The Bucks hit the road for a one-game pit stop in Cleveland and
fell 115-99 to the Cavaliers on Wednesday night. The loss
snapped a three-game win streak and Milwaukee has now lost its
past four road games.
Giannis Antetokounmpo was a rebound shy of his third consecutive
double-double with 26 points and nine rebounds on 7-of-13
shooting, but tied his season high with seven turnovers. Bobby
Portis added 22 points, and Khris Middleton finished with 21.
"I thought we started well," Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer said.
"We couldn't maintain it and they (the Cavaliers) played lights
out tonight, so I don't know what the analogy is or whatever it
is, but they played really, really well. They shot it at a
really, really high rate."
Milwaukee really struggled from behind the 3-point line, going
just 9-for-32 (28.1 percent). The Bucks were without two of
their best long-range shooters, as Grayson Allen served his
one-game suspension and Wesley Matthews was sidelined due to a
knee injury.
Allen should be set to make his return on Friday, and Matthews
is listed as day-to-day. Milwaukee will definitely be without
Brook Lopez, who continues to recover from back surgery.
The Knicks are coming off a 110-96 loss to the Miami Heat on
Wednesday night in the second game of a three-game road trip.
New York has now lost back-to-back games and has dropped five of
its past six.
Obi Toppin tallied a team-high 18 points on 7-of-9 shooting off
the bench. RJ Barrett trailed closely behind with 17, Julius
Randle had 11 and reserve Immanuel Quickly contributed 12 to go
along with seven assists.
"I just felt like we went against a championship-caliber team
today," Toppin said. "I felt like we didn't bring the energy
from the jump, but we know what we got to do. We're going to
learn from this loss and get better from it."
Another game on the road might not be the remedy the Knicks are
looking for to cure their woes. New York has gone 1-5 over its
past six games away from home.
Despite the inconsistent play, Barrett has found his groove in
the month of January. The second-year guard is averaging 22.5
points over his last 13 games and is shooting 45.7 percent from
the field and 43.7 percent from behind the arc.
Barrett's contributions have been vital with Randle's play
sliding to the opposite end of the spectrum. The one-time
All-Star is averaging 17 points in January, his lowest mark in a
single month this season. Randle averaged at least 18.9 in
October, November and December.
The Knicks have also been struggling to shoot the ball as a team
and have not been able to shoot better than 43 percent from the
field in any of the past four games.
Friday marks the fourth and final meeting of the season between
New York and the Bucks. Milwaukee has taken two of the first
three games, including a 112-97 win at New York in their most
recent matchup on Dec. 12.
--Field Level Media
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |
|