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NBA EAST SEMIFINALS Game5 MILWAUKEE BUCKS & MIAMI HEAT

NBA EAST SEMIFINALS LIVE

                         MILWAUKEE BUCKS & MIAMI HEAT 2020

NBA EAST SEMIFINALS LIVE



NBA EAST SEMIFINALS LIVE               NBA EAST SEMIFINALS LIVE


NBA EAST SEMIFINALS

NBA EAST SEMIFINALS LIVE


Miami Heat

Miami Heat All-Star swingman Jimmy Butler acknowledged what anyone watching his team's 118-115 Game 4 overtime loss to the Milwaukee Bucks could see in the moment.
The Heat let their foot off the gas when reigning league MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo reinjured his right ankle early in the second quarter of Sunday's game.
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Bucks avoid sweep as Giannis injures ankle
"Well, it shouldn't affect ours, but I think that we relaxed a little bit," Butler said when asked if the Heat's play changed after the Bucks' big man exited. "And we stopped playing basketball the right way. We stopped guarding. We stopped living by our defensive principles. We weren't getting 50-50 balls. We were getting outrebounded. It was just all bad."
The Heat still have a commanding 3-1 lead in their Eastern Conference semifinal series, but Heat coaches and players were frustrated by the fact that they couldn't end the series the day the Bucks lost their best player.
"I feel like we played like we were up 3-0," Heat All-Star big man Bam Adebayo said. "That's not giving enough effort, not sacrificing our body, and we ended up losing because we were up 3-0. They're a good team. So at the end of the day, we should have played like we were in Game 1, Game 2 and Game 3 ... I feel like we didn't play a maximum effort the whole game."
The Heat's inability to finish is surprising, given how mentally tough the team has played throughout the bubble. The Heat came into the game 7-0 in the postseason, confident in the belief that their businesslike culture would keep them focused on the task at hand.
After Antetokounmpo went down, Bucks forward Khris Middleton and his teammates continued to play hard and pushed a Miami team that appeared to lose some of the focus that has defined the group's stay at the Walt Disney World Resort campus.
"We didn't have the mentality just to take the win," Heat forward Jae Crowder said. "I don't know if Giannis going out was a dictative factor for us, but we just didn't have the same mentality."


Milwaukee Bucks


The Milwaukee Bucks staved off elimination on Sunday, beating the Miami Heat 118-115 in overtime despite losing superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo to a right ankle sprain in the second quarter.

After being fouled by Heat forward Andre Iguodala on a drive into the paint at the 10:18 mark of the second quarter of Game 4 of this Eastern Conference semifinal series, Antetokounmpo went down in a heap, yelling out in pain and clutching at his right ankle. He had to be helped off the court but later walked back on to split a pair of free throws.

Antetokounmpo then immediately checked out of the game and walked under his own power to Milwaukee's locker room. He wouldn't be seen again, as the Bucks ruled out their superstar forward at halftime, when they were clinging to a 50-48 lead.

"He'll get treatment through the night, and we'll just see how he does in the next 24 (to) 48 hours," said Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer after the game.

In an inspired effort led by Khris Middleton, the Bucks managed to hold on after losing the reigning MVP to avoid a 4-0 sweep. Middleton's 21 points in the third quarter were the most by a Bucks player in any quarter of a playoff game since Tim Thomas' 19 in 1996-97. He ended with 36 points, 8 assists and 8 rebounds in 48 minutes -- including a clutch 3-pointer with 6.9 seconds left in overtime against a Miami double-team.

"We know he was laying it out on the line out there for us," Middleton said. "His ankle was already in bad shape, and he still went out there in the first quarter in the minutes that, in the first and second quarter, however long he was out there, he gave it his all, and as a team you couldn't do nothing but respect your teammate for giving his all out there. So, we had to have his back tonight, and hopefully we'll have him back again for the next game, but if not, we still have to play as hard as we can. We gotta fight every night to keep on playing."

Antetokounmpo was a game-time decision for Game 4 after initially injuring his right ankle during the first half of Game 3 on Friday night. He worked out and appeared to be moving without any noticeable limp on Sunday before starting the game.

He was off to a terrific start, too, scoring 19 points on 8-for-10 shooting to go with four rebounds, a steal and a block in 11 minutes before the injury.

"You feel for Giannis," Budenholzer said. "I hope it's not lost what he did in those first 10 or 12 minutes on an ankle that is not fully 100 percent. He was phenomenal at the start of the game, and he was a huge boost. I think they threw a big punch early, and Giannis was able to keep us afloat."

Middleton then picked up the slack. So did Eric Bledsoe, who contributed 14 points, 10 rebounds and 6 assists as the Bucks avoided being swept. Brook Lopez scored 14 points with five rebounds, and Hill added 12 points with five rebounds off the bench.

"They're a great disciplined team. No matter if we go up or down, they're gonna play the same either way. What we gotta do is weather the storm," Bledsoe said. "We know their run is gonna come. It's all about how we're gonna bounce back from it and stay poised. I thought we did a great job of not getting too down when they did go on their run. We stayed in attack mode and got to the rim."

As Bucks players entered the locker room, Antetokounmpo was there to congratulate them on the latest victory, but it's still unclear if he'll be able to return for Game 5 on Tuesday.

The Bucks are the first team to win in overtime when facing elimination since the Heat in Game 6 of the 2013 NBA Finals against the San Antonio Spurs.

NBA EAST SEMIFINALS

Wednesday, 9 September 2020


NBA EAST SEMIFINALS

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