Wednesday, June 09, 2021

Brooklyn Nets: Like a Buck in the Headlights

From the desk: THE HOOPS OF FLATBUSH

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
PLAYOFFS: ROUND TWO
Nets lead Bucks; 2-0
I - BKN 115; MIL 107
II - BKN 125; MIL 86

GAME THREE
BROOKLYN NETS
vs.
MILWAUKEE BUCKS

James Harden Warned Us Scary Days Lay Ahead

James Harden had a front-row view.  He watched, took sips from his drink, looked up at the scoreboard, then looked at Kevin Durant, looked around at the crowd, again raised his drink, and repeat.  We know Harden previously played with Kevin Durant.  But there were times during Monday's game when even he looked in disbelief.  If you recall, Harden was the one who said things were gonna get scary around here.

Even after dismantling the Celtics in five, how can you not be somewhat taken aback by Brooklyn's two-game utter dominance over Milwaukee at Barclays Center.  Tightly contested affairs, yes; completely one-sided games, not so much.  No one anticipated this.

We are fast approaching the second anniversary of Kevin Durant's Achillies injury sustained during the 2019 NBA Finals.  But whereas he appears fully recovered, Giannis Antetokounmpo's ankles must be killing him today ... 

Kevin Durant scored 21 first-half points in 21 minutes, and Brooklyn went into the locker room with a 24-point lead.  Durant added another twelve points in the third quarter and sat out the fourth.  He still finished the night with a game-high 32 points while the Nets won by an uncommon 39 point margin. Both Durant and Kyrie Irving put in at least 20 first-half minutes.  Kyrie went into the half with nine points but with five assists.  And that was the plan, build a big lead and manage the minutes on the back end.  Like Durant, Kyrie Irving was out of the game with nine minutes still left in regulation, and the Nets staked to a 30-point lead.

Kyrie Irving was second on the floor with 22 points in 34 minutes.  In Harden's absence, he and Durant tied for game-high with six assists apiece.  In fact, the Nets had 27 assists while the Bucks finish with just 14 assists.

The Bucks again got the better of Flatbush in the paint by a 52-38 difference, but there was just no keeping pace with Brooklyn's 50.0% from behind the arc.  The Nets had eight steals and forced 16 turnovers; they put up ten more shots than Milwaukee.  Brooklyn put those extra attempts to good use, outscoring Milwaukee 63-24 from long range.

I'm happy to speak of a well-played complimentary effort put in by Joe Harris, connecting on 3/7 from three with 13 points in 30 minutes.  Getting the start, Bruce Brown also contributed 13 points in 26 minutes.

By far, the person having the most fun in the first half was Blake Griffin.  His putback slam gave Flatbush a 10-7 lead.  He later squared up for a big three giving the Nets a 43-21 lead, and another monster dunk put the Nets ahead by a 52-31 margin.

Flatbush wins the battle of the benches, outscoring Milwaukee 40-26; Mike James led the bench with ten points in 24 minutes while posting a game-high plus-30; Nicolas Claxton was a factor on defense with a block, steal, and four rebounds in 14 impact minutes.

For a team that averaged 120.1 points per game (third in NBA) during the regular season, playing against a Nets team that averaged 114.1 points allowed during the regular season, the Bucks were held by Brooklyn to just 86 points (and 107 points in game one).  They've been far from accurate.  But that still doesn't take away from the fact not one Buck eclipsed 20 points in game two.  Giannis led the Bucks with just 18 points on 8/15 from the field but did secure a game-high eleven rebounds.  However, Jrue Holiday was limited to just 13 points.  Kris Middleton was second on the Bucks with 17 points, and Brook Lopez finished with ten points.

In two games at Barclays Center, the Nets outscored Milwaukee by a scary 240-193 differential.

I do not anticipate the Bucks staying around 44% from the field.  Brooklyn got outscored in the paint by 24 points in game one and 14 points in game two.  I expect the Bucks to intensify their attack within the paint and second-chance opportunities.  Brook Lopez can and will be securing more rebounds, preferably on the offensive glass if you're Milwaukee.

Who on the Nets will contest this?  Can Claxton and Blake Griffin stay the course?

You know what they say; it's not a series until the home team loses.



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