Post#80 » by old skool » Fri Jan 24, 2025 6:04 pm
A couple of thoughts on last nights game ......
Giannis picks up his second foul in the middle of the 1st quarter (challenge wasted), and plays perfectly disciplined the rest of the game, finishing with just those 2 fouls. You could hardly tell he was defending conservatively in that first half, aggressively but under control. The game might have ended up differently if he had gone to the bench early on with those two fouls.
Trent had an incredible first half. Bail out 3s that had to be disheartening to the Heat defense. Read somewhere last week that he felt it took him a month or so to figure out how and where to get his shots with this team. Enjoy him now, because he will cash in with a multi-year deal this summer.
The first half turnaround was disorienting. The Bucks miss 11 of their first 12 FGAs, but end up shooting 50% from the field before the half is over. Lillard's 6 points in the final second of the half ballooned the lead to 16, but more than that, it stunned the Heat. It felt like the game was almost out of reach at that point.
Jackson Jr. looked like he was moving 50% faster than everyone else on the court. A little like an out of control pinball, but multiple impactful plays in short minutes in the second half. That athletic dynamic dictates that the Bucks do everything possible to develop his game, regardless of any growing pains in the process. Even if he doesn't pan out, his speed and athleticism is really needed on an aging Bucks team that doesn't have a lot of resources or pathways to add quality youthful talent. His +/- of -8 last night adds to a rough stretch for him where he is often the only Bucks rotation player in negative territory, but his physical talents warrant the game minutes investments the Bucks are making.
The Bucks lack traditional point guards and a second back up big, but the team looks very "complete", able to adjust to players not named Dame or Giannis being out. It would not have been surprising if the team looked a bit discombobulated with Middleton and Green sitting out. Instead, they didn't miss a beat, with Trent hot from the arc, Lillard playing like a superstar, and Connaughton and Rollins filling key roles. It's a player's league, but the coaching staff deserves some credit for getting a cast of vet minimums and end of the draft youngsters to provide an excess of NBA quality depth.
Rollins is looking scarily solid. Coming into this season with zero expectations (only 4 career NBA games with over 10-minutes on the court), he is a solid ball handler, decent defender, and can score at the rim, mid-range and from distance - all without forcing anything. Horst needs to figure out how to create an open roster spot so the Bucks can convert his two-way to a regular contract. That would keep him out of restricted free agency and available for the playoffs.