Bucks loathe to adjust gameplan after season-long success

* Tonight on TNT: Game 2, Celtics vs. Bucks (8 ET)

MILWAUKEE — Just one game removed from one of the most marvelous seasons of basketball in Milwaukee Bucks history — 60 regular-season wins, a sweep of Detroit in the first round, the debut of a dazzling new arena — the team is loathe to let all that go and overreact to 48 minutes that didn’t go their way in Sunday’s Game 1 loss to the Boston Celtics.

But if they underreact in Game 2 Tuesday at Fiserv Forum, it will be at their own peril.

Adjustments — from game-to-game, at halftime, even on the fly during live action — are as much a part of the NBA postseason as podium interviews. The reason is simple: Strategic mistakes, small failings and tendencies you can get away with facing random teams during the season are sniffed out and exploited by an opponent you see as many as seven times in a two-week span.

You can stubbornly stick with a pat hand, but most coaches and players would rather change things up to minimize what didn’t work last time and might, if repeated, prove fatal again.

The Bucks, though, sounded a little clingy Monday in the wake of their 112-90 defeat. Wanting to hold on to everything that worked so well from October until, well, noon on April 28.

“No, no. Definitely not,” forward Giannis Antetokounmpo said. “We’re just going to keep doing what we’ve been doing all year.”

You might be inclined to read that quote assuming sarcasm, as in: Oh right, we’re just going to keep doing exactly what got us blown out and stripped of home-court advantage. Sure.

After all, Antetokounmpo had one of his worst performances of the season (7-for-21 FGs, a minus-24 rating). But no, “The Greek Freak” was sincere.

I don’t think there should be no change at all. We should not be the team that makes the adjustments.”

Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo

“I don’t think there should be no change at all,” he said. “Why should there be a change after a game that we lost, like … we should not be the team that makes the adjustments.”

Antetokounmpo was not alone.

“The way we’ve been playing all season has been just letting it fly,” center Brook Lopez said. “So even if we miss it 10-out-of-10 times, just keep [shooting].”

The Bucks made 13 of their 39 3-point shots Sunday, well off their regular-season rate of 38.2 percent. Lopez was 1-for-4 on 3s and 1-for-5 overall, combining with fellow Bucks starters Sterling Brown and Eric Bledsoe to shoot 3-for-17 from the floor.

Said Milwaukee coach Mike Budenholzer: “I think adjustments and all those things are sometimes overrated.”

So unless the Bucks are trying to snooker the Celtics with some tweaks they weren’t willing to share, we’ll get to see how that pat hand plays out.

Milwaukee did get serious mileage out of its formulas prior to Game 1. Offensively, they’ve surrounded Antetokounmpo with potent 3-point shooters, relying on his drives into the lane to draw defenders and offer them unobstructed views from the arc.

Defensively, they committed to defending the other guys’ 3-pointers, protecting the rim and keeping foes off the foul line. What did that leave? Contested 2-pointers and mid-range jumpers — so ugly and out-of-style in the NBA of 2019.

It all worked tremendously — until the Celtics shot 15-of-27 on mid-range attempts in their rout. Suddenly, the Bucks’ sagging defense against pick-and-rolls looked as gimmicky and ineffective as its plan of guarding Houston’s James Harden from behind. Once the prolific Rockets scorer got over his shock at the unusual method, he was able to pick it apart.

Ditto for the Celtics’ shooters. Kyrie Irving is one of the most dangerous scorers from any place on the floor but particularly inventing ways to put the ball in the hoop in the mid-range. Celtics veteran Al Horford savored his looks inside the arc, as did Gordon Hayward.

The Bucks, meanwhile, were 5-of-12 from mid-range. However, there is one area in which the Bucks believe they can adjust without adjusting. They can play harder. A pervasive lack of hustle and urgency was apparent in real time at Fiserv but was undeniable when Budenholzer and his staff went to “the truth machine” before practice Monday.

That would be the video the Bucks reviewed before Monday’s workout.

[Coach Bud] chewed us out. And like I say, ‘Film don’t lie.’

Bucks guard Eric Bledsoe

“He chewed us out. And like I say, ‘Film don’t lie,’ ” Bledsoe said. “It was effort, man. We weren’t playing our game.”

Antetokounmpo said he got scolded on that front in a postgame phone call from his older brother, Thanasis.

“No. 1, I play for my family,” he said. “So when he’s like, ‘C’mon man. Giannis! You’ve got to go, you’ve got to go. You’ve got to still be aggressive. You’ve got to make the right pass,’ it stabs you in your heart. But at the end of the day, I know it’s the truth.”

The Bucks appeared a step slow on both ends. It showed when they went after loose balls or closed out on Celtics shooters. And it showed when lollygagging, relatively, in getting to their spots on offense. Boston already was sending extra defenders at Antetokounmpo, and the Bucks not being crisp in their execution never made them pay.

“We weren’t as quick in transition,” Lopez said. “Our pace wasn’t great … We can be better at getting it out. Everyone running the floor, finding their spots. Keeping the spacing wide.”

It should be noted the Bucks only lost two games in a row one time all season (March 2-4 against the Jazz and Suns). They’re proud of that resiliency.

Of course, in the regular season, they only played the same opponent in consecutive games one time (New York, Dec. 25-27). The Bucks never had to react after losses to specific things the other guys did. They merely had to be themselves, only better.

“Even though we lost the first game, we’re just gonna come out and play our hardest and see how Game 2 goes,” Antetokounmpo said. “If it doesn’t go well for us, then you can think about adjusting. But right now, we’re not adjusting nothing.”

But unless someone rattles Boston out of its comfort zone in the mid-range, Milwaukee’s adherence to its style of play could contribute to its undoing.

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Steve Aschburner has written about the NBA since 1980. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on Twitter.

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