New on Sports Illustrated: Khris Middleton Made the Difference for Milwaukee in Game 3

Three thoughts on Milwaukee's Game 3 victory in Atlanta.

View the
original article
to see embedded media.

The Bucks entered Sunday night’s contest against the Hawks fresh off a 34-point victory in the game prior. They had completely embarrassed their opponent and it was unclear how Atlanta would respond.

Back on home court for the first time since June 18, the Hawks jumped out to an early lead, up by as many as 15 points. But the Bucks evened the score by the halftime break and then dominated the fourth quarter behind the efforts of Khris Middleton to capture a 113-102 victory.

Here are three takeaways from Game 3.

Khris Middleton was sensational

Through the first two games of this series, Khris Middleton had been fairly quiet. He only managed 15 points in both contests, with just two three-pointers to show for 16 tries from deep. Sunday night was a much different story, however. Simply put, Middleton was sensational.

Middleton outdid his prior two showings through three quarters alone, entering the final frame with 18 points; his night was just getting started.

The two-time All-Star went on to score 20 points on 8-for-13 shooting in the fourth, proving hotter than the scorching summer heat in Atlanta on Sunday. He drained four three-pointers as he single handedly outscored the Hawks, who as an entire team only managed 17 points in the period.

Middleton finished the evening with 38 points—tying his playoff career high—along with 11 rebounds and seven assists to carry the Bucks to victory.

Trae Young tweaked his ankle

Through three quarters of play, Trae Young had dazzled for the Hawks.

After a poor performance in Game 2, he was back to his confident, shimmying self out of the gates as he easily knocked down six of his first seven shots from the field. The point guard toyed with the Bucks defense, making logo three-pointers look as easy as layups and having his way with his signature floater through most of the evening.

But with less than 30 seconds left in the third quarter, Young accidentally stepped on an official’s foot and tweaked his ankle. He exited the game and went back to the locker room, at that point with 32 points on 11-for-19 shooting and the Hawks up 85-82.

Young was deemed available with a right ankle sprain and re-entered the game to the roar of the Atlanta crowd with under nine minutes left. But he was clearly uncomfortable, at times grimacing in pain, and didn’t finish the game.

The injury had a huge impact in the game as the Bucks outscored the Hawks 31-17 following his initial exit. Young said in his press conference after the game that he will be getting an MRI on the ankle and hopes to play in Game 4, so this will certainly be something to watch in the coming days. The Hawks were already underdogs in this series, as they have been throughout the playoffs, and they don’t stand much of a chance of pulling off the series upset without their star player fully healthy.

The Bucks continue to rule the paint

Playing to their strengths, the Bucks have completely dominated the interior throughout this series. They scored 132 points in the paint, to just 84 from the Hawks, through the first two games, and that trend only continued Sunday night.

Though it scored less there than in each of the first two contests, Milwaukee once again had the advantage inside in Game 3, outscoring the Hawks in the paint 56-34. In typical fashion, Giannis Antetokounmpo led the charge on the interior, using his length to punish the Hawks defense. He finished with 33 points and 11 rebounds.

Much in part to their play on the interior, the Bucks shot over 50% from the field for the second straight game. Combined with 11 made three-pointers, the Hawks had no answer. If they want to keep the series alive, they’ll need to find one in Game 4. 

More NBA Playoffs Coverage:

• Pina: The NBA Playoffs All-Money Team
• Beck: How It Feels to Watch the Team You Built Thrive Without You
• Nadkarni: Clippers Pushed to the Brink Despite Off Night From Suns' Stars

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

New on Sports Illustrated: NBA Draft Big Board 3.0: Top 80 Prospect Rankings

New on Sports Illustrated: The Patriots’ Post-Brady Era Begins Now

New on Sports Illustrated: NCAA Board of Governors Unanimously Votes to Extend Mark Emmert’s Contract