Bucks Buck Early Losses to Win NBA Championship
Wednesday, July 21st, 2021On Tuesday, July 20, the Milwaukee Bucks of the National Basketball Association (NBA) defeated the Phoenix Suns 105-98 to win the team’s first NBA championship in 50 years. The Bucks won the best-of-seven finals four games to two. Bucks superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo tallied 50 points, 14 rebounds, and 5 blocks in the deciding Game 6 and won the NBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award.
The Bucks opened Game 6 with a 13-point first quarter lead, to the delight of 17,000 fans in attendance at Milwaukee’s Fiserv Forum and some 65,000 supporters at a watch party outside the arena. The Suns charged back to take a 47-42 halftime lead, but the Bucks outscored their opponents by 12 in the second half and capture the team’s first championship since 1971.
The 1971 Bucks team had been led by star center Lew Alcindor and fellow Hall of Fame members Oscar Robertson and Bob Dandridge. Alcindor publicly announced his name change to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar soon after winning the league title. Teammates Jabbar, Robertson, Dandridge, and Jon McGlocklin attended Game 4 in Milwaukee, a Bucks win that evened the series at two games apiece.
The Suns had opened Finals play with a 118-105 Game 1 victory. Guards Chris Paul and Devon Booker combined for 59 points. After the Suns prevailed, 118-108, in Game 2, chants of “Suns in four”—predicting a four-game sweep—echoed through the Footprint Center in Phoenix. Over the next four games, however, the taller, more physical Bucks squad wore down an overmatched Suns front line led by 7-foot center Deandre Ayton and journeyman forward Jae Crowder. Behind 41 points from Antetokounmpo, the Bucks won 120-100 in Game 3. In Game 4, the Bucks, with 40 points from wing Khris Middleton, overcame a fourth quarter deficit and 42 points from Booker to prevail 109-103. The Suns forged a 37-21 lead early in Game 5, but the Bucks dominated the middle two quarters en route to a 123-119 win.
Following the Game 6 victory, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver presented the Bucks with the Larry O’Brien trophy. Coach Mike Budenholzer lauded Antetokounmpo and Middleton, who have played together since the 2013-2014 season. Point guard Jrue Holiday, pesky guard-forward P.J. Tucker, and center Brook Lopez completed the starting lineup. Forward Bobby Portis and guard Pat Connaughton provided scoring and energy off the bench. Antetokounmpo, who signed a five-year contract extension before the season, had high hopes for further Bucks success. “I want the team to build off this and hopefully we can do it again,” he said.