Coach Doc Rivers didn’t see any signs of panic as the Bucks stumbled out of the gate this season, writes Gary Washburn of The Boston Globe. After winning on opening night, Milwaukee dropped six straight games, raising questions about whether the team should still be considered a contender following two consecutive first-round playoff exits. Meeting with reporters before Friday’s game at Boston, Rivers said those concerns never affected his team.
“Nobody in Milwaukee is saying that, nobody on our team is saying that,” he said. “We feel like we’re going to be right there when we need to be.”
The slow start led to some speculation that a Giannis Antetokounmpo trade might be necessary, considering the team’s second apron status and the overall age of its roster. The Bucks eventually pulled out of their tailspin, winning seven straight before back-to-back losses that evened their record at 11-11. Rivers admitted that he expected to be in a better position, but he believes the team is heading in the right direction.
“Tough start, but I think everybody here’s patient,”he said.“… I think we’re going to be one of the teams, but we’re not yet. We’re not. So we have work to do.It’s funny, when we go on the road we hear that and it’s laughable for us. But our record says what we are and we’re not where we want to be, so we get it.”
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Making his season debut after missing 21 games following offseason surgery on both ankles, Khris Middleton took a hard bump early in Friday’s contest, per Jim Owczarski of The Journal-Sentinel. Less than two minutes after checking into the game, Middleton was knocked to the court by Sam Hauser while sinking a three-point shot. “I love it. Get it out the way,” Middleton said. “That’s something that’s been happening to me in play groups, one-on-one sessions, workouts, feeling that contact. Of course the contact was a little bit more during the game, but I needed that. I needed to feel like what it feels like to get hit, fall down on the floor and not really worry about anything. So that felt great. Felt even better to knock down the shot too and the free throw. I was cool with it.”
Rivers admitted that Middleton exceeded his minutes restriction in his first game back, Owczarski adds. The team didn’t reveal what Middleton’s limit is, but he wound up playing 23 minutes and was in the closing lineup as the game went down to the wire.
Friday’s contest was already the last meeting between Boston and Milwaukee during the regular season. Eric Nehm of The Athletic notes that the Bucks have become a better matchup for the Celtics because of the emergence of A.J. Green and Andre Jackson, adding that **Taurean Prince**‘s illness prevented Milwaukee from having a full complement of wing defenders that it might use against Boston in a playoff series.