NEW YORK (AP) —
The Milwaukee Bucks withstood Kevin Durant’s NBA-record 48 points
in a Game 7, advancing to the Eastern Conference finals by beating
the Brooklyn Nets 115-111 in overtime Saturday night.
Giannis
Antetokounmpo had 40 points and 13 rebounds, and Khris Middleton
made the tiebreaking shot with 40 seconds left in the first
overtime Game 7 in 15 years.
The Bucks held
on from there when Durant missed two jumpers, the last an airball
with 0.3 seconds remaining.
Middleton added
23 points and 10 rebounds for the Bucks, who reached the East
finals for the second time in three years. They will play either
Philadelphia or Atlanta in a series that starts Wednesday
night.
“I can say for
sure I’ve never been in a game like this, a Game 7 on the road with
one of the best players in the world,” Middleton said.
Durant played
all 53 minutes and forced OT with a turnaround jumper that was just
inches from being a 3-pointer that would have won it with a second
left.
He added nine
rebounds and six assists, but didn’t have enough help with injured
Kyrie Irving watching from the baseline and James Harden unable to
locate his shot after missing most of the first four games with
right hamstring tightness.
Harden had 22
points, nine rebounds and nine assists, but was 5 for 17 from the
field.
“I was just
going out there and trying to give everything I can and it’s just
frustrating,” Harden said.
In a series
where the teams often didn’t produce the quality of play that was
anticipated between the league’s two highest-scoring teams, Game 7
was a thriller, the first do-or-die game to need extra time since
Dallas beat San Antonio in the 2006 Western Conference
semifinals.
The Bucks had a
109-107 lead before Middleton missed a 3, but the Bucks got the
rebound. They then turned it over on a shot clock violation to give
the Nets a final chance with 6 seconds left. They threw it in
across the court to Durant, who hit a spinning, turnaround jumper
from just inside the 3-point line — maybe even on top of it — to
tie it at 109.
Bruce Brown
scored on a follow shot to open overtime but neither team scored
again until Antetokounmpo’s basket with 1:12 to play. Brook Lopez
blocked Durant’s shot on the other end before Middleton broke the
final tie of the series.
Durant tried to
prolong it again, dribbling up the floor and running the clock down
before launching a long look that came up well short.
Lopez had 19
points for the Bucks, who were knocked out in this round last year
after finishing with the NBA’s best record. Jrue Holiday shook off
a poor shooting night to finish with 13 points, eight assists and
seven rebounds.
“Those guys,
they’re great competitors. I love the way they just kept coming,
keep playing, find a way to win an overtime game on the road, Game
7,” Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer said. “They all made big plays
down the stretch, and we needed every one of them.”
Blake Griffin
had 17 points and 11 rebounds for the Nets, who thought they had a
title contender after acquiring Harden but had their three
superstars on the floor together for just 43 seconds in this
series. They lost for the first time at home in the postseason.
The Nets had
struggled with slow starts but put together a good one in Game 7,
getting 10 points from Durant to lead 28-25 after the opening
quarter.
Middleton and
Holiday were both 2 for 11 in the first half, combining to miss all
six 3-pointers in a rehash of their shooting struggles from when
the series began in Brooklyn.
The Nets
capitalized on the Bucks’ misfires — Antetokounmpo shot an airball
on a free throw and Lopez and Holiday hit the side of the backboard
on long jumpers during one ugly stretch — to open a 51-41 lead on
Harden’s three-point play with 1:59 left in the half.
Down six at
halftime, the Bucks came out of the break with a 7-0 burst to grab
a 54-53 edge. The Nets regrouped and were ahead 79-74 with under 2
minutes remaining, but the Bucks closed strong to take an 82-81
lead to the fourth.
TIP-INS
Bucks:
Antetokounmpo had his fifth straight game with 30 points and 10
rebounds, tying Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s franchise playoff record that
he set in 1974.
Nets: Durant
had his third 40-point game of these playoffs. The Nets have only
had three other 40-point postseason games in their NBA history. ...
Brown had 14 points after playing just 4 1/2 minutes in Game 6.
No. 7
IN GAME 7s
Durant fell to
3-2 in Game 7s. though his average rose to 36.2 points. His average
of 33.3 coming into the game was third among all players who had
appeared in more than one Game 7, behind LeBron James (34.9 PPG in
8 games) and Michael Jordan (33.7 PPG in 3 games), according to
Elias.