half.

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