-Jragon- wrote:Reggie Miller has Dame in his top 10 all time and realgm dudes think he's maybe Mo Williams with a green light
Reggie miller has 150 players in his top 10 fyi
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-Jragon- wrote:Reggie Miller has Dame in his top 10 all time and realgm dudes think he's maybe Mo Williams with a green light
yiyiyi wrote:give rockets Redd ,houston give you T-MAC in return .please help rockets!
i dont want see that woman anymore !
steger_3434 wrote:-Jragon- wrote:Reggie Miller has Dame in his top 10 all time and realgm dudes think he's maybe Mo Williams with a green light
Reggie miller has 150 players in his top 10 fyi
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MickeyDavis wrote:Play through a torn ligament in the shooting hand? I'm dubious. Unless he never plans to shoot.
DukeH wrote:Plenty, RealGM Bucks Board is the Golden Dawn of forums.
-Jragon- wrote:Reggie Miller has Dame in his top 10 all time and realgm dudes think he's maybe Mo Williams with a green light
Giannis Antetokounmpo wrote:You're out here reffing like Marc Davis and ****
I only watched about 5 minutes, but it definitely sounds like he plans to play.soxperry wrote:If you didnt watch the Pat Bev pod, it absolutely sounds like he intends to play through it without question. He also told his agent that hes going to take his time with it so that he can make sure hes ready for the playoffs.
Love this guy.
Gianstoppable wrote:Yeah after listening to the pod they're going to have to lock him out of the arena to keep him away. Love that fire. He can still play defense or the bad wrist he doesn't need to shoot and he even said it doesn't really hurt much when he shoots. But guys are going to be smacking at his wrist all game but he's prepared for it
BigO wrote:Wisconsin Herd: Ty Ty Washington with 37 points last night, along with 5 rebounds and 7 assists; 16-25 and 5-8 from three.He's getting better-only one turnover
They got Wenyan Gabriel back from Memphis; 18 pts. 13 rebounds
AJJ- only 7 points -6 rebounds, 4 assists on 3-9 shooting
Chris Livingston- 13 points- not much else. I don't ever see him contributing, but who knows?
Rollins 23 points 4 and 3assists- good defense
For the Indiana team, Oscar Tshiebwe 24 points and 26 rebounds. Quite an inside presence.
Elfrid Payton still around and looked good.
drone3 wrote:I miss Jrue.... That's all
Fotis St wrote:drone3 wrote:I miss Jrue.... That's all
He is probably a lucky Charles Barkley who got one.
pifhluk23 wrote:Fotis St wrote:drone3 wrote:I miss Jrue.... That's all
He is probably a lucky Charles Barkley who got one.
He works 100x harder than Barkley who by every account of players that played in his era was lazy. If Giannis grew up in the US and started playing at a young age he'd likely be up there with Jordan and LeBron for all time great. He can still get there too if the Bucks org is a little more competent and we stop letting him make coaching and personnel decisions.
With no time to waste and facing title-or-bust pressure, the Bucks can finally take on their true form with Middleton healthy. He should lock everything into place. Jae Crowder becomes a useful reserve instead of an overtaxed starter. Malik Beasley has help guarding perimeter scorers. In Milwaukee's best lineups, Middleton cooks weak defenders -- with opposing stoppers battling Damian Lillard and Giannis Antetokounmpo.
The Bucks have mauled opponents by 16 points per 100 possessions with Lillard, Middleton, Antetokounmpo and Brook Lopez on the floor.
What a boon to have Middleton lurking on the second side, waiting to spring into a pick-and-roll with Antetokounmpo after someone else bends the defense. Milwaukee's foundational stars have the kind of chemistry that only comes with shared experience.
Antetokounmpo set 45 ball screens in the Bucks' double-overtime loss to the Lakers on Tuesday -- nine more than in any game in his career, per Second Spectrum. The Bucks are running about 24 Lillard-Antetokounmpo pick-and-rolls per 100 possessions under new head coach Doc Rivers -- up from about 17 before.
If anything, the Bucks overdid it against the Lakers. Antetokounmpo didn't get enough touches in scoring positions late in the game. Milwaukee settled for too many pull-up jumpers. That's healthy. It's part of the learning curve.
The Bucks lost again Thursday in New Orleans in another shaky offensive performance. A week-plus ago, they looked like world-beaters in trouncing the Suns (without Antetokounmpo) and Thunder. Lillard's production continues to be maddeningly up and down by his standards. They are still searching for the consistent gear they will need to challenge the Celtics. (Boston is on its own two-game losing streak after quaking in crunch time for the second straight game against the Atlanta Hawks. This is a real problem.)
It's time to focus more on offense now that Rivers has plucked the low-hanging fruit in repairing the defense. The Bucks get back in transition now. Lopez is a forcefield around the rim again. Patrick Beverley fits any lineup and has kept the ball moving on offense.
The Bucks switch and blitz in strategic situations -- with Bobby Portis at the point of attack, when matchups make sense, when the shot clock dwindles -- and they are starting to make those reads in the flow. They are building habits.
Milwaukee is now 13-8 in its past 21 games -- tied for 11th in offense and sixth in defense in that stretch. That's good, but not quite as empathic a statement as it would want to make before the postseason.
Until the New York Knicks and Joel Embiid reach 100% health, the Bucks stand as the East team with the best chance to push Boston. There is another level they need to reach to do that. It's not that far away, but the Bucks' shortcomings defending the perimeter are more or less intractable. Late in that Lakers game, the Bucks lost containment against L.A.'s guards -- notably Reaves. Boston is an entirely different challenge -- if that series ever comes to pass.
But the actualized version of the Bucks has the firepower and resourcefulness to overcome those impediments four times in seven games against anyone.
chonestown wrote:Tell me you weren't around to watch Charles Barkley without telling me you weren't around to watch Charles Barkley.
DingleJerry wrote:I'd guess the Barkely comment was more about working/training, not so much about not playing hard in the games. Especially when compared to Giannis who's worked himself into a physical beast while chuck was the round mound.
DingleJerry wrote:I'd guess the ZION comment was more about working/training, not so much about not playing hard in the games. Especially when compared to Giannis who's worked himself into a physical beast while ZION was the round mound.