Archive

Archive for the ‘Recaps’ Category

The pattern continues: Bucks 112 – Wizards 98

April 2nd, 2012 Jeremy Schmidt 6 comments

Milwaukee Bucks 112 Final
Recap | Box Score
98 Washington Wizards
Ersan Ilyasova, PF 35 MIN | 6-12 FG | 4-4 FT | 11 REB | 1 AST | 16 PTS | +16

In roughly 30 minutes per game in March, Ersan averaged 16 and nine. Looks like he’s just going to run with that as he kicks off April in similar fashion. Classic Ersan night, but minus the one three he’ll often hit. A bunch of rebounds at the hoop that he turned into buckets plus an extra cool bank shot that I didn’t see coming.

Drew Gooden, PF 21 MIN | 4-6 FG | 0-1 FT | 3 REB | 3 AST | 8 PTS | +3

21 minutes was the perfect amount of time for Gooden against a Wizards team minus Nene and Trevor Booker. Great opportunity for him to get a breather after taking a pounding against the Grizz.

Brandon Jennings, PG 35 MIN | 7-17 FG | 5-5 FT | 6 REB | 7 AST | 19 PTS | +12

Jennings scored 17 points in the third quarter by floating in one shot after the next right around and sometimes inside of the paint. The floater is a very difficult shot and for one night, Jennings had it mastered. Hopefully he can remember what he was doing with that arm and get the same kind of looks against some better teams in the coming weeks.

Mike Dunleavy, SF 30 MIN | 6-10 FG | 3-4 FT | 1 REB | 1 AST | 17 PTS | +17

Catch. Shoot. Score. Repeat.

Shaun Livingston, PG 24 MIN | 5-6 FG | 0-0 FT | 4 REB | 2 AST | 10 PTS | +9

Blessed with 20+ minutes for the first time in a month thanks to foul trouble for Monta Ellis, the injured Beno Udrih and an eventual big lead, Livingston did not disappoint. He scored in the paint and defended well enough. Not an entirely difficult task, but it probably helps him to have gotten these minutes just in case he needs to step in in the coming weeks.

Ekpe Udoh, PF 21 MIN | 6-10 FG | 3-5 FT | 8 REB | 5 AST | 15 PTS | +16

For Udoh, this was an A game. Statistically, this was one of the finest games of his career. He hit the glass, he made some shots in the paint and even made some real solid decisions with the ball. Offensively, he hasn’t played better as a Bucks player. And he brought his usual effort on the defensive side. Terrific outing.

Four Things We Saw

  1. After a rough night against the Grizzlies, the Bucks bench outscored their Washington counterparts 44-29. Dunleavy led the charge with 17 points but the Bucks got a surprising 10 points from Livingston. Ah, to play the thin every night.
  2. Jennings and Ellis both had better than average games for what may have been the first time since Ellis arrived. Cool to see, even if they didn’t really share the court while they had success all that much. Ellis still couldn’t get as many to fall on drives as I’m sure he’d like. Something to keep watching for sure.
  3. Knicks were inactive tonight (not like the Wizards, I mean literally inactive) so Milwaukee is now 2 games back of the final playoff spot.
  4. This wasn’t as easy as the final score may indicate it was. Milwaukee didn’t really put this away until about halfway through the fourth quarter. When they put it away, they did so with authority and looked like the team that’s been smoking bad teams left and right over the past month. Before that, it was a slop fest. At one point the two teams combined for a stretch that included two missed layups and six turnovers in a minute and a half. Woof.

Another good team tops the Bucks: Grizzlies 99 – Bucks 95

March 31st, 2012 Jeremy Schmidt 9 comments

Memphis Grizzlies 99 Final
Recap | Box Score
95 Milwaukee Bucks
Ersan Ilyasova, PF 43 MIN | 5-11 FG | 8-12 FT | 16 REB | 3 AST | 20 PTS | +9

I did not envy Ersan Ilyasova during this game. He was guarding either Marc Gasol or Zach Randolph for the majority of the evening, guys that are much larger and stronger than him in the post. He split his time absorbing punishment and drawing charges as a defender, but found a way to contribute on offense anyway. Also he was the only Bucks player with more than five rebounds. IT’S ON YOU ERS must have been the whiteboard message pre-game.

Drew Gooden, PF 38 MIN | 9-16 FG | 2-3 FT | 5 REB | 2 AST | 20 PTS | +2

There was a lot of talk from coach Skiles about Gooden before the game. Apparently he’s quite the hot topic amongst Milwaukee media. I’ll sum it up for you: Milwaukee knows they are losing something without a true center, but they expect to make up some of that with Gooden’s offense forcing other centers to come out and defend him. He’s being asked to do a lot and he’s answered the call.

Against the Grizzlies things fell in line with what Coach Skiles said before the game. He had his hands full on defense, but he got Gasol to step away from the hoop and was fairly productive on offense. Still, the Bucks could really have used another center option this season. Gooden’s five rebounds at the end of this game helped make that abundantly clear yet again.

Monta Ellis, SG 35 MIN | 2-12 FG | 4-4 FT | 4 REB | 5 AST | 8 PTS | +7

I know he’s getting adjusted and that he’s got to find himself and figure out how he can best interact with new teammates and all that stuff. I know. But the Bucks didn’t trade for Monta Ellis to not score 20 points. Everyone saw this as a home run for the Bucks because they gave up two inactive players for a guy who would step in and get them points. We’re 10 games into this thing and Ellis still isn’t doing his thing the way he did it in Golden State. He’s missing difficult shots. The shots he gets within 10 feet may be shots he can make, but he isn’t going to magically start making difficult shots at a 40% clip.

The plus with Ellis is that he’s done well to hand out assists despite shooting about 40%. For those of you who were so ecstatic about his acquisition, I ask, is that what you were hoping for? Probably not. Fortunately, he still has time to turn it around. But it’s running out.

Brandon Jennings, PG 38 MIN | 9-19 FG | 4-4 FT | 4 REB | 3 AST | 24 PTS | +14

Jennings came out firing. Seven shots in his first stint, a few of them that had me wondering what has this guy shooting these shots tonight? Was he still feeling himself from yesterday? Was he approaching a matchup with Jeremy Pargo the way a lion approaches a gazelle? Whatever the case, he came out firing. He got more accurate as the night went on fortunately after making just two of his first seven.

He and Ellis still haven’t really seemed to find a rhythm together. We’re not exactly seeing that dynamic guard play we were promised when they share the court. Just same old Jennings with a fairly average Ellis.

Mike Dunleavy, SF 24 MIN | 4-9 FG | 1-1 FT | 1 REB | 2 AST | 10 PTS | -15

Dunleavy was basically all of the Bucks bench scoring. He had 10, the rest of the bench chipped in six. He wasn’t the superhero he’d been lately though. Milwaukee needed Super Dunleavy if they wanted to win this one. It almost seems like he was a little too deferential or that the team needed to do more to get him looks from outside. Given the way he’s shot lately, two 3-point attempts hardly seems like enough. Dunleavy spoke after the game about the lack of ball movement and a failure to make the right reads. Against better teams that kind of thing comes back to haunt you was his overall message.

Four Things We Saw

  1. With Carlos Delfino out, the Bucks got little from their typically strong bench. Mbah a Moute moved into a starting role and everyone else was just kind of bleh. That’s a problem they’ve run into against strong teams with talent coming off the bench. And the Grizzlies aren’t even that deep. But O.J. Mayo, Zach Randolph (why he’s coming off the bench I don’t know) and Quincy Pondexter (seriously) did work on the Bucks.
  2. Before the game Coach Skiles also spoke about the importance of defensive rebounds. Milwaukee had to get better on that end to close out opponents, he said. Against the Grizzlies, they did not get better. Memphis out-rebounded Milwaukee 58-39 and grabbed 18 offensive boards. Memphis’s size and strength was too much for Milwaukee to overcome. Rudy Gay, Mo Speights and Gasol all ended up with double digit rebound totals and Randolph had five on offense alone.
  3. Presented without comment: Milwaukee is now 9-22 against teams with a record better than .500.
  4. The Knicks won. Milwaukee is now 2.5 games behind them for the final playoff spot in the East.

Cleveland was very “cavalier”: Bucks 121 – Cavs 84

March 30th, 2012 Jeremy Schmidt 4 comments

Milwaukee Bucks 121 Final
Recap | Box Score
84 Cleveland Cavaliers
Ersan Ilyasova, PF 24 MIN | 9-11 FG | 0-0 FT | 10 REB | 2 AST | 20 PTS | +12

Huge start for Ersan as he put up 14 points in his first eight minutes. Everything else was just going through the motions. My goodness were the Cavs terrible and Bucks hot.

Monta Ellis, SG 32 MIN | 6-16 FG | 1-2 FT | 5 REB | 3 AST | 13 PTS | +9

He didn’t have the same game everyone else had, but who cares? This game was like an exceptional practice. Milwaukee is still better off is Monta is scoring more than 20 points the way he did against the Hawks.

Brandon Jennings, PG 31 MIN | 11-17 FG | 3-4 FT | 2 REB | 6 AST | 28 PTS | +23

Killed it. Pulled up jumpers, Threes. Passed the ball. Steals. Fast breaks. Jennings had it all going. The whole team had it all going.

Mike Dunleavy, SF 19 MIN | 5-7 FG | 2-2 FT | 3 REB | 2 AST | 16 PTS | +11

By the time Dunleavy checked out of the game in the second quarter after his first stint, this game was over and he played a big hand. 14 points with a 4-5 effort on threes with what seemed like hardly any effort. He helped stretch the Bucks lead from nine to 24.

Beno Udrih, PG 25 MIN | 3-6 FG | 1-2 FT | 3 REB | 10 AST | 7 PTS | +33

Someone had to help move the ball with everyone knocking down shots. Kudos to Beno. If I were Udrih I would have been out there chucking up threes like a madman the second Milwaukee had a 25 point lead.

Two Things We Saw

  1. My goodness. So many made shots. Roughly five minutes into this game and the Bucks had pretty much moved on past the Cavs. A great game for saving legs and getting shots up.
  2. Something tells me the Grizzlies trip to Milwaukee won’t be as simple as Milwaukee’s trip to Cleveland. The Bucks keep showing they can beat the bad teams. Now they have to build on that win against the Hawks on Wednesday with a win over another good team in the Grizzlies. Every game is important for the Bucks now. All equally important. But for our sake, the fans, and for the team’s mentality, a few wins over winning teams would be a good idea.

Monta, Monta, Monta, Monta and Monta. I spit hot fire. Bucks 108 – Hawks 101

March 27th, 2012 Ian Segovia 10 comments

Atlanta Hawks 101 Final

Recap | Box Score

108 Milwaukee Bucks
Ekpe Udoh, PF 31 MIN | 3-8 FG | 2-2 FT | 10 REB | 1 AST | 8 PTS | +5

I’m man-crushing pretty hard on Udoh. He fills holes everyone else misses. Plays great defense without fouling. He constantly moving his feet and arms. He’s much thicker than Sanders and more versatile than Bogut ever was – he was guarding Josh Smith tonight. He has a ways to go in guarding bigger players, but he’ll be a defensive anchor in this league. His rebounding is much better than anything he showed in Golden State and any points from him are a huge bonus.

Monta Ellis, SG 41 MIN | 15-24 FG | 3-4 FT | 4 REB | 8 AST | 33 PTS | -2

The Bucks offense looked quite meager at the end of the third. No big. Ellis poured in 17 points and two assists in the fourth. His outburst was fueled by long twos and getting a few easy transition breaks The highlight of the night was an Ellis steal off a bad Jeff Teague pass that lead to a dunk.

Brandon Jennings, PG 39 MIN | 6-13 FG | 4-4 FT | 2 REB | 6 AST | 18 PTS | +4

The Ellis/Jennings backcourt sort of mirrors my feelings about any song with Paul McCartney and Michael Jackson. In theory, this is a great idea. In practice, it’s not so hot. The guys can’t share a song together and it’s best if one guy just dominates the song the same way Jackson owns “The Girl is Mine.” I’m not saying I’m right, I’m not even saying this is a good analogy, I’m not a music critic. I’m saying that this is going to end with an Ellis buying the rights to Jennings shoe collection.

Four Things We Saw

  1. Frontcourt of my dreams: Larry Sanders and Ekpe Udoh together at last! Udoh fills the holes Sanders leaves open when he gets a little overzealous with his blocking. The Bucks allowed 16 points during the approximately 11 minutes that duo was out there. The Bucks allowed considerably more points when Gooden was on the floor.
  2. So how is this Jennings/Ellis thing going to work? Jennings has to be the outside guy and Ellis has to be the slasher, right? But then where does Jennings create from there?
  3. The Bucks finally beat a team with a winning record. And they did it with a short bench. The sky isn’t falling anymore, but that doesn’t mean the window isn’t closing.
  4. The new guys, Udoh and Ellis, kept talking about passing, passing, passing in the post-game interviews. But the game was won because a guy just decided to not pass. Regardless of what anyone says, Ellis took bad shots tonight. Sometimes it works, most times it’s better to pass it off.

Bucks Fall to Undermanned Knicks 89 – 80

March 27th, 2012 Ian Segovia 2 comments

Milwaukee Bucks 80 Final

Recap | Box Score

89 New York Knicks
Ersan Ilyasova, PF 19 MIN | 0-2 FG | 2-2 FT | 1 REB | 0 AST | 2 PTS | -19

The Knicks outrebounded the Bucks 54-41. It shouldn’t have been that lopsided. Not with Stoudemire out. And not with the Knicks using guard-heavy lineups all night. Ilyasova’s bad game is really inexplicable. He got two fouls early and Skiles chose to sit him, but didn’t play him the rest of the first half. Then his play in the second half was very unagressive.

Drew Gooden, PF 22 MIN | 2-9 FG | 2-2 FT | 5 REB | 1 AST | 6 PTS | -6

Once again, no Stoudemire playing. This should have been easy. I don’t exactly know how this happened, but if Drew Gooden isn’t passing well then the team doesn’t play well. This is all going to end poorly.

Monta Ellis, SG 37 MIN | 2-14 FG | 0-0 FT | 5 REB | 4 AST | 4 PTS | -9

Ellis and Jennings are both shooting less and shooting worse than before the trade. Monta has been a capable distributor, but that’s not why he’s here. He’s supposed to be a scorer and hasn’t shown even a flash of that capability yet. He’s been useless shooting threes. He attacks the paint, but misses lay-ups and has been terrible at shooting free throws.

Brandon Jennings, PG 35 MIN | 6-22 FG | 3-4 FT | 6 REB | 5 AST | 15 PTS | -16

Jennings could not seem to hold onto the ball during a fast break. Baron Davis would just waddle his way into the break and snatch the ball as if was no big thing. He’s still not getting to the line and he’s been less aggressive in every way since the Ellis trade.

Mike Dunleavy, SF 31 MIN | 10-14 FG | 1-3 FT | 5 REB | 3 AST | 26 PTS | +11

In his four first quarter minutes, Dunleavy poured in 14 points. He continued that hot streak with 10 points in the second quarter. He also got possessed by the ghost of Larry Johnson and threw in a four-point play just for kicks. This performance wasn’t the usual Dunleavy performance where he’s using his opponent’s athleticism and speed against them to get open looks. The Knicks were rather good about staying on their feet on Dunleavy pump fakes. They just couldn’t keep track of him. Either he’d break away off a screen for an open look or be in the perfect spot on a fast break, the man was just in the right place at the right time all first quarter. Delfino left the game in the first half due to a groin injury so it would seem like the perfect time to start Dunleavy in the second half, but Skiles wouldn’t play the hot-shooting Dunleavy until halfway through the third.

Ekpe Udoh, PF 21 MIN | 3-8 FG | 0-0 FT | 4 REB | 1 AST | 6 PTS | 0

Udoh showed some flashes of offensive prowess in the game with some spins and head-fakes that lead to some easy buckets. You should probably take these as just flashes for now, at best, Udoh’s ceiling is probably an 8 ppg game. But once again he looked good on defense despite his poor performance on the boards.

Two Things We Saw

  1. The Bucks fall 2.5 games back of the Knicks with 17 games to go. That’s quite a mountain to climb, but they’re not quite dead in the water yet. The Bucks have more home games left than the Knicks and one of those home games is against the Knicks. However any chance of avoiding the Bulls (to face Miami instead, ugh) is dead. The Bucks are 5 games back of the Celtics.
  2. Melo deserves a big round of applause for stepping up this game. He crashed the boards, put the offensive load and his shoulders and came through with a big win for the Knicks. Will anyone remember this game from Anthony? No.