The Milwaukee Bucks had a bad shooting night against a poor 20-win team, the Brooklyn Nets, losing 96-90. AJ Green led the Bucks with 20 points on 6/12 from three, while E.J. Liddell scored a career-high 21 in as many minutes (as he didn’t play in the fourth quarter because… you know why).
Game Recap
The game started back and forth, and no side truly earned an advantage early in the first quarter. However, through three quick triples from AJ Green, Milwaukee established an advantage over Brooklyn
as the game wore on. Milwaukee continued its characteristic defensive lapses as Brooklyn exploited opportunistic double-teams for easy points in the paint and open threes. That, coupled with an inability to find good looks on offense and frequent turnovers, allowed Brooklyn to storm to a 10-0 run, giving them a 30-29 lead at the end of the first quarter.
Milwaukee looked shocked by Brooklyn’s resolve during the second quarter. They had to fight for every shot, dealing with an uncharacteristically tough Nets defense. Even when they found open shots, they didn’t land. Milwaukee shot 1/12 from long range throughout the quarter, opening the door for a 10-4 run by the Nets. They ran circles around the Milwaukee offense, using a mixture of pick-and-rolls and handoffs to find open shots. Both teams began to falter offensively towards the end, settling for contested shots. Despite finding some important stops towards the end of the half, Milwaukee continued to trail Brooklyn 49-43.
The Bucks struggled to chip away at the Nets’ increasingly imposing lead. They struggled on defense, frequently giving up physical paint buckets to Liddell and rookie Drake Powell. On offense, the three-ball didn’t fall, and they continued to make clumsy turnovers in transition. As Liddell reached a career high in points, Milwaukee fell behind by as many as 16 points. Although Milwaukee’s shooting from range gradually warmed up, the game’s stop-and-go nature continued to frustrate the Bucks’ offense. They ended the quarter down 70-62.
Milwaukee continued to get in its own way in the final frame; careless turnovers, a general softness in the paint, and woeful shooting stopped any momentum. Cormac Ryan’s open three-pointer three minutes deep into the fourth was their first three in around six minutes of game time, and, although the team followed it up with a Green triple, they subsequently turned the ball over twice inside a minute. However, Green’s scoring came in clutch during crunch time, pouring in 11 of his 20 points in the final quarter. Taurean Prince’s corner three trimmed Brooklyn’s lead to just one with 2:30 left. However, a pair of missed threes, along with two clutch Brooklyn layups, put the Nets up five with little under a minute to go. Although Green’s 30-foot heat-check gave Milwaukee life late, Ben Saraf drew a tricky foul on Ousmane Dieng and put the Nets up by four. Dieng’s late contested three-pointer from range missed the mark, effectively icing the game for the Nets.
Stat That Stood Out
The Bucks only hit 5/8 from the free throw line, their third-lowest total of the season. By comparison, the Nets hit 21/23.











