Friday, July 23, 2021

J-Speaks: Suns Fall Again In The Finals

 Nearly three decades ago, the Phoenix Suns acquired a now Hall of Famer who they hoped could lead them to their first NBA title inf franchise history. They made it to The Finals but lost to a team that would go on to complete the first of two three-peats. In the summer of 2020, the Suns again acquired a future Hall of Fame who they hoped could just get them back to the Playoffs let alone the championship round. They finished with the second-best record in the Western Conference, took down last season’s Western Conference Finalists in the first two rounds and then took down L.A.’s other squad making their Western Conference Finals debut. They were halfway to winning their first title in franchise history but like the two previous Suns squads that reached The Finals had their championship dreams ended with a thud on Tuesday night to the Eastern Conference representative in 2021 Finals.

After coming back from a double-digit deficit in the first quarter of Game 6 of The Finals to tie the score 77-77 after three quarters, the Suns were outscored 28-21 in the four quarter and fell at the Milwaukee Bucks 105-98 to lose the series and the NBA championship 4-2.

This was the Suns third appearance in The Finals (1976, 1993, and 2021), their first since 1993, where the Charles Barkley led Suns lost to fellow Hall of Famer Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls also in six games.

The Suns trailed in Game 6 29-16 after the first quarter but outscored the Bucks 31-13 in the second quarter to lead 47-42 at half. Bucks then outscored the Suns 35-30 in the third quarter with the eventually named Bill Russell Finals MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo scoring 20 of his playoff career-high 50 points in the third quarter to tie things up 77-77 after three quarters.

With the score tied 82-82 early in the fourth period, the Bucks assumed control outscoring the Suns 23-16 to close the period to win their second title in franchise history, their first since 1971, where they took down the then Baltimore Bullets (now Washington Wizards) in a four-game sweep led by Hall of Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who was named Finals MVP after winning Kia MVP in his third NBA season.

It was a tough way for the Suns season to end as they suffered their first four-game losing streak of this season (regular season and playoffs). They went 4-6 their last 10 playoff games after winning a franchise record nine consecutive playoffs games from Game 4 of the opening-round at the Lakers to Game 3 of the Western Conference Finals at the Clippers.

The Suns becoming the first team since the 2006 Dallas Mavericks to lose four consecutive games in The Finals after winning the first two games at home.

“There’s just a pain that goes with your season being over,” Suns head coach Monty Williams, in his second season as the team’s sideline leader said in his postgame presser.

“I think it’s going to take me a minute. I just don’t take it for granted. It’s hard to get here and I wanted it so bad. It’s hard to process right now. But I’ve never dealt with this and so I’m grateful, like I said, but I know this is going to hurt for a while.”

Even after a painful defeat, Coach Williams in a show a great sportsmanship went to Bucks locker room to congratulate them on winning their second title in franchise history saying to them, “I just wanted to come and congratulate you guys as a man and a coach. You guys deserve it, and I’m thankful for the experience. You guys made me a better coach. You made us a better team. Congratulations.”

No one on the Suns hurts more from this loss than future Hall of Famer Chris Paul, who the Suns acquired in hopes of making it back to the Playoffs after a 10-year absence, which was the second longest playoff drought in the NBA behind the 15 straight of the Sacramento Kings. 

In their first postseason appearance since 2010,  the Suns took down the current defending NBA champion Lakers led by four-time Finals MVP and four-time NBA champion LeBron James and fellow perennial All-Star Anthony Davis in six games in the opening-round. They proceeded in the West Semis to sweep the other 2020 West Finals participant in the Denver Nuggets 4-0. In the West Finals the Suns defeated the so-called little brother of the Lakers in the Los Angeles Clippers, Paul’s former team that he played from 2011-2017 in six games to reach the NBA Finals for the first time in 28 years.

The Suns were halfway to their first title in franchise history before dropping Games 3 and 4 at the Bucks Then lost a heartbreaking 123-119 last Saturday night to fall 3-2. Then they had another fourth quarter collapse in Game 6 to lose the series in six games.

Paul who had 26 points and nine assists on 11 for 19 from the field was making his first Finals appearance in his 16th NBA season became the first player to lose four best-of-seven series where his team led 2-0 to start.

Since scoring 32 points with nine assists and no turnovers in 118-105 win in Game 1 of The Finals, Paul’s scoring previous to what he did in Game 6 was 23, 19, and 10 points in Games 2, 3, and 4. Game 4 was the hardest one to take because Paul was just 5 for 13 shooting and committed five turnovers, including a crucial one late in, the fourth quarter that led to a Bucks score that created some major separation from the Suns.

To put that moment into context, Paul in Games, 2, 3, and 4 had registered a total of 15 turnovers, his most in a three-game stretch in his playoff career since 2012. He had averaged counting the Game 6 clincher of the West Finals at the Clippers and Game 1 of The Finals versus Bucks, Paul averaged 36.5 points, 8.5 assists on 65 percent from the field and just one turnover. Games 2, 3, and 4 of the Finals Paul averaged 17.3 points and eight assists on a solid 49 percent from the field but averaged five turnovers.  

While Paul played much better in Game 5 scoring 11 of his 21 points in the fourth quarter with 11 assists and just one turnover, he committed a late foul on Bucks’ Antetokounmpo on a completed alley-oop dunk off a turnover by Booker off a steal by Bucks’ Jrue Holiday in the final 20 seconds of regulation that put the Bucks up 122-119. Antetokounmpo missed the free throw but Bucks’ Khris Middleton secured the rebound and after getting fouled split a pair of free throws that put the game away.

That was loss was the Suns first this postseason in 14 games where they led by double-digits as they led by as many as 16 in Game 5.    

“You just trying to figure our what you could’ve done more, you know,” Paul said in his postgame presser after the Game 6 loss. “It’s tough. “They (Bucks) made timely shots. We didn’t. We didn’t get stops when we needed to, and they just beat us.”

As instrumental as Paul was in getting the Suns in position to being NBA champions, the play of Devin Booker and Deandre Ayton, who were making their playoff debuts in their sixth and third NBA seasons respectably played at a level as if they had been here before.

Booker the last two games had scored 42 and 40 points in Games 4 and 5 respectably, which were also his 3rd and 4th games scoring 40 or more this postseason. Only Hall of Famer Rick Barry had more 40-point Games in his first postseason back in 1967 with the then San Francisco Warriors (now Golden State Warriors) than the four such games by Booker.

In fact, Booker finished with the most total points of any player in NBA history making their postseason debut with 601 points.

Most Total Points In First NBA Postseason Run

Devin Booker: 601 points

Rick Barry: 521 points

Trae Young (ATL): 461 points

Maurice Lucas: 403 points

Carlos Boozer: 400 points

LeBron James (LAL): 400 points

Paul Pierce: 394 points

Richard Hamilton: 383 points

Boris Diaw: 371 points

In Game 6 where the Suns for the first time faced elimination in the 2021 Playoffs, Booker had just 19 points on 8 for 22 shooting, including 0 for 7 from three-point range.

Booker in his postgame presser said that the locker room was “silent” after the loss that ended their season.

“It’s a long season. We went through a lot,” Booker added. “All of us wanted it. All of us wanted it.”    

In looking back in how the Suns lost this series, their inability to take care of the basketball. Their inability to keep the Bucks from scoring in the paint especially Antetokounmpo. Their inability to make three-pointers at a high clip, and how the Bucks Holiday and Middleton outplayed Paul and Booker the last four games of the series.

In the losses in Games 3 (120-100) and 4 (109-103) at the Bucks, the Suns totaled 32 turnovers, shot 29.6 percent (16 for 54) from three-point range, were outscored in the paint 102-80 and 31-6 in fast break points.

While the Suns took much better care of the ball in Game 5 with just nine turnovers and outscored the Bucks 52-46 in the paint, the Bucks scored 16 points off those Suns miscues, and outscored them 21-12 in fast break points, and while the Suns went 13 for 19 from three-point range, the Bucks shot 14 for 28 from three-point line.

In Game 6, the Suns struggled from three-point range going 6 for 25. The Bucks went to the foul line more and made more free throws going 25 for 29 from the charity stripe, led by the 17 for 19 by Antetokounmpo and the Suns went 16 for 19 from the foul line.

The Suns inability to control the paint to close the series circled around Ayton’s inability to match the intensity and focus that Antetokounmpo had.

After shooting at least 50 percent from the field or better in every game of the first three rounds of the 2021 Playoffs, Ayton had 4 for 10, 3 for 9, and 4 for 12 shooting games in The Finals. Scoring 22, 10 and 18 points in the first three games of The Finals, Ayton finished The Finals with games of six, 20, and 12 points to closeout the series. After registering double figure rebounds in four of the first five games of this series (19, 11, nine, 17, and 10 boards), Ayton only registered six boards in Game 6.

For most teams that accomplished what the Suns did winning 52 games in the regular season, their first 50-win season since 2010 and winning their first Pacific Division title since 2007. Paul was in the running for Kia MVP. Coach Williams finished second to Tom Thibodeau of New York Knicks for Kia Coach of the Year, and General Manager James Jones on NBA Executive of the Year. Making the playoffs for the first time in a decade and reaching The Finals for first time in 28 seasons would be a cause for celebration.

This Suns group though to a man, there is no such thing as moral victories, and while they acknowledge that what they did was special it does not take the sting out of the fact that they had a serious chance of holding their first Larry O’Brien trophy in their 53-year history and they let it slip away.

“That’s our team. That’s been the name of our team this whole season. We’re an emotional group,” Booker said. “We fight hard. We practice hard. We have a lot of fun together and we trust each other, and we love each other and we say that all the time. So, we had a common goal in bringing a championship back to Phoenix, and it’s tough to fall short.”

Paul concurred by saying about reaching The Finals for the first time in his aforementioned 16-year career and not winning it basically means getting “back to work” and trying to get back in the same position next season and having a different outcome.

“Ain’t no moral victories or what not,” Paul said. “We saw what it takes to get there, and hopefully we see wat it takes to get past that.”

“We grew all season long, especially starting out the way we did. Nobody probably expected us to be where we are, accept for us, you know. It is what it is. Like I said all season long with our team there ain’t moral victories.”

While Paul and the Suns might get back to work in terms of getting better, there is the matter of Paul and his $44.2 million player option that has to be settled this offseason.

Deciding whether he will opt into the final year of his current deal or decline it and become an unrestricted free agent will be something to watch because considering how he has shown in this past season with the Suns and the previous season with the Oklahoma City Thunder that there is plenty of gas left in his tank and a desire to win a title that maybe he could want to play elsewhere like with the Lakers and his longtime friend in James.

“It’ll take a while to process this or what not,” Paul said. “But it’s the same mentality. Get back to work. I ain’t retiring. That’s out. Back to work.”

Whether Paul does win that elusive title or not, to Booker his career resume speaks for itself and thinking that Paul needs a title to solidify his career is to all the true basketball fans is “complete nonsense.”

“He [Paul] led us this whole season, and this is our first year together,” Booker said of his backcourt teammate. “So now, just developing a relationship. Developing the trust amongst each other throughout the whole season, you know. For it to fall short like this is tough on all of us.”

Nearly three decades ago, the Phoenix Suns acquired a then soon to be future Hall of Famer in Charles Barkley in the hopes that he was the final piece of their journey to being NBA champions. They came awfully close but lost to as mentioned fellow Hall of Fame Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls in the 1993 Finals in six games.

The Suns back I November 2020 acquired future Hall of Famer Chris Paul in hopes of doing what they could not 28 years ago. They got halfway there winning Games 1 and 2 of 2021 Finals but lost the next four games and saw the Milwaukee Bucks win the title instead of them.

Longest Active NBA Title Droughts

Sacramento Kings: 69 seasons

Atlanta Hawks: 63 seasons

Phoenix Suns: 53 seasons (never won a title in franchise history)

Los Angeles Clippers: 51 seasons (never won a title in franchise history)

Milwaukee Bucks: 49 seasons (won their first title since 1971 in their third Finals trip)

The Barkley led Suns never made it back to The Finals falling the next three seasons to the eventual NBA champions in the Houston Rockets in 1994 and 1995 and fell in the opening-round of the 1996 Playoffs to the San Antonio Spurs.

A big part in whether or not the Suns will get another legitimate crack at winning a title will depend on whether Paul opts in to his previously mentioned $44.2 million player option or wants to decline it and move on, which is highly unlikely. Then there is the possibility he could ask to be traded to a contender like the Lakers and finally team up with his good friend in the aforementioned James.

The other part of the Suns chances of making it back to The Finals is how the rest of the Western Conference improves next season. All three teams the Suns took down in their run to the title round in the Lakers, Nuggets and Clippers had their star players out or hampered because of injury in James and Anthony Davis for the Lakers; Jamal Murray for the Nuggets; and two-time Finals MVP Kawhi Leonard for the Clippers.

While there will be a lot of factors that determine whether or not the Suns get another shot at winning a title moving forward, they feel that they have the foundation and culture in place to give themselves a shot at winning their first Larry O’Brien trophy sooner rather than later.

“We said the whole season we’re trying to win big, and we fell short of that. But like I said we have a foundation. We have a base for us to learn from,” Booker said. “An experience for us to learn from, and there is no moral victories in our locker room….We want to win a championship.”

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 7/17/2021 8:30 p.m. “NBA Countdown” ABC, presented by Doordash with Maria Taylor, Jalen Rose, and Adrian Wojnarowski; 7/21/2021 1:15 a.m. NBATV’s “Finals Postgame Show” with Kristen Ledlow, Isiah Thomas, Brendan Haywood, and Dennis Scott; 7/21/2021 3 a.m. ESPN news crawl and “Sportscenter” from Los Angeles, CA with Neil Everett and Stan Verrett; www.statmuse.com; https://www.nba.com/game/phx-vs-mil-0042000406/box-score/summary; https://en.m.wikpedia.org/wiki/Phoenix_Suns; https://www.espn.com/nba/player/gamelog/_/id/4278129/deandre-ayton; https://www.espn.com/nba/player/gamelog/_/id/3136193/devin-booker; and https://www.espn.com/nba/player/gamelog/_/id/2779/chris-paul.

J-Speaks: Bucks Win Second Title

On Saturday night, the team that represented the Eastern Conference in The Finals got one step closer to winning their second title in franchise history. Three days later in front of their home fans and nearly 65,000 that watched outside their home arena the Eastern Conference champions finally reached the top of the NBA mountain led by their perennial All-Star and two-time Kia MVP who dreamed of this moment as he prepared to be drafted into the NBA nearly a decade ago.

On Tuesday night, the Eastern Conference champion Milwaukee Bucks, who feel short of their goal to win a championship the last two postseasons got it done defeating the Western Conference champion Phoenix Suns 105-98 to win the 2021 Finals 4-2 and captured their second NBA title in franchise history in their third trip in franchise history to the NBA Finals.

Giannis Antetokounmpo led the way with a playoff career-high 50 points on 16 for 25 from the field and 17 for 19 from the foul line with 14 rebounds and a playoff career-high five blocks, earning the Bill Russell Finals MVP.

Fellow All-Star Khris Middleton added 17 points, five rebounds, five assists, and four steals, while reserve Bobby Portis poured in 16 points on 6 for 10 shooting and fellow All-Star Jrue Holiday nearly had a triple-double with 12 points, 11 assists, nine rebounds, and four steals. Brook Lopez added 10 points and eight rebounds.

Antetokounmpo 50-point night tied Hall of Famer Bob Pettit for the most points in a Finals clinching game. The five-time All-Star also became the first player to register 50-plus points, 10-plus rebounds, and five-plus blocks in a Finals game since 1974, where block shots became an official stat in 1973-74 season. 

Most Points Scored In Finals Clinching Game All-Time (All Were Done In Game 6)

Giannis Antetokounmpo (MIL) 50 points in 2021

Bob Pettit: 50 points in 1958

Michael Jordan: 45 points in 1998

Earvin “Magic” Johnson: 42 points (1980)

Shaquille O’Neal: 41 points in 2000

This championship clincher displayed the Bucks resiliency that had been on display this entire postseason. After leading 29-16 after the first quarter and led by 13 points early in the second quarter, the Suns outscored the Bucks 31-13 in the second quarter to lead 47-42 at the half. The Bucks bounced back in the third quarter outscoring the Suns 35-30 to tie the game 77-77 after three quarters as Antetokounmpo, who had 17 points, seven rebounds and three block shots on 6 for 10 shooting in the first half had on 6 for 10 shooting in the third and 7 for 7 from the foul line in the third quarter.

With the score tied 82-82 early in the fourth quarter the Bucks took control outscoring the Suns from that point 23-16 to close the game to win the title, led by Antetokounmpo’s 13 points, four rebounds and two block shots, going 4 for 5 from the field, and 5 for 6 from the foul line in the fourth quarter.

“It means a lot,” Antetokounmpo, who averaged 35.2 points, 13.2 rebounds, five assists, and 1.8 block shots on 62 percent from the field in the 2021 Finals said during the Finals trophy presentation to ESPN’s Malika Andrews. “I want to thank the city of Milwaukee for believing in me, you know. I want to thank my teammates. They played hard every freakin game, you know. I trusted this team. I wanted to do it here in this city. I wanted to do it with these guys. So, I’m happy. I’ happy we we’re able to get it done.”

While it may be easy to have expected Antetokounmpo and the Bucks to finally become NBA champions this season, it was an eight-year process that had  a lot of ups and a number of downs.

It began with the drafting of Antetokounmpo No. 15 overall in 2013 NBA Draft, an unknown prospect from Athens, Greece, who had dreams of being an NBA player and one day one of the best in the game.

“I’m an all-around player. I can jump. I can shoot and pass the ball,” a then 18-year-old 196-pound Antetokounmpo described his game. “I can do everything on the court. I want to be an NBA player.”

That dream became a reality as the Bucks took the guy that was eventually dubbed “The Greek Freak” No. 15 overall in 2013 NBA Draft.

In his first visit to the then Bucks arena the BMO Harris Bradley Center, Antetokounmpo with a couple members of his family looked into the rafters and saw the retired jerseys of Hall of Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Oscar Robertson and said, “Maybe 15, 20 years, maybe my number is up there next to Kareem, Oscar Robertson.”

The Bucks also that offseason acquired former Second-Round pick (No. 39 overall) out of Texas A&M Khris Middleton from the Detroit Pistons.   

The start of the Antetokounmpo era got off to a rough start as the Bucks registered an 89-157 record in his first three seasons, which included a 15-67 record in his and Middleton’s first season under then head coach Larry Drew, which was his lone season on the Bucks sidelines.

Things got better in 2014-15 season, the first of four under Hall of Famer Jason Kidd, where the Bucks went 41-41 and made the playoffs as the No. 6 Seed but lost to their Central Division rival the Chicago Bulls in six games.

After missing the 2016 Playoffs, the Bucks began their five straight seasons of making the postseason in 2016-17 season going 42-40, and while they fell in the First-Round to the Toronto Raptors in six games, Antetokounmpo won Kia Most Improved Player while now Indiana Pacers lead guard Malcolm Brogdon won Kia Rookie of the Year.

After a 44-38 mark the next season, the No. 7 Seeded Bucks played the eventual East runner-up Boston Celtics tough before falling in seven games. In the offseason, the Bucks fired then head coach Jason Kidd, the new head coach of the Dallas Mavericks after four seasons.

The summer of 2018, the Bucks went looking for a head coach that could get them over the hump and they hired former Hawks head coach Mike Budenholzer.

Over the next two seasons the Bucks would compile the best record in the regular season going 60-22 in 2018-19 and 56-17 in 2019-20, led by Antetokounmpo, who earned back-to-back Kia MVP awards, and was named Kia Defensive Player of the Year also in 2019-20. Coach Budenholzer earned 2018-19 Kia Coach of the Year, while Bucks General Manager John Horst won NBA Executive of the Year.

They Bucks in the 2019 Playoffs, swept their other Central Division rival the Detroit Pistons 4-0 in the opening-round to win their first playoff series since 2001 where Hall of Famer Ray Allen, Glenn “Big Dog” Robinson, and Sam Cassel led the Bucks to the East Finals, where they lost to Hall of Famer Allen Iverson and the Finals runner-up Philadelphia 76ers in seven games. After defeating the Celtics in five games in the East Semis, the Bucks after taking a 2-0 series lead in 2019 lost the final four games of the series to the eventual NBA champion Raptors in six games.

In the restart of the 2019-20 season due to the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic in Orlando, FL, the Bucks after taking down the No. 8 Seeded Orlando Magic in five games, fell in the East Semifinals to the eventual Eastern Conference champion and runner-up in the 2020 Finals in the Miami Heat in five games.

In summer of 2020, the Bucks in trying to upgrade their roster acquired from the New Orleans Pelicans Jrue Holiday, who they hoped was the final piece to help the Bucks win the championship.

That move then led to Antetokounmpo re-signing with the Bucks on a five-year $228 million super max contract extension, the largest contract in NBA history.

While the Bucks did not capture the best record in NBA in 2020-21 season, they played well enough to finish No. 3 in the East at 46-26.

In a rematch with the Heat, the Bucks played with a hunger and determination to beat the team that ended their championship dreams in the East Semis and they swept them 4-0.

After falling behind 2-0 in the East Semis against the Brooklyn Nets, losing Game 2 by 39 points (125-86), the Bucks won four of the next five games, including an epic Game 7 at the Nets 115-111 in overtime to take the series.

In the Eastern Conference Finals against the Atlanta Hawks, the Bucks dropped Game 1 116-113, which would end up being their only loss at home this postseason. They won Games 2 (125-91) and 3 (113-102) but they lost Game 4 (110-88) and they also lost Antetokounmpo to a hyperextended left knee early in the third quarter.

Behind Middleton and Holiday, the Bucks won the next two games winning Game 5 at home 123-112, and the series clincher 118-107 at the Hawks to take the series in six games and advance to The Finals for the first time since 1974, where they lost to the eventual NBA champion Celtics in seven games.

The Bucks began the 2021 Finals against the Suns back at full strength with the return of Antetokounmpo. However, they dropped Games 1 (1181-05) and 2 (118-108). The Bucks took both games at home, winning Game 3 (120-100) and Game 4 (109-103). They won Game 5 at the Suns (123-119) and as mentioned earlier won Game 6 back at home to win their second title in franchise history.

From the “Big Three” of Antetokounmpo, Middleton, and Holiday to the rest of the team, the Bucks togetherness and resilience won them their title and earned their “Big Three” more accolades to their respective career resumes, while the team also made some major NBA history.

The Bucks ended a 49-year drought since their last title in the aforementioned 1971, the longest drought in the NBA. The Bucks went 10-1 at home (6-6 on road) in 2021 Playoffs. 

Longest Active NBA Title Droughts

Sacramento Kings: 69 seasons

Atlanta Hawks: 63 seasons

Phoenix Suns: 53 seasons-yet to win a title

Los Angeles Clippers: 51 seasons

Milwaukee Bucks: 49 seasons 

The Bucks joined the 1977 Portland Trail Blazers, and 2006 Miami Heat as the three teams to win four straight games and the championship after falling behind 2-0 in NBA Finals history. The Bucks also joined those three championship teams along with the 1969 Celtics, and the 2016 Cleveland Cavaliers as teams to win The Finals after being down 2-0.

Antetokounmpo joined Hall of Famers Bob Pettit, the late Elgin Baylor, Rick Barry, Jerry West, and Michael Jordan, and the Los Angeles Lakers four-time NBA champion LeBron James as the only seven players to score 50 points in an NBA Finals Game. Antetokounmpo joined Bob Pettit as the only two players to score 50 in the championship clinching game.

Six Players with At Least 3 40-Point Games In NBA Finals Series All-Time

Jerry West:  10 such games

LeBron James: 8 such games

Michael Jordan: 6 such games

Shaquille O’Neal: 5 such games

Elgin Baylor: 4 such games

Rick Barry: 3 such games

Giannis Antetokounmpo: 3 such games

Antetokounmpo also joined Jordan and fellow Hall of Famer Hakeem Olajuwon, who led the Houston Rockets to back-to-back titles in 1994 and 1995 as the only three players in NBA history to win Kia MVP, Finals MVP, and Defensive Player of the Year in their careers. Jordan (1988), Olajuwon (1994), and Antetokounmpo (2020) are also the only three players to win Kia MVP and Kia Defensive Player of the Year in same season.

Antetokounmpo became just the fourth player with three games of at least 30 points and 10 rebounds in any playoff series and joined O’Neal as the only players to do so in The Finals all-time.

Antetokounmpo also joined Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (1974 and 1980), O’Neal (2000, 2001, and 2002), and James (2017) as the only three players to average 30-plus points and 10-plus rebounds on 50-plus percent from the field In a Finals series all-time.

He also joined future Olajuwon (1994 and 1995), future Hall of Famer Dirk Nowitzki (2011); three-time NBA champion with the San Antonio Spurs Tony Parker (2007) and his Hall of Famer Tim Duncan (1999, 2003, and 2005) as the five international players to win NBA Finals MVP.

When Antetokounmpo re-signed with the Bucks back in the offseason the hope was that this was the start of their championship run and a sign that a small market team can keep their star player.

That happened and Antetokounmpo helped lead the Bucks to the finish line of a journey that took five decades by making plays that were not only spectacular but were game changers, especially in the prior two games that put the Bucks in position to win it on Tuesday night.

He had the block on the dunk attempt by Suns’ Deandre Ayton off a lob pass from All-Star Devin Booker that led to a layup by Middleton. Then in the closing seconds of Game 5 finished a lob pass off a steal from Holiday that he dunked while getting fouled by Suns All-Star lead guard Chris Paul. Then he capped it off scoring 33 of his 50 points in second half of Game 6 clincher.  

“This is my city. They trust me. They believe in me,” Antetokounmpo said during the Finals trophy presentation. “Like its easy to go somewhere and go win a championship with somebody else. It’s easy. I could go to a super team and just do my part to win a championship and steal one. But this is the hard way to do it, and we did it. We [bleep] did it.”

What Antetokounmpo did more than anything in this Game 6 clincher to get the Bucks to was make his free throws, which he has struggled to do the entire postseason, especially in The Finals.

Antetokounmpo entered Game 6 shooting 55.6 percent for the 2021 postseason. In the first three games of The Finals, he went 31 for 47 (66 percent) from the foul line. He was even worse at 8 for 19 (42 percent) in Games 4 and 5. But in Game 6, Antetokounmpo shot 17 for 19 from the foul line (89.5 percent).

“Don’t let nobody tell you what you can be or what you cannot do, you know. People told me I can’t make my free throw. I made my free throws tonight, and I’m a freakin champion,” Antetokounmpo said in his postgame presser while holding the Larry O’Brien trophy and his Finals MVP in both hands. “I made then when I’m supposed to make them.”

Along with Antetokounmpo making his free throws, Middleton’s shot making in the clutch throughout the entire playoffs and Holiday’s defense and contributions offensively made a huge difference in the Bucks winning it all on Tuesday night.

Middleton’s jumper with 56.9 seconds left in regulation sealed the win in Game 6. Going back to Game 1 of the opening-round versus the Heat, Middleton’s jumper with 00.5 seconds left in overtime helped the Bucks to a 109-107 win.

In the previously mentioned Game 7 win in East Semis at the Nets, Middleton’s go-ahead jumper with 40.1 seconds left that put the Bucks on top and eventually won them the game and series.

In Game 3 victory of East Finals at Hawks, Middleton scored a playoff career-high of 20 of his then playoff career-high tying 38 points in the fourth quarter. In the Game 6 clincher of the series at Hawks, Middleton scored 23 of his 32 points in third quarter.

The Bucks tied The Finals 2-2 in a nail-biting win versus Suns thanks to Middleton’s new playoff career-high of 40 points, with 14 of those points coming in the fourth quarter, that included the final 10 points of the contest.

After struggling for much of the playoffs with his production on the road, Middleton came up big in the Game 5 win at the Suns with 29 points, seven boards, and five assists on 12 for 23 shooting, which included three made three-pointers. Middleton hit the game-clinching free throws in the finals seconds that got the Bucks within a win of their second title in franchise history.

“It means everything that they trust in me,” Middleton said during the trophy presentation to Andrews on making timely shots for the Bucks in the clutch. “Each time late in game, they tell me to go get the ball, shoot it, pass it, whatever you do, just play with confidence. Be aggressive. And that gives me all the confidence in the world when my teammates have it.”

Middleton before becoming a two-time All-Star as mentioned earlier was a Second-Round pick (No. 39) overall by the Pistons. He spent time in the NBA’s G-League, and after just one season with the Pistons was dealt to the Bucks.

It would have been enough to make a lot of players quit if they had to go the extra mile to make it in the NBA. That is what  the Charleston, SC native did was work at his craft day-in and day-out and it led Middleton to becoming not only the first G-League alum to become an All-Star but a solid one-A option for the Bucks alongside Antetokounmpo. Now they can call themselves NBA champions.

“Just keeping my belief in my faith and then having this team around me, this organization, all my teammates every day, they wanted me to work. And it’s easy to come to work with guys like this,” Middleton, who averaged 24.0 points, 6.3 rebounds, and 5.3 assists on 49 percent shooting in The Finals said. “All they want to do is compete, hoop, and play. So, it’s easy to come in everyday and every night and try to get better.” 

While Antetokounmpo and Middleton helped the Bucks become a perennial postseason participant and on the fence of becoming champions, but it was the addition of the aforementioned Holiday that helped the Bucks become champions, especially the last two games of East Finals without Antetokounmpo and the entire 2021 Finals.

Holiday had 25 points, 13 assists, and six rebounds in Game 5 of East Finals versus Hawks. He followed that up with a near triple-double of 27 points, nine assists, nine rebounds, four steals and two block shots, going 11 for 23 from the field, hitting four three-pointers in the Game 6 clincher. Holiday had 17 of those 27 points in second half.

In Game 5 of The Finals at the Suns, Holiday had 27 points, 13 assists, and three steals on 12 for 20 shooting, including 3 for 6 from three-point range.

That previously mentioned finish on the alley-oop dunk by Antetokounmpo from Holiday in the final 20 seconds came off a steal by Holiday on Suns’ Devin Booker in the final 20 seconds.

While he went just 4 for 19 shooting, including 2 for 7 from three-point range in Game 6, Holiday still made his imprint on the game with his ability to find his open teammates, his rebounding and his defense on the Suns starting guards of Booker and Paul.

“They embraced me, you know,” Holiday who averaged 16.7 points, 9.3 assists, 6.2 boards, and 2.2 steals in 2021 Finals said to Andrews on why he made such an immediate impact in his first season with the Bucks. “They told me what the deal was from the beginning. I’ve seen all the work they’ve put in. How close they’ve gotten, and they believed in me honestly, and coming here was obviously the greatest thing of my career.”

There have been many times over the course of the last two seasons that Bucks head coach Mike Budenholzer had faced questions from the outside about if his team could get it done under his watch. So much so, that if the Bucks had another flame out in the playoffs that he was going to get the axe. That came very close to reality in the East Semis in Game 7 if two-time Finals MVP Kevin Durant’s foot had been on the three-point line in the final second of regulation that tied the game.

Throughout the course of the past two seasons, Budenholzer had faced a lot of questions about his ability to make in game adjustments as well as his ability to adjust his style on both ends of the floor to the personnel of the roster.

Those questions were especially asked when Portis did not play at the close of the East Semis against the Nets.

But as he learned in his time as an assistant coach with the San Antonio Spurs working for head coach Gregg Popovich, Coach Budenholzer stayed the course and now can call himself an NBA championship head coach and a five-time championship coach counting his four titles (1999, 2003, 2005, and 2007) as an assistant with the Spurs.

From day one as head coach of the Bucks, Coach Budenholzer preached getting better, embracing competition, playing together, building championship habits each and every day from practice to gametime and it all came together in 2020-21.

“These players, they’re champions every day. Every day they come to the building, they’re champions,” Budenholzer said during championship presentation. “They’ve embraced competing. They’ve embraced playing together, and it’s made them champions tonight. I couldn’t be more prouder of them. I’m so happy for these players.”

One player Coach Budenholzer was so happy and is happy to work with everyday over the past three seasons is Antetokounmpo, who Budenholzer said is a “more amazing human being than he is a player.”

Coach Budenholzer added that the championship culture that the Bucks have built over the past three seasons that finally paid off with a title on Tuesday night started with the leadership of Antetokounmpo and Middleton, and that he is “glad” to be a part of ,something as “beautiful” as this.

This beautiful moment is also the result of Coach Budenholzer and the Bucks front office in the ownership group of Wes Edens, Marc Lasry, Jamie Dinan, and Mike Fascitelli working in tandem to identify the right players to draft and sign in free agency.

To put that into perspective, there is only one lottery pick on the Bucks roster in Lopez, who was taken No. 10 overall by the then New Jersey Nets (now Brooklyn Nets) in 2008 NBA Draft. Six players on the Bucks were chosen in picks 15-30, including the aforementioned Antetokounmpo and Holiday, No. 17 overall pick in 2009 by the Philadelphia 76ers, where he played from 2009-2013 and then for the New Orleans Pelicans from 2013-2020. The are seven Second-Round picks on the roster, including the previously mentioned Middleton, and four undrafted players, that includes P.J. Tucker, who the Bucks acquired at the Mar. 25 trade deadline from the Rockets and former Spur Bryn Forbes, whose perimeter shooting made a huge difference in the First-Round against the Heat, and made up for the loss of starting guard Donte DiVincenzo, who was lost for the remainder of the 2021 Playoffs in Game 3 of the First-Round at the Heat due to an ankle injury.

“Acknowledge first the city of Milwaukee, for the fans for everything you guys have done,” Bucks co-owner Marc Lasry said to start the trophy presentation to Andrews. “I want to acknowledge our coach [Budenholzer], our GM [Jon Horst], but most of all, I want to acknowledge our player. So, thank you.”

This past season marked 50 years since the Bucks won their first title in franchise history, taking down the then Baltimore Bullets (now Washington Wizards) in a four-game sweep on Apr. 30, 1971. They were led by aforementioned Hall of Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar who in his third season then won Kia MVP and Finals MVP. The team was also led by Hall of Famer Oscar, who the Bucks acquired from the Cincinnati Royals that season to compliment Abdul-Jabbar, who was Lew Alcindor then.

The Bucks that season compiled the second most wins in NBA history then at 66, which included a 20-game winning streak, an NBA record before the 33-game winning streak by the eventual NBA champion Los Angeles Lakers in 1971-72 season. They went 12-2 in the playoffs that season on their way to the title.

“I think it’s great for the city of Milwaukee,” Abdul-Jabbar said to Neil Everett on late night addition of ESPN’s “Sportscenter” from Los Angeles, CA. “The fans are so great there. They’re loyal. They’re crazy and they stick with it.”

“So, it’s been 50 years, and I’m happy for them, and I think this can be a new era for them. They’ve been waiting for this for a long time.”

Perhaps the most symbolic part of the Bucks winning the 2021 title was the tremendous support shown by the fans of squad who packed not only Fiserv Forum throughout their playoff run but especially in the Finals. They particularly showed up in large numbers outside the arena, which became known as “The Deer District.”

To put how big that fan support was into context, there was a great deal of division not just in the country but in the state of Wisconsin after 29-year-old African American male Jacob Blake was seriously injured after Kenosha, WI policeman Rusten Sheskey shot him in the back on Aug. 23, 2020. Three days later, the Bucks protested playing Game 4 of the First-Round series against the Magic.

Nearly one month and three days later many of those same fans were united and celebrating together for their team that won its first title in five decades.

Tuesday night was not only the second title in their third appearance in the NBA Finals for the Milwaukee Bucks, their first title in 50 seasons, it was a moment of celebration and joy for an organization that built its way to being a champion one piece at a time.

It was built around drafting and signing the right players that played well collectively. It was drafting, and acquiring a trio of players in Giannis Antetokounmpo, Khris Middleton, and Jrue Holiday who care only about winning and playing together. It is about head coach in Mike Budenholzer and his coaching staff having a system that brings the best out of collective roster on both ends of the court.

More than anything this championship for the Bucks is about perseverance. After falling short of just getting to The Finals the last two seasons, it would have been easy for the Bucks front office to make major changes like firing head coach Mike Budenholzer or possibly trading Middleton. Instead, they kept Budenholzer, made the major deal in acquiring Holiday, while also adding solid complimentary players in Bobby Portis, P.J. Tucker and Byrn Forbes.

After getting over some tough hurdles in the 2021 Playoffs, the Bucks are now NBA champions and now it is all about hopefully doing it again in the 2021-22 season.

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 7/20/2021 8:30 p.m. “NBA Countdown,” ABC, presented by Doordash with Maria Taylor, Jalen Rose, and Adrian Wojnarowski; 4/20/2021 9 p.m. “Phoenix Suns versus Milwaukee Bucks,” Game 6 NBA Finals ABC, presented by YouTube TV with Mike Breen, Jeff Van Gundy, Mark Jackson, and Malika Andrews; https://www.nba.com/game/phx-vs-mil-0042000406/box-score; 7/21/2021 3 a.m. ESPN news crawl and “Sportscenter” from Los Angeles, CA with Neil Everett and Stan Verrett; 7/21/2021 1:15 a.m. NBATV’s “Finals Postgame Show,” with Kristen Ledlow, Isiah Thomas, Brendan Haywood, and Dennis Scott; 7/21/2021 www.thestar.com story, “Giannis Antetokounmpo Is The Deer In The Headlines As Bucks Win First NBA Title In 50 Years,” by Doug Smith; www.statmuse.com/nba/ask/players-to-have-3-40-point-games-in-nba-finals; https://www.espn.com/nba/player/gamelog/_/id/39995/jrue-holiday; https://www.espn.com/nba/player/gamelog/_/id/6609/khris-middleton; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milwaukee_Bucks.

Tuesday, July 6, 2021

J-Speaks: 2021 NBA Finals Preview


While the 2021 NBA Finals maybe a little bit different because of the participants being relatively new, the same kind of excitement and enthusiasm from the fanbases of both teams will be at a fever pitch. But like this entire 2021 NBA Playoffs where injuries to star players has been at the forefront, it will be just the same to start the championship round. This NBA Finals will also be a legacy closer for the two headliners involved. Here is the J-Speaks 2021 NBA Finals Preview.

Since the turn of the century, the NBA Finals have featured the Los Angeles Lakers, Miami Heat, Cleveland Cavaliers, San Antonio Spurs, the then New Jersey (now Brooklyn) Nets, Detroit Pistons, Dallas Mavericks, and Golden State Warriors at least twice. Since the 2000 Finals, LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson Kawhi Leonard, Dirk Nowitzki, Tim Duncan, Kevin Durant, and the late Kobe Bryant have taken over the small screen during this time of the NBA season.

For the first time in a little over two decades will there be two different squads competing for the Larry O’Brien trophy, but we will have two different headlining stars on both sides with the Eastern Conference champion Milwaukee Bucks led by two-time Kia MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo and the Western Conference champion Phoenix Suns led by 11-time All-Star, 10-time All-NBA selection, and nine-time NBA All-Defensive team selection Chris Paul, who will be making his first Finals appearance in his 16-year NBA career.

For the Eastern Conference champion Bucks, this will be their third appearance in The Finals and their first since 1974, when they lost to the Boston Celtics in seven games when the Bucks were a part of the Western Conference. Their lone championship came in 1971 as Hall of Famers Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Lew Alcindor then) and Oscar Robertson led them to a 4-0 sweep against the then Baltimore Bullets (now Washington Wizards).

This will also be the third time in The Finals for the Western Conference champion Suns, will play for the Larry O’Brien trophy, their first since 1993 when Kia MVP from that season in Hall of Famer and current NBA on TNT studio analyst Charles Barkley led them Suns to the 1993 NBA Finals, where they lost to fellow Hall of Famer and five-time Kia MVP Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls 4-2.

Two things can be expected in this Finals tilt, a lot of scoring and down to the wire games.

Bucks led the NBA in scoring at 120.1 points per game, registering a franchise record 120 points or more 41 times during regular season. The Suns ranked No. 7 in “The Association” in scoring average at 115.3 points per contest.

Only the Nets (49.4 percent) had a higher field goal percentage during the regular season then the 49.0 percent from the field average by the Suns, who were slightly ahead of the Bucks who ranked No. 3 in field percentage at 48.7 percent.

The Bucks ranked No. 5 in three-point percentage during the regular season, while the Suns were No. 7 at 37.8 percent from three-point range.

During the regular season, the Suns took both meetings each by one point, winning 125-124 at home over the Bucks on Feb. 10 on ESPN, and 128-127 at the Bucks in overtime on Apr. 19.

The final margin of victory each time was determined by a free throw by Suns’ Devin Booker, who split a pair at the foul line with 33 seconds left in the first matchup, and the Bucks Giannis Antetokounmpo missing a pull-up 20-foot jumper with 02.8 seconds left in regulation. The second matchup Booker hit the game-winning free throw after he was fouled by the Bucks P.J. Tucker with 00.3 seconds left in the extra period. The Bucks were without Antetokounmpo the final 4:02 of OT because of cramping in his leg.

Antetokounmpo averaged 40.0 points and 9.5 rebounds on 60 percent from the field in the season series against the Suns. The 40-point average by Antetokounmpo on 60 percent shooting are the highest marks in a single regular season against the Suns since Jordan averaged 42 points on 60 percent from the field in the two tilts against the Suns in 1992-93 season.

Booker averaged 27.0 points in the two games in the regular season against the Bucks.

While the short-term journey gets a lot of the headlines in how the Bucks and Suns reached The Finals for the first time in 47 and 28 years respectably, there is more to the Bucks’ and Suns’ paths that has both squads just four wins away from calling themselves NBA champions.

Prior to breaking through in the 2021 Eastern Conference Finals by defeating the Atlanta Hawks in six games, the Bucks after back-to-back stellar regular seasons compiling the best record in the league lost in the East Semifinals to the Miami Heat 4-1 in the 2020 Playoffs and falling in six games to the eventual NBA champion Toronto Raptors the year before in the East Finals.

The Bucks prior to this three-year run, made the postseason nine times, falling in the First-Round eight of those nine times. They reached the East Finals in 2001 led by Hall of Famer Ray Allen, Sam Cassell, and Glenn “Big Dog” Robinson, and head coach George Karl, but fell to Hall of Famer Allen Iverson and the Philadelphia 76ers in seven games.

Just seven years ago, the Bucks were one of the worst teams in the NBA going just 15-67 in 2013-14 campaign.

Led by the ownership group of Wes Edens, Marc Lasry, Jamie Dinan, and Mike Frascitelli, and General Manager Jon Horst, the Bucks built the team into a title contender from scratch from building the proper roster that could compete for a championship to finding the right coach, who could assemble a coaching staff that could get that roster to play at a championship level. 

It began with the drafting of Antetokounmpo No. 15 overall in 2013. The acquisition of Khris Middleton from the Detroit Pistons on July 13, 2013. On May 17, 2018, they hired former Hawks head coach and longtime Spurs assistant Mike Budenholzer as their new head coach, who led the Hawks to the East Finals three years earlier. Signed Brook Lopez in free agency on July 17, 2018. Drafting Donte DiVincenzo No. 17 overall in 2018 out of Villanova, who will not play in The Finals because of an injury sustained in First-Round against the Heat. Signing in free agency reserve swingman Pat Connaughton on August 1, 2018.

The moves that put the Bucks in position to win it all came this past offseason with the acquisition of All-Star floor general Jrue Holiday on Nov. 24, 2020, in a four-team deal that involved the Denver Nuggets and Oklahoma City Thunder. They signed sharp-shooter Bryn Forbes two days after acquiring Holiday as well as signed Bobby Portis in free agency. On Mar. 19, the Bucks acquired P.J. Tucker from the Houston Rockets to bring toughness and three-point shooting.

Unlike the regular season, where they compiled the best-record in “The Association” the past two seasons, the Bucks used this past regular season to tinker with their style of play on both ends to be more prepared for the postseason.

It all came together the first three rounds of the 2021 Playoffs as the Bucks took down the Heat 4-0 in the First Round, winning by an average of 20.5 points. They overcame a 2-0 series deficit in the East Semis against the Nets to win the series in seven games as Antetokounmpo registered at least 30 points and 10 rebounds in 6 of the 7 games. In the East Finals, the Bucks lost Antetokounmpo in the third quarter of Game 4 with a hyperextended left knee. Led by Middleton, Holiday, and Lopez, the Bucks won Game 5 123-112 and Game 6 at the Hawks 118-107 to win the Eastern Conference and punch their ticket to The Finals.

“It’s been a long journey. But it’s been a great journey. It’s been worth it,” Middleton, who scored 23 of his game-high 32 points in the Game 6 clincher on 10 for 22 shooting, including 4 for 10 from three-point range said postgame about the Bucks journey to The Finals. “After winning 15 games my first year here to seven years not making the playoffs, to the last two years thinking we had a chance, and we just didn’t do enough. And now we’re here.”

Middleton, who scored 16 straight points in the third quarter of Game 6 that helped to create some distance for the Bucks, with Holiday contributing 11 points of his own in the period.

As great as Middleton was in Game 6 as well as in Game 5 with 26 points, 13 rebounds, eight assists, two steals on 10 for 20 shooting, Holiday and Lopez really took their personal games up a few notches the last two games of the East Finals.

In Game 5 Lopez registered a game-high, season-high and playoff career-high 33 points on 14 for 18 from the floor with seven rebounds and four blocks, scoring 26 of those 33 points in the paint, his most since scoring 30 paint points in a game in Feb. 2016 for the Nets. The Bucks behind Lopez outscored the Hawks in the paint 66-36 in the paint in Game 5.

After registering 25 points, 13 assists and six rebounds in the Bucks wire-to-wire victory in Game 5, Holiday scored 17 of his 27 points in the second half to go along with nine assists, nine rebounds, four steals, and two block shots on 11 for 23 from the field, making four three-pointers in the Game 6 clincher at the Hawks.

“I just thought there was a need,” Holiday, who will be playing in his first Finals in his 12th NBA season told ESPN’s “NBA: The Jump” crew of Rachel Nichols, Richard Jefferson, and Kendrick Perkins about his approach in Games 5 and 6 of East Finals against the Hawks without Antetokounmpo. “Giannis does so much for us. He attacks the basket, gets into the paint, get fouls. He makes plays out of it too. And defensively, he does so much for us as well.”

“So, I felt like somebody needed to step up, and I figured that should be me. I kept on hearing my vet [Perkins] tell me to step up. So, I had to do what I had to do.”

The Bucks as a whole team did what they needed to do, which has not always been the case not just this postseason at times, but in their flameouts the previous two postseasons.

There were times where they gave the ball to Antetokounmpo and waited for him to make things happen, especially when he initiated the offense from the top of the three-point line.

There have been times this postseason, where the Bucks settled for three-point shots instead of attacking the paint where they had a huge advantage.

Without Antetokounmpo on the floor, the Bucks took the ownness as a team to be better on both ends of the floor. Playing on a string as a team. The result, taking down the aforementioned Hawks where they were a plus-40 in points in the paint (338-240) for the series.

“We’re just a team that’s trying to play unselfish, trying to do it as a committee,” Middleton said at Finals Media Day on Monday. “When Giannis is out there, a lot of times we can just give him the ball and let him go to work and let him orchestrate a lot of things out there. Without him, we have to do it by committee, moving the ball around, driving it a little bit more, playing just a little bit faster with a little bit of different flow. But I think guys have done a great job of adjusting with him out, with him not out there in two of the most important games of our season.”   

The task does not get any easier for the Bucks who will be facing in The Finals a Phoenix Suns squad who is looking to complete their own long journey with their first NBA title.

Prior to this season, the Suns had not made the playoffs in a decade. The last time there was playoff basketball in the “Valley of the Sun” was 2010 where now Nets head coach Steve Nash, Nets assistant Coach Amar’e Stoudemire, Hall of Famer Grant Hill, and then head coach Alvin Gentry (now Kings assistant coach) fell to the eventual NBA champion Los Angeles Lakers, led by the late Hall of Famer Kobe Bryant in six games.

Aside from winning 40 games in 2010-11 and 48 games in 2013-14, just missing out on the Playoffs that season, the Suns compiled those other seven prior to the 2019-20 campaign of just 33, 25, 39, 23, 24, 21, and 19.

One bad decision after another led to dysfunction both on the court and in the front office, where owner since 2004 Robert Sarver became a laughingstock of not just the NBA but all of pro sports.

Like the Bucks, the Suns had to build themselves into a title contender by getting things right first in the front office, through the draft, and hiring the right head coach and coaching staff to get the best out of roster built by the front office. 

Through the draft, the Suns reshaped their roster by drafting Booker No. 13 overall in 2015 out of University of Kentucky. Three years later with the No. 1 overall pick in the draft, the Suns selected out of the University of Arizona and Hillcrest Prep Academy’s Deandre Ayton. In that same draft, the Suns acquired the draft rights to No. 10 overall pick Mikal Bridges. On July 6, 2019, the Suns acquired big man Dario Saric along with the draft rights to No. 11 overall pick of 2019 draft in sharp-shooter Cameron Johnson out of University of North Carolina.

Even with the roster taking shape, the Suns still had their difficulties winning consistently because of the void in leadership in the front office and on the sidelines.

After firing Coach Gentry halfway through the 2012-13 season, the Suns from 2013-19 had five head coaches (Lindsey Hunter in 2013; Jeff Hornacek from 2013-16; Earl Watson in 2016-17; Jay Triano in 2017-18; and Igor Kokoskov in 2018-19), with Hornacek being the only one lasting for more than one season.

The next step in the Suns reconstruction came in the front office with the hiring three-time NBA champion with the Heat and Cavaliers James Jones, who played 14 NBA seasons (2003-17) with the Indiana Pacers, Suns, Portland Trail Blazers, Heat, and Cavaliers, who began as Vice President of Basketball Operations on July 19, 2017, to being named interim General Manager alongside assistant General Manager Trevor Bukstein and becoming the permanent GM at the end of the 2018-19 season. On May 3, 2019, the Suns hired Monty Williams as their new head coach. 

Things did not get any better under Coach Williams as the team was 26-39 when the season was put on pause because of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic. When the season resumed in Orlando, FL, the Suns were one of 22 teams invited to the restart to participate in the final eight games of the regular season.

While the odds were stacked against them in making the playoffs, the Suns finished as the only undefeated team in the restart going 8-0, just missed out on the playoffs by one game as they finished the season 34-39.

In the summer 2020, the Suns acquired who they hoped as the final piece in getting them back to the postseason in perennial All-Star Chris Paul from the Oklahoma City Thunder. They also signed veteran Jae Crowder, who played in the 2020 Finals for the Heat against the Lakers.

Excluding the first NBA Finals, the six games of total NBA Finals experience combined by both the Bucks and Suns (all from Crowder) will be the second fewest entering the championship round. The aforementioned series between the 76ers and Trail Blazers in 1977 had a combined zero games of NBA Finals experience, though some of the players had previously appeared in the ABA Finals.

The talent and veteran savvy of Paul combined with the talents and hunger of Booker, who earned his second All-Star selection back in February, while Paul earned his 11th, Ayton, Bridges, Johnson, Crowder, and Torrey Craig, who the Suns acquired from Bucks at Mar. 25 trade deadline, along with the discipline, focus and attention to detail from Coach Williams, the Suns went 51-21 during the regular season, earning their first trip to the playoffs in a decade.

The Suns playoff journey began against the defending NBA champion Lakers led by their dynamic duo reigning Finals MVP and four-time Kia MVP LeBron James and fellow perennial All-Star Anthony Davis.

Along with dealing with their opponent, the Suns had to deal with a shoulder injury to Paul in Game 1 of the series, which they won 99-90. The Suns would drop the next two games though to fall behind in the series 2-1.

Along with the loss of Davis due to injury in Game 4, the Suns got off the pavement and won Game 4 of series 100-92 to square things up 2-2. They dominated the Lakers back at home in Game 5 115-85, and then closed them out on their homecourt 113-100.

In the West Semifinals, the Suns took a part the depleted Denver Nuggets in a 4-0 sweep as they advanced to the West Finals for the first time since the aforementioned 2010.

In the West Finals, they took Game 1 versus the Los Angeles Clippers 120-114. They stole Game 2-104-103 thanks to an inbounds pass from Crowder that led to the game-winning lob dunk by Ayton, which has been dubbed the “Valley-Oop.”

The Suns won Games 1 and 2 without Paul, who was on the shelf after testing positive for COVID-19. In his absence, Paul’s understudy Cameron Payne, who joined the Suns in the restart in Orlando last season and has played very well in the playoffs had 11 points and nine assists in Game 1 with just one turnover, and a playoff career-high of 29 points and nine assists, two steals and two blocks, and zero turnovers in Game 2.

After dropping Game 3 at the Clippers (106-92), the Suns won a defensive struggle in Game 4 (84-80) at the Clippers to be one win away from The Finals. That win did not come in Game 5 back at home as the Clippers staved off elimination with a 116-102 win. The Suns returned the favor though with a 130-103 win at the Clippers to earn their first trip to The Finals since 1993.

In the first three rounds of the 2021 Playoffs, the Suns went 12-4, clinching each series on the road, where they compiled a 6-2 record this postseason. They never faced an elimination game in any of the first three rounds.

To put into context how incredible of a run this has been for the Suns to reach The Finals, they became the first team in NBA history to play for the Larry O’Brien trophy after missing the postseason 10 straight seasons. Before that, the 2019-20 Lakers and 1976-77 Trail Blazers were tied for the longest droughts of missing the playoffs then reaching The Finals.

They joined the 2011 Heat as the only two teams in the last 35 seasons to reach The Finals after three seasons of having the worst record in the league.

The Suns also joined the Heat (2007-11), Rockets (1982-86), and 76ers (1973-77) as the four teams to from the worst record in “The Association” to an appearance in The Finals within a four-year span in last 50 years.

This Finals appearance is something that means a lot not just for the Suns as an organization but for the main cogs in this machine in Coach Williams, Booker, and Paul.

After a nine-year career playing for the New York Knicks, Spurs, Nuggets, Orlando Magic, and 76ers, Williams began his NBA coaching career as a staff intern with the Spurs in the spring of 2005.

In the fall of that year, Williams was hired as an assistant coach on now Hawks head coach Nate McMillan’s staff with the Portland Trail Blazers.

Five years later, Williams was hired as the head coach of the then New Orleans Hornets (now Pelicans), becoming then the youngest coach in NBA history at age 38. In his first season the Hornets under Williams and then lead guard in Paul made the Playoffs at 46-36 but lost in the opening-round to the No. 2 Seeded Lakers. After seasons of winning 21, 27, and 34 games, the now Pelicans under Williams in 2014-15 went 45-37, but again lost in the First-Round to the eventual NBA champion Warriors and was let go after five seasons, compiling a 173-221 record, including going just 2-8 in the postseason.

On June 29, 2015, Williams associate head coach on the staff of head coach Billy Donovan with the Oklahoma City Thunder.

On Feb. 10, 2016, Williams suffered a major loss when his wife Ingrid died from a car crash in Oklahoma City, OK from her car being struck by a vehicle that crossed lanes after losing control. Mrs. Williams left behind her husband and their five children. On June 1, 2016, the Thunder announced that Williams would not return to the team.

In 2016 while heeling from the loss of his wife, Williams worked as Vice President of Basketball Operations for the Spurs.

Two seasons later, Williams returned to coaching when he joined the coaching staff of then head coach Brett Brown and the 76ers as the lead assistant coach.

In getting his second chance at being a head coach with the Suns, Williams in getting feedback from some of his former players with the Pelicans, he learned that he had to change how he coached will not losing the essence of his philosophy as a coach along with the standards of what he expects from his players.

Coach Williams, who won 50 games in the regular season for the first time in his career and with a 12-4 mark so far this postseason pushed his playoff record to one game above .500 (13-12) said to ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt postgame after the Game 6 clincher that this was something he always wanted to be a part of his whole career, especially after experiencing this kind of winning while with the Spurs.

When he got the head coaching job with the Suns, Williams said to Van Pelt that every player that came into his program that the essence of his coaching is to serve, especially as someone who believes in Christ.

“And I tell them all the time, if I get on you, I’m not calling you out. I’m calling you up,” Williams said about how he coaches his players. “You have potential and I have to work my tail off to help you to reach that potential. And I think guys have embraced that. They understand that if I’m direct, black, and white with them, it’s not to make them feel bad. I want them to win. I want their families to enjoy it, and it’s served us well.”

A perfect example of this is when he and Paul were first together in New Orleans, Williams believed his way was the only way instead of at times taking input from one of his key players.

Reunited with Paul, that communication has been incredible, and while he still coaches his team hard, it has done with the approach as he has said of not calling the players out but calling them up. Meaning, he coaches his team in a way where they respect where he is coming from, and it brings the best out of them.

“I’ve told people. I’m not ashamed to tell anybody that the most success I’ve had as a coach is with Chris,” Williams said to Van Pelt on Paul’s impact on the Suns this season, adding, “and the conversations we’ve had off the floor or on the floor is always about winning.”

“It’s always about how to make other people better. He picks my brain. I pick his brain. I tend to follow him when he has  an instinct about a certain situation. And for whatever the reason he trust me to put him in situations where he can be successful.”

That is especially true of Ayton where before he was not as dedicated to his craft. Because of how Coach Williams and Paul have stayed on him throughout this season, Ayton is as dedicated to getting better and that has resulted in him shooting at least 50 percent from the field in all 16 games so far this postseason, the longest such streak by a player in NBA Playoff history in the 24-second shot clock era (1954-55). Along with averaging 16.2 points so far this postseason, which is his first, Ayton is also No. 3 in the 2021 Playoffs in rebounds per game at 11.8 and is No. 2 in the Playoffs in double-doubles with 11.

“Just the way how we approach the game period,” Ayton, who had 16 points and 17 rebounds in the Game 6 clincher said to ESPN's Dave McMenamin on Monday at Media Day how specifically Paul has influenced him and the Suns throughout this season. "It's something as young guys we pick up on, and we respect him at a high, high level. And he respects us the same." 

"Just to get the same respect in the locker room, off the court and a dude like him whose a Hall of Famer just doing what he does and for who he is. It's something you can't really talk about. It feels like Michael Jordan or like LeBron James on the court with you. And to see him  [Paul] everyday, you just start to pick it up."   

“But you know what, it’s life and we just got to enjoy this night, get back in the lab and get ready for The Finals.”  

Williams also to Van Pelt about seeing his players celebrate after winning Game 6 at the Clippers to reach The Finals, “But to be a head coach in this position, it’s hard to describe,” Williams said to Van Pelt. “I’m just grateful, and I think I’m just getting old because I really enjoyed watching our players enjoy the moment. But I’m so blessed to coach the guys I coach, to work, the people I work with. To have a job. This kind of job is something I don’t take for granted.”

This postseason, the Suns starting backcourt of Booker and Paul have for sure not taken anything for granted.

As mentioned earlier, Paul’s postseason could have been derailed from a shoulder injury sustained in Game 1 of the opening-round versus the Lakers.

It could have been another moment of unfortunate luck for Paul, who has seen his dreams of winning a title derailed by injury, like in Game 5 of the 2018 West Finals versus the eventual NBA champion Golden State Warriors while with the Rockets. They lost in seven games and lost the next year in West Semis in six against the Warriors and Paul was eventually dealt that offseason to the Thunder.

At this point in his career, Paul was labeled as an injury prone player whose hardnose, take no prisoners, follow my lead at all times style wore out with his superstar teammates like now Nets All-Star forward Blake Griffin with the Clippers and fellow All-Star and 2018 Kia MVP James Harden.

Last season with the Thunder though, Paul changed his diet, reshaped his body, and toned his approach and help guide the Thunder to the playoffs in the restart in Orlando, where they took his former team the Rockets to the brink before falling in seven games.

In reuniting with Coach Williams in Phoenix, the pair were the driving force in the Suns as mentioned winning 50 games and returning to the Playoffs for the first time in a decade and winning their first Pacific Division title since 2007.

After a rough start to 2021 Playoffs against the Lakers because of a shoulder injury, Paul  raised his play to his future Hall of Fame stature first in the West Semis against the Nuggets averaging 25.5 points and 10.3 assists on 61.3 percent from the field, and 58.3 percent from three-point range.

In the Game 4 clinching 125-118 win of West Semis at the Nuggets, Paul had 37 points and seven assists on 14 for 19 shooting. He finished that series with 41 total assists and just five turnovers.

After missing as he tested positive for COVID-19, which shelved him for the first two games of the West Finals against the Clippers.

When he returned for Game 3 of the West Finals at Clippers after a two-game absence due to testing positive for COVID-19, Paul had 15 points, 12 assists and three steals, but was very rusty having not done any basketball activity for 11 days as he shot just 5 for 19 from the floor.

While the Suns got the win in ugly fashion in Game 4 to be one win away from The Finals, Paul had 18 points and seven assists, but shot just 6 for 22 from the field, but made 6 for 7 from the foul line, including some key free throws in the closing seconds.

After a rough 8 for 19 shooting display for 22 points and eight assists in the loss at home against the Clippers in Game 5, Paul finally found a rhythm in Game 6 scoring 31 of his playoff career-high tying 41 points in the second half, finishing 16 for 24 from the field, including 7 for 8 from three-point range as he led his new team the Suns to The Finals against the team he played for from 2011-17 and experienced many heartbreaking setbacks and injuries that derailed the so-called little brother of L.A. from ever getting to the West Finals let alone The Finals.

“To do it here against a team that I got the upmost respect for. I’ll always be a be a Clipper and I love these fans,” Paul said during the West Finals trophy presentation after the Game 6 clincher.

Paul added about his Suns teammates, “But this crew right here! This crew right here! This game right here! Man, since Day One, they’ve welcomed me with open arms. Coach [Monty Williams] we did this 10 years ago in New Orleans, and we still got a lot of work to do, but we’re going to enjoy this one.” 

One person who really enjoyed this moment was Booker, who in the early part of his career could have decided that he wanted out of Phoenix. He could have gone in kicking and screaming to management to deal him our he could have after his rookie contract had ended.

Instead, he stuck with it. He had faith in what Coach Williams was selling when he got to the Suns last season, and Booker rewarded that faith by taking care of his end of things on the floor, especially in the playoffs.

To put how exceptional Booker has been in his first postseason run, his scoring average of 27.0 points marks the first time since 1977 a team has reached The Finals with its leading scorer making his playoff debut since Hall of Famers Julius “Dr. J” Erving of 76ers and Maurice Lucas of Portland Trail Blazers did it, but both had ABA playoff experience. The Trail Blazers defeated the 76ers in the 1997 Finals that season. Also on this list is the late Hall of Famer Elgin Baylor who did for the Lakers in 1959 in his playoff debut and the late great Tom Heinsohn did it for the Celtics two seasons prior.

Booker’s 432 total points and counting are the third most in a single postseason by a Suns player, trailing the 449 total points scored by Stoudemire in 2005 postseason and the 638 scored by Barkley in the Suns 1993 run to The Finals.

In the closeout games of the first two rounds of the playoffs, Booker was at his best with 47 points and 11 rebounds on 15 for 20 from the field, including 8 for 10 from three-point range in Game 6 clincher of First-Round at the Lakers. In the Game 4 clincher of West Semis at the Nuggets, Booker had 34 points and 11 boards on 11 for 25 shooting and 10 for 11 from the charity stripe.  

“This is what we set out to get tonight,” Booker, who had 22 points and seven boards in the Game 6 clincher at the Clippers said during the West Finals trophy presentation. “So, we didn’t want to go back to Phoenix without it. We didn’t want to do a Game 7. We wanted to do it here tonight.”

In a series that was very tight and evenly matched during the season. It comes down to first if Antetokounmpo will play in The Finals as he missed the last two games of the East Finals against the Hawks with as mentioned a hyperextended right knee.

If he cannot go, that means the pressure is on Middleton and Holiday to lead the way on both ends.

They will have their hands full with the backcourt of Booker and Paul, who have been nothing short of sensational throughout the playoffs.

“One is just relying on my teammates,” Holiday said to the “NBA: The Jump” crew on what it will take to try to slow down the Suns backcourt of Paul and Booker. “Obviously, nobody can do it by themselves. These are the best scorers in the world. And to be able to do it by yourself is virtually impossible. So, relying on my teammates, Brook, Giannis, Khris, we always got Big-Tuck.”

“So, they help me out so much, and then honestly, just being able to have confidence in myself. Just knowing guys are going to go out there, and they’re going to have big games. But at the same time, I can do the same thing on both ends of the floor.

When the Bucks have been right this postseason, they have outscored their opponents on the fast break, where they have been a +5.2 and a +12.1 in points in the paint.

In the Semis against the Hawks, the Hawks were a plus-98 differential in points in the paint (338-240).

“We tried to own the paint the last series,” Portis, who started Games 5 and 6 in place of Antetokounmpo in the East Finals said of the Bucks offensive strategy last series, “just pounding the ball inside. I think that’s going to be a big emphasis for us in this series.”

The Bucks all season long have also shown an ability to play from ahead as well as behind. They followed up a 41-9 mark in the regular season when leading by at least 10 points at any point in the game with a 10-1 mark after leading by at least 10 points so far in the 2021 Playoffs.  They are only team with a winning mark at 4-3 after trailing by double-digits so far this postseason and have shown their ability to pull games out in the clutch with a 4-2 record in games that were within five points in the last five minutes of the fourth quarter and overtime in the playoffs.  

“There hasn’t been any doubt for me throughout this playoff run, whether we were up 2-0 against Miami or down 2-0 against Brooklyn,” Lopez said. “I would like to be able to speak for everyone else and saying that we have all had the confidence going through, that we can achieve that goal of winning a championship.”

In a series where the likes of Middleton and Holiday for the Bucks, and Booker and Paul will receive a lot of attention from the opposing side, it comes down to ancillary players like Lopez, Tucker, Connaughton, and Teague for the Bucks, and Crowder, Ayton, Bridges, Johnson, Saric, Craig and Payne for the Suns.

What has put the Suns over the top in getting to The Finals is their ability to get stops and make their free throws consistently, where they have shot 86.2 percent from the charity stripe the first three rounds of the 2021 Playoffs, the best mark for a team with at least 250 free throw attempts in NBA Playoff history.

They too like the Bucks have been exceptional when it comes to closing out teams when leading by double digits. They went 45-10 in the regular season when leading by at least 10 points at any point in a game to a perfect 11-0 when ahead by at least 10 points so far in the 2021 Playoffs.

“Guys are ready to play,” Coach Williams said on Monday. “I think guys feel really good about where they are right now.”

It has been a long time for the Milwaukee Bucks and the Phoenix Suns since they last appeared in the NBA Finals.

For one of these teams, they will end a season where both have had to overcome a lot from dealing with the COVID-19 Pandemic to just the grind of competition in one of the most daunting of NBA seasons ever with the Larry O’Brien trophy in their hands.

For the Bucks headliner, Giannis Antetokounmpo, who has had a remarkable a career to this point with many good years left has a chance, if he can play to lead his team to where they have not been in five decades.

The Bucks hope to join the 1977 Trail Blazers and the 2015 Warriors as the third team in NBA history to win a title without a player with any previous NBA Finals experience.

For Suns’ Chris Paul, the only thing missing from his Hall of Fame resume is a title. He entered the Playoffs as the all-time leader in All-Star selections (11), All-NBA selections (10) and NBA All-Defensive team selections (9) without appearing in The Finals. Only Denver Nuggets Paul Millsap (129) and the now Celtics Al Horford (124) have played more playoff games without appearing in The Finals than Paul, who is three ahead of former Suns Joe Johnson and Nash at 120.

The Suns are four wins away from adding the one thing missing from Paul’s Hall of Fame resume, a championship.

If he can lead the Suns to their first Larry O’Brien trophy, he will join Juwan Howard (won title with Heat in 2012 in season No. 18), Kevin Willis (won title with Spurs in 2003 in seasons No. 19), Mavericks new head coach Jason Kidd (won title with Mavericks in 2011 in season No. 17), 76ers perennial All-Star Dwight Howard (won title in 2020 with Lakers in season No. 16), and Hall of Famer Gary Payton (won title with Heat in 2006 in season No. 16) who won a title in season No. 16 or later.  

If the Suns capture their first Larry O’Brien trophy in franchise history, they can join the 2008 Celtics and the 2020 Lakers to win the NBA championship after missing the playoffs the previous season. The Suns can also become the 20th active NBA franchise and the 21st NBA franchise overall to win a title (the now defunct Baltimore Bullets won their lone championship in 1947-48 season).

“I think we’re locked into the goal at hand,” Paul said during his media availability on Monday.

Predication: Suns in six games.

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 6/30/2021 11:30 p.m. ESPN’s “Sportscenter With Scott Van Pelt;” 7/1/2021 3 p.m. "NBAL The Jump" ESPN 2 with Rachel Nichols, Richard Jefferson, Kendrick Perkins, Chris Bosh, and Zach Lowe; 7/1/2021 www.nba.com story, “Chris Paul’s Masterful Closeout Performance Ends Pair of Long Droughts,” by Shaun Powell; 7/3/2021 8:30 p.m. “Milwaukee Bucks versus Atlanta Hawks” Game 6 East Finals on TNT, presented by AT&T with Marv Albert, Reggie Miller, and Stephanie Ready; 7/3/2021 11 p.m. “Inside the NBA,” presented by Kia on TNT with Ernie Johnson, Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley, and Shaquille O’Neal; 7/4/2021 2 a.m. ESPN’s “Sportscenter” with Michael Eaves and Stan Verrett; 7/4/2021 www.nba.com story, “NBA Finals Preview: Can Bucks Put Clamps On Determined Chris Paul, Suns?,” by Shaun Powell; 7/5/2021 www.nba.com story, “Numbers Preview: The Finals,” by John Schuhmann;” 7/2021 4 p.m. "NBA: The Jump" ESPN 2 with Rachel Nichols, Richard Jefferson, Kendrick Perkins, and Dave McMenaminl 7/5/2021 www.nba.com story, “Storylines And State To Know For 2021 NBA Finals;” 7/6/2021 www.nba.com story, “10 Facts To Know About Bucks Versus Suns Matchup In The Finals,” by Tim Reynolds The Associated Press; 7/6/2021 www.nba.com, “Fresh Faces Bring Fresh Drama To NBA Finals,” by Shaun Powell;  www.espn.com/nba/stats/team/_/view/team/season/2021/seasontype; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoenix_Suns; and https://en.m.wikipeda.org/wiki/Milwaukee_Bucks.