Milwaukee Bucks head coach Doc Rivers understood immediately that the timeout questions were coming the moment Myles Turner’s potential game tying three-point attempt bounced away.
Down three in the final seconds, the Bucks kept the action moving instead of stopping play. Rivers trusted Rollins to attack in transition, the ball moved to Turner on the wing, and his contested three with 5.7 seconds left fell short. No timeout, no designed set, just a live-ball scramble that unfolded the way Rivers preferred.
Asked Doc Rivers about going without the timeout on the final possession.
Rivers: “I loved it. Loved the call. Would do it again…Instead of letting them set their defense, we had them on their heels.” https://t.co/VNpULBTuLM
— Eric Nehm (@eric_nehm) November 27, 2025
“I loved it. Loved the call. Would do it again…Instead of letting them set their defense, we had them on their heels,” he told reporters via The Athletic’s Eric Nehm, adding that he wanted to keep Miami from settling into its half-court defense after the Bucks had finally pushed them back.
Doc Rivers let the Bucks play until the buzzer
Nov 7, 2025; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Bucks head coach Doc Rivers reacts in the 4th quarter against the Chicago Bulls at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-Imagn Images
Rivers stood by the decision even though the Heat closed out a 106 – 103 win on Wednesday, their sixth straight, fueled by Tyler Herro’s 29 points and seven assists and Bam Adebayo’s 17 points and 11 rebounds. Milwaukee dropped to 8-11 with its sixth straight loss.
Ryan Rollins scored 26 points and Turner added 24, helping the Bucks trim a 12 point fourth quarter deficit.
On some level, Rivers’ reasoning still makes sense. Miami dictated the terms most of the night, limiting Milwaukee to 42 percent from the field and 33 percent from long range while staying even on the boards at 47. Handing Erik Spoelstra a timeout to design one more tailored coverage for Turner and Rollins would have played right into the Heat’s hands.
Apr 3, 2024; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Bucks head coach Doc Rivers and forward Giannis Antetokounmpo (34) looks on in the fourth quarter against the Memphis Grizzlies at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-USA TODAY Sports
The Bucks were without Giannis Antetokounmpo for the fourth straight game because of a groin strain, yet they still came close to grabbing an NBA Cup road win as their role players stepped up with timely shots.
Rivers, however, sounded like a coach standing firm. He wants his team to learn to react and execute in the moment. If the Milwaukee Bucks start finishing games like this, Wednesday’s gamble could feel less like stubbornness and more like a necessary step in that growth.