MILWAUKEE -- As Jason Kidd prepared his Milwaukee Bucks for their
much-awaited return to the Mecca on Thursday night, the future Hall of Famer was
asked how the smaller arena environment compared to the professional arenas in
which he spent a portion of his career playing.
"It's a little cozy," Kidd said before a 96-89 loss to the Boston Celtics.
"It's 11,000 [capacity]. People say the Bucks had home-court advantage when we
had players like Oscar [Roberston] and Kareem [Abdul-Jabbar] playing. But I
think it's gotten a lot bigger, there's a lot more fans. But it just shows how
the game has grown from then to today. But it's always good to go back and have
the opportunity to play in the Mecca or into the Garden because that's where the
game and the history started."
As the Bucks celebrated their past, playing on a new replica Mecca floor
like the one artist Robert Indiana made so famous back in the day, they also had
another chance to cherish their present and future. As the Bucks embark on their
50th anniversary season, there's a realization around the league that the team
is beginning a new renaissance of its own with all-everything big man Giannis
Antetokounmpoleading the way. At 22, he hasn't just become the face of the
franchise already, he has the type of transformative talent that can change the
game. With his 28 points Thursday, he has accumulated more points (175) in the
first five games of a season than any other player in Bucks history, and that
includes Abdul-Jabbar's total of 166 points in 1970-71, according to ESPN Stats
& Information.
But in the midst of all the pomp and circumstance of Thursday's festivities
at the now dubbed UW-Milwaukee Panther Arena, the Celtics reminded Antetokounmpo
and the Bucks that he wasn't going to be able to dominate every single night.
Aside from the sellout crowd's proximity to the floor, what really got intimate
was the Celtics' defenders in and around Antetokounmpo's airspace. After
watching the Greek Freak throttle their team to the tune of 37 points and 13
rebounds a week ago in Boston, the Celtics were determined not to allow the
young star to have his way again.
That's why veteran Al Horford followed Antetokounmpo all over the floor and
the Celtics were always ready with another body wherever he went. For the first
time all season, Antetokounmpo was held under 30 points.
"They're a very versatile team," Brogdon said of the Celtics. "They have
[Jayson] Tatum and [Jaylen] Brown, 6-7, 6-8 guys that can really guard any
position on the floor so that allows them to switch a lot. If you're not
aggressive on those switches then they can really stop your offense."
As the Bucks new multimillion dollar palace rounds into shape down the
street, dreams of future glory with Antetokounmpo leading the way will hover in
the minds of Milwaukee fans who were lucky enough to see Robertson and
Abdul-Jabbar lift the franchise to prominence the first time around. But for as
much joy came out of seeing a new era of players race up and down the remake of
a beautiful old floor, it was also a reminder that the elusive championship days
are still a long way off unless the Bucks can get their young star some more
consistent help. In the meantime, Antetokounmpo laid out some pretty simple
advice when asked what his teammates can do when defenders are collapsing down
around him.
No comments:
Post a Comment