Tag Archive | "team"

Bucks getting ready for start of NBA season

MILWAUKEE — The Milwaukee Bucks are back. Well, at least one of them was.

Guard Beno Udrih showed up to work out and shoot baskets Thursday, the first day team facilities were reopened to players as the NBA lockout heads toward an apparent resolution.

Steve Novak, a former Marquette star who most recently played for San Antonio, also was shooting at the Bucks’ facility.

If a tentative agreement between owners and players is ratified as expected, training camps could begin Dec. 9.

Bucks general manager John Hammond said the team’s front office has been filled with a sense of excitement since the deal came together.

“I think immediately, you could kind of feel that in your gut: Here we go, we’re getting ready to get started again,” Hammond said. “I think as each step progresses, that will continue.”

Restrictions on contact between team officials and players remain in place for now, but Hammond said teams are free to begin talking to agents.

“We can talk and we’re having conversations, just like I’m sure every other team is in the league,” Hammond said.

The Bucks have 12 players under contract, and Hammond pulled off what is expected to be his biggest move of the offseason before the lockout started.

Coming off a season where the Bucks generally played good defense but struggled to score, Milwaukee made a three-way trade on draft day to acquire Stephen Jackson, Udrih, guard Shaun Livingston and the rights to first-round pick Tobias Harris.

“Our roster is somewhat set, but we still have work to do,” Hammond said.

Hammond said the Bucks intend to bring back defensive stopper Luc Richard Mbah a Moute, who is a restricted free agent.

“We appreciate Luc and what he’s done for us as an organization, and what he stands for,” Hammond said. “We have every intention of bringing Luc back.”

Hammond also was looking forward to the potential pairing of Udrih and Brandon Jennings in the backcourt. But he seemed most excited about the possibility of a strong bounce-back season from injured center Andrew Bogut.

“I believe this about Andrew: Andrew’s going to come back and have a really good year,” Hammond said. “People still don’t realize that Andrew has not had an opportunity to work the last two summers.”

The Bucks are coming off a disappointing season filled with injuries, but Hammond said he isn’t concerned that a compressed NBA season will take a toll on players’ health.

“That question is probably going to be asked more about our team more than any because of what we went through last year, the injured (players) that we had,” Hammond said. “I look at that and say it was an anomaly. I’ve never been around a team that’s gone through that before and I don’t expect that to happen again. I expect us to have a good season and a healthy season.”

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Milwaukee Bucks Win by Feeding Less Fortunate

MILWAUKEE — The Milwaukee Bucks may not play basketball for a while but at least Bango is staying busy.

Monday, he’ll join other Bucks staff members to serve dinner for 500 people at the St. Ben’s Community Meal Program in downtown Milwaukee.

The dinner starts at 5 p.m. at St. Ben’s on North 9th Street.

A couple weeks ago, the team’s furry mascot was helping to make peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for needy kids in Southeastern Wisconsin.

What do you guys think about this.

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Top Five Centers in Milwaukee Bucks History

Qualifiers: the Milwaukee Bucks have more than 40 years of history, so players should have at least two seasons with the team. Also, players will be classified under one position even if they played at more than one.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar:

Hall of Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar began his record-setting career with six brilliant seasons in Milwaukee from 1969 to 1975. Abdul-Jabbar won three of his six NBA MVPs and one of his two Finals MVP awards during his tenure with the Bucks. He remains the Bucks’ all-time leading scorer and rebounder with 14,211 points and 7,161 boards. Abdul-Jabbar set the NBA’s all-time scoring record with 38,387 points and he did so on the 12th highest career shooting percentage (.559). His 19 All-Star appearances are the most by any player and he added 15 All-NBA and 11 All-Defensive honors.

Jack Sikma:

Seven-time All-Star center Jack Sikma played the last five years of his career in Milwaukee from 1986 to 1991. Sikma was a great defender and a highly skilled center who could pass and shoot like a smaller player. He averaged 13.4 points, 7.9 rebounds and 2.9 assists with the Bucks and his .884 free-throw percentage ranks second in franchise history. He recorded 17,287 points, 10,816 rebounds, 3,488 assists, 1,162 steals and 1,048 blocks in his 14-year career.

Andrew Bogut(notes):

Current Bucks center Andrew Bogut joined the team as the top overall pick of the 2005 NBA Draft. Bogut evolved into a nightly double-double threat and a tough defender. In 2009-10, he earned his first All-NBA selection with averages of 15.9 points, 10.2 rebounds and 2.5 blocks, but a gruesome arm injury abbreviated his season. Bogut bounced back with a double-double season and led the league in blocks per game in 2010-11. His totals through 396 games include 5,043 points, 3,710 rebounds and 618 blocks.

Bob Lanier:

Hall of Fame center Bob Lanier wrapped up his NBA career as a Buck from 1980 to 1984. Lanier was a 20-10 player for the Detroit Pistons throughout the 1970s, but he still had All-Star years in him when he joined Milwaukee. He helped the Bucks become one of the top teams in the east as they reached two conference finals and five playoffs in five years. In 45 playoff games with Milwaukee, he averaged 15.1 points, 7.6 rebounds and 3.5 assists. Lanier totaled 19,248 points and 9,698 boards in his 14-year career.

Alton Lister:

Alton Lister spent the first five years of his NBA career in the Bucks’ frontcourt. From 1981 to 1986, Lister maintained averages of 7.3 points, 6.5 rebounds and 1.7 blocks per game, first backing up Lanier and then taking his place in the starting lineup. Lister owns the Bucks’ all-time shot-blocking record with 804 and his career total of 1,473 blocks places him 32nd all-time.

Sources:

Milwaukee Bucks Franchise Index, Basketball-Reference.com

David Friedman, “Dependable and durable,” February 26, 2008, HoopsHype.com

More from this contributor:

Milwaukee Bucks top five power forwards

Milwaukee Bucks top five small forwards

Milwaukee Bucks top five shooting guards

Milwaukee Bucks top five point guards

Los Angeles Clippers top five centers

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Top Five Power Forwards in Milwaukee Bucks History

Qualifiers: the Milwaukee Bucks have more than 40 years of history, so players should have at least two seasons with the team. Also, players will be classified under one position even if they played at more than one.

Terry Cummings:

Two-time All-NBA forward Terry Cummings played five prime years with the Milwaukee Bucks in the 1980s. Cummings was a versatile high-scoring forward who could create his own offense from the post and mid-range. During his initial stint with the Bucks, he averaged 21.7 points, 8.3 rebounds and 1.4 steals per game while leading the team to at least the Eastern Conference Semifinals four times in five years. In his 18-year career as a whole, Cummings racked up 19,460 points, 8,630 rebounds and 1,255 steals.

Vin Baker:

Four-time All-Star power forward Vin Baker began his career far better than he ended it. Spending his first four seasons with the Bucks, Baker quickly established himself as one of the top talents in his 1993 rookie class. He posted overall averages of 18.3 points, 9.5 rebounds and 1.3 blocks including two double-double seasons and two years of more than 20 points per game. Baker earned his last All-NBA selection in 1998; shortly after he left Milwaukee, his career took a sharp nosedive due to off-court troubles.

Greg Smith:

Former starting forward Greg Smith was an original member of the Milwaukee Bucks who spent three-plus seasons with the franchise from 1968 to 1971. Smith was the fifth starter on a team with four All-Stars. He averaged 9.7 points, 8.4 rebounds and 2.2 assists overall, plus 11.6 points and 8.6 boards per game in the Bucks’ 1971 playoff run to their first NBA Championship.

Joe Smith(notes):

Current free agent power forward Joe Smith played his last two years as a full-time starter during a three-season stint in Milwaukee from 2003 to 2006. Smith was a disappointing return on a number one draft pick from 1995, but he has been a solid all-around player over the last 16 seasons. He averaged 10.4 points and 7.3 rebounds in Milwaukee, finishing second in win shares behind only Michael Redd(notes) during his tenure. Smith’s career totals include 11,208 points and 6,575 rebounds.

Curtis Perry:

Curtis Perry took over for Greg Smith at power forward for the Bucks in 1971. A former third round pick in 1970, Perry developed into an excellent rebounder and a gritty inside player. He played three seasons in Milwaukee and registered 8.5 points, 9.2 rebounds and 1.9 assists per game for three .700-plus teams. Perry later averaged a double-double in the 1974-75 season with the Phoenix Suns.

Sources:

Milwaukee Bucks Franchise Index, Basketball-Reference.com

Lyndal Scranton, “Perry tops list as best Bear of all,” March 9, 2009, Springfield News-Leader

More from this contributor:

Milwaukee Bucks top five small forwards

Milwaukee Bucks top five shooting guards

Milwaukee Bucks top five point guards

Houston Rockets top five point guards

Cleveland Cavaliers top five small forwards

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Minor-league team owner: Bucks’ Livingston could…

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. — Milwaukee Bucks guard Shaun Livingston hasn’t yet signed to play for a minor-league team in Illinois. The team’s owner says he still could.

The Central Illinois Drive of Bloomington, Ill., said this week that the team was signing an NBA player for its first season. Team co-owner Scott Henderson said the player was Peoria, Ill. native Livingston.

Henderson on Friday clarified that Livingston would only sign if the NBA lockout continues until the Premier Basketball League season starts in January and if other options don’t come along.

Livingston will help promote the team in the meantime. Livingston is friends with Drive coach A.J. Guyton and player Daniel Ruffin.

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Ill. team says Bucks guard hasn’t yet signed

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. —

Milwaukee Bucks guard Shaun Livingston hasn’t yet signed to play for a minor league team in Illinois. The team’s owner says he still could.

The Central Illinois Drive of Bloomington, Ill., said this week that the team was signing an NBA player for its first season. Team co-owner Scott Henderson said the player was Peoria, Ill. native Livingston.

Henderson on Friday clarified that Livingston would only sign if the NBA lockout continues until the Premier Basketball League season starts in January and if other options don’t come along.

Livingston will help promote the team in the meantime. Livingston is friends with Drive coach A.J. Guyton and player Daniel Ruffin.

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Livingston signs with minor league team

Updated Oct 13, 2011 6:05 PM ET

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. (AP)

A minor league basketball team in central Illinois says it has signed Milwaukee Bucks guard Shaun Livingston to play if the NBA season is lost to a labor dispute.

Central Illinois Drive co-owner Scott Henderson said Thursday that Livingston will help promote the new Premier Basketball League team based in Bloomington, Ill. If the NBA isn’t playing by the time the league’s season begins in late December or early January, he says Livingston will play for the Drive.

Livingston is from Peoria and a graduate of Central High School. Henderson said Livingston is friends with Drive coach A.J. Guyton and the team’s first signed player, Daniel Ruffin. All three went to Central High.

Henderson wouldn’t say what the team would pay Livingston.

Not much else going on in the NBA world today.

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Ill. minor league team signs Bucks G Livingston


BLOOMINGTON, Ill. (AP) — A minor league basketball team in central Illinois says it has signed Milwaukee Bucks guard Shaun Livingston to play if the NBA season is lost to a labor dispute.

Central Illinois Drive co-owner Scott Henderson said Thursday that Livingston will help promote the new Premier Basketball League team based in Bloomington, Ill. If the NBA isn’t playing by the time the league’s season begins in late December or early January, he says Livingston will play for the Drive.

Livingston is from Peoria and a graduate of Central High School. Henderson said Livingston is friends with Drive coach A.J. Guyton and the team’s first signed player, Daniel Ruffin. All three went to Central High.

Henderson wouldn’t say what the team would pay Livingston.

Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Illinois minor league team signs Livingston

updated 4:58 p.m. ET Oct. 13, 2011

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. – A minor league basketball team in central Illinois says it has signed Milwaukee Bucks guard Shaun Livingston to play if the NBA season is lost to a labor dispute.

Central Illinois Drive co-owner Scott Henderson said Thursday that Livingston will help promote the new Premier Basketball League team based in Bloomington, Ill. If the NBA isn’t playing by the time the league’s season begins in late December or early January, he says Livingston will play for the Drive.

Livingston is from Peoria and a graduate of Central High School. Henderson said Livingston is friends with Drive coach A.J. Guyton and the team’s first signed player, Daniel Ruffin. All three went to Central High.

Henderson wouldn’t say what the team would pay Livingston.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Ill. minor league team signs NBA guard Livingston

BLOOMINGTON, Ill. (AP)—A minor league basketball team in central Illinois
says it has signed Milwaukee Bucks guard Shaun Livingston(notes) to play if the NBA
season is lost to a labor dispute.

Central Illinois Drive co-owner Scott Henderson said Thursday that
Livingston will help promote the new Premier Basketball League team based in
Bloomington, Ill. If the NBA isn’t playing by the time the league’s season
begins in late December or early January, he says Livingston will play for the
Drive.

Livingston is from Peoria and a graduate of Central High School. Henderson
said Livingston is friends with Drive coach A.J. Guyton and the team’s first
signed player, Daniel Ruffin. All three went to Central High.

Henderson wouldn’t say what the team would pay Livingston.

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Minnesota Timberwolves Interview Terry Porter, Go…

Read More: timberwolves coaching search, terry porter, Don Nelson (H – GSW), Milwaukee Bucks, Phoenix Suns, Minnesota Timberwolves

Terry Porter became the first candidate interviewed by the Minnesota Timberwolves on Monday. Porter, the former head coach of the Milwaukee Bucks and Phoenix Suns, was likely to interview with both David Kahn and owner Glen Taylor, according to the Star Tribune’s Jerry Zgoda.

The Wolves were expected to interview former Golden State Warriors head coach Don Nelson for the position first –a man that certainly fits Kahn’s edict for a coach that has “up-tempo” ingrained into his DNA — but Zgoda reports that Nelson never reconnected with Minnesota’s president of basketball operations as planned.

Nelson implied that not talking to to the Wolves over the weekend as planned means nothing one way or the other, but the fact that the team went in such an opposite direction by interviewing Porter in the meantime is a bit surprising.

Porter, a two-time NBA All-Star who played a couple of past-his-prime seasons for the Wolves, was last seen in the NBA when he was fired by Phoenix in 2009. Porter’s intention was to bring a defense-oriented, slower playing style with him following a stint as an assistant coach for the Detroit Pistons, but was ran out of town when he was unable to adjust his coaching philosophy to the run-and-gun Suns’ offense. 

The same offense, essentially, that Kahn would would like to instill into the Timberwolves future plans. At least the team is keeping it interesting, I guess.

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The Milwaukee Bucks manage just 56 points in Boston

Milwaukee had its excuses for scoring just 56 points in a loss to the Boston Celtics on Sunday, but that doesn’t mean the game’s outcome should have served as a surprise.

The Bucks entered Sunday with the league’s worst offense, ranked 30 amongst 30 teams in offensive efficiency, and Scott Skiles’ crew walked out of Boston looking even worse. In a league where over 112 points per 100 possessions will pace the field, and 100 points per 100 possessions will have you bringing up the rear, the Bucks scored a shocking 65 points per 100 possessions. And the team’s mark of 38 points through three quarters set an NBA record as an all-time low.

Just nine points in the first quarter for Milwaukee, against a Boston team that jumped from second in the NBA in defensive efficiency to first based solely on this dominant performance. The Bucks had more turnovers (nine) than field goals (eight) in the first half; and though the team had flown in from Milwaukee after a 102-74 home win over the 76ers on Sunday morning (losing two hours with the time change and the spring introduction of Daylight Savings Time), close observers of the Bucks knew that it was only a matter of time before the team dropped a bomb like this.

The Celtics threw in their sportsmanship towel early, as no regular starter played more than 30 minutes, and newly added types like Carlos Arroyo(notes), Jeff Green(notes), Troy Murphy(notes) and Sasha Pavlovic(notes) did most of the heavy lifting. No Bucks starter played more than 28 minutes, but with a starting lineup that thinks about defense 14 times before wondering how it is going to make its first basket, it’s not as if that mattered much.

Milwaukee shot 31.4 percent, which you’ll see in a game from time to time, but it also made only three three-pointers, and nine free throws. Those are terribly low numbers. The team also added miscue to malignancy by turning the ball over on 20 percent of its possessions. Despite 54 chances for an offensive rebound after a missed field goal or free throw, the Bucks managed just six offensive rebounds all night. And former New York Knick castaway Earl Barron(notes) led the team in scoring. With 10 points.

All is not lost for Milwaukee. Despite the season-long swoon on the offensive end, Milwaukee ranks third in defensive efficiency, and the team is still just 1.5 games in back of the Indiana Pacers for the final spot in the Eastern Conference playoff bracket. Though it should be noted that, as the standings currently sit, the Bucks would face Boston in the first round. Hopefully only radio (short wave, AM radio) will carry that series.

Related: Jeff Green, Troy Murphy, Boston Celtics, Indiana Pacers, Milwaukee Bucks, Uncategorized

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&w=100&h=100&zc=1&q=90" alt="Milwaukee Bucks C Andrew Bogut: NBA Players would welcome concussion policy" class="woo-image th" width="100" height="100" />

Milwaukee Bucks C Andrew Bogut: NBA Players would welcome concussion policy

Updated: March 10, 2011, 5:31 PM ET

MILWAUKEE — Aaron McKie remembers being popped by an elbow on the side of his head and finishing the game in Los Angeles anyway. Things started going badly a few hours later.

“I was watching TV but I wasn’t really watching. I got up, went to the bathroom, didn’t have an appetite, and I went and spit in the toilet and blood came out,” said McKie, a longtime NBA guard and now a 76ers assistant coach. “I went to the hospital and I had a mild concussion.”

Still, McKie said, he played the next game because “concussions weren’t a big thing at that time.”

The NBA told The Associated Press this week it has been working with an independent neurologist to establish a league-wide concussion policy and return-to-play protocols. A policy could be in place before the start of next season.

Players and former players who spoke with the AP say they would welcome the move after years of head-jarring hits and a feeling among some, like McKie, that they needed to play on.

“They have to,” Milwaukee Bucks center Andrew Bogut said of a formal policy. “It should’ve been done years ago.”

Added Magic coach Stan Van Gundy: “I think it’s a great idea in all the sports.”

“We’re dealing with a very dangerous thing,” the coach said. “The more they’ve learned about concussions, especially the danger of not recovering from concussions before you’re back to activity tells you that every sport has to be very conscious of it.”

Bogut, a former No. 1 pick now in his sixth season, figures he’s had “five to 10″ concussions in his pro career, including three after breaking his nose three different times. He said he’d like to see “mandatory” testing in the preseason to establish benchmarks to evaluate when a player is ready to return from a concussion.

Sitting out even without clear symptoms is OK with him.

“Brain injuries are nothing to play with, no matter what,” he said. “If you want to call a guy soft for sitting out with a concussion, you’re an idiot.”

Reigning NBA Rookie of the Year Tyreke Evans missed five games for Sacramento last season after being elbowed in the face and said it was hard to stay out of action.

“That was a situation where at the time I really wanted to play,” Evans said. “Maybe in the long run it was best that I didn’t.”

“

Salmons I’m all for it. I was just talking to my wife and saying there’s been a lot of concussions lately in basketball. We’ve had a few on our team, alone, so I think it’s a good thing they’re looking at it.

” – John Salmons on a possible NBA concussion policy

All-Star Chris Paul sustained the most recent concussion in the NBA when his forehead hit Cavaliers guard Ramon Sessions’ shoulder on Sunday. The Hornets’ guard was taken from the court on the stretcher and the team has hired a neurologist to monitor Paul’s condition. Paul returned to practice on Thursday, but is not yet cleared to play.

Cavaliers coach Byron Scott said he can remember Magic Johnson getting a concussion and the 1987 playoff collision between Pistons teammates Vinnie Johnson and Adrian Dantley that knocked both players out of a game.

Current players say they think the game is less violent than the physical teams of the ’80s and ’90s. But Scott, who doesn’t recall ever having a concussion in his playing days, said today’s players are bigger, stronger and faster — and that the collisions have become more violent.

“It’s a good thing that the league is taking a serious look into concussions because again, we don’t have helmets, this is something probably that should’ve been put in place a while back, but obviously it takes time and when something like this happens, I think the commissioner has done a real good job of jumping on it,” Scott said. “Hopefully we’ll have something in place.”

Timberwolves coach Kurt Rambis, who was known for his scrappy, hard-nosed play during his 14-year career, said that he could’ve had several concussions and had no idea.

“They didn’t test us for anything back then. No MRIs, X-rays. If the bone was sticking out they might say, ‘Yeah, you need an X-ray,’” Rambis said. “There was probably a lot of cases where guys may or may not have, but the diagnostic testing is much more accurate now and there’s much more intensity to getting players checked for everything and anything than there was back then.”

In the NBA, six players have missed games in the past four weeks with concussions or concussion-like symptoms. The injuries, and particularly the incident involving Paul, have gotten the attention of many players.

They say they’re looking to the league to protect them.

“I’m all for it,” Bucks guard John Salmons said. “I was just talking to my wife and saying there’s been a lot of concussions lately in basketball. We’ve had a few on our team, alone, so I think it’s a good thing they’re looking at it.”

Sessions, who didn’t know he was the one who Paul ran into until his shoulder hurt the next day, said he hasn’t been a part of any educational programs geared toward players learning the warning signs of concussions.

Hornets guard Willie Green, though, talked extensively about the materials he received about the dangers of head injuries in both Philadelphia and New Orleans.

“They pass out handbooks that give you ideas or things to do if you symptoms or if you feel nauseous or what have you — if you get a concussion, these are the steps,” Green said. “The doctors and our training staff, they’re going to do a great job and take you through all the tests that you need.”

Currently, the NBA tracks concussions, but leaves it up to teams to determine the guidelines for when a player can return to the court. Wizards coach Flip Saunders said he believes the franchises do everything they can to make sure the players won’t put themselves at risk.

“There’s a policy here even on fevers. If you have a fever over 101.5 or whatever, we don’t let guys with that sort of fever play because of where you can be with heat,” he said. “So whatever they do, anything to protect players from being further hurt, I think everyone in the league’s all for that.”

For Bogut, the contact in the NBA is as serious as any other pro sport given the elbows and lack of head protection. He fears some players feel they must stay in games and keep their symptoms quiet.

“I’ve probably played through something like that when I was a rookie, a bit naive. I wanted to play every game. I’ve gotten to a point where I want to play every game, but it’s stupid to put my body in harm for 10, 15 years down the track. It’s only money,” he said. “If someone’s going to take my spot because I miss time with a concussion and I’m out of the rotation, so be it.”


Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press

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Milwaukee Bucks shooters get hot in win over Cleveland Cavaliers

MILWAUKEE — Two guards teamed up to give Milwaukee its second win in two days.

Brandon Jennings and Earl Boykins each scored 18 points to lead the Bucks to a 110-90 victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers on Wednesday night.

“At this point, we’re running out of time,” Boykins said. “It’s time to win, no matter who the opponent is. If you can get a win, it’s a good win. So, we’re able to get the back-to-back wins. It’s huge for us at this point of the season.”

Boykins had all of his points in the first half, then Jennings scored 14 in the third quarter as Milwaukee enjoyed its second blowout in two days, due to 55.1 percent shooting.

The Bucks, who won 95-76 on Tuesday at Washington, have won back-to-back games for the first time since Jan. 28-29. Boykins and Jennings combined to shoot 15-of-19 from the field.

“They were in the paint,” Milwaukee coach Scott Skiles said. “One of our points of emphasis in the game was to break them down off the dribble, get down in the paint and then make good decisions and save for four or five minutes, we did.”

Samardo Samuels scored 11 of his 15 points in the first quarter for Cleveland, which lost for the fifth time in six games. The Cavaliers, 4-28 on the road, also got 13 points and seven assists from Daniel Gibson.

After shooting 60.5 percent in the first half for a 62-49 lead at the break, Milwaukee extended its lead by opening the third quarter with a 14-4 run.

Jennings contributed 10 points during the stretch, and his second three-pointer of the run gave his team a 76-53 lead with 6:22 left.

“These are teams we should beat, so you can’t really get too hyped about it or anything like that,” Jennings said.

Milwaukee took control by shooting 70 percent (14-of-20) and scoring 39 points in the second quarter. Boykins made all six of his shots in the period, and he started and capped a 17-2 run by the Bucks.

His jump shot gave Milwaukee a 38-35 lead with 6:54 remaining and his layup extended the lead to 53-37 with 3:26 to play.

“I just took the shots that were there,” Boykins said. “The thing was, once I made a couple, I really just focused on taking good shots.”

(Page 2 of 2)

A three-pointer by John Salmons gave Milwaukee a 58-41 lead, its biggest of the half, with 2:11 left.

“We stopped playing,” Cleveland coach Byron Scott said. “We stopped playing on the defensive end, stopped playing offensively together as a team and they got up and started pressuring us a little more. And we just seemed to lose our minds and just play individual basketball.”

Baron Davis, Cleveland’s leading scorer since being traded to the Cavaliers, missed the game due to the death of his grandmother.

Afterward, the Cavaliers met for about 15-20 minutes before opening the locker room to reporters.

“Pretty much all the coaches talked and I had a couple of players talk, and that was the biggest thing, consistency and trust,” Scott said. “I don’t think the guys truly trust each other out there, for whatever reason. They’ve been together 60-plus games and obviously the consistency is something we’ve been lacking for a while.”

Samuels, who also grabbed five rebounds, agreed.

“We went over things, stuff we need to work on,” Samuels said. “Stuff that will help this team and try to get everybody on the same page. That was what the conversation was about.”

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