LOS ANGELES — With just under a minute and a half remaining in Sunday’s game against the LA Clippers, Giannis Antetokounmpo caught a pass Damian Lillard lobbed over the defense to him on the left wing. Antetokounmpo began to survey the floor to try to find an opening, but he quickly gave up that notion.
“Dame wanted the ball,” Antetokounmpo said of the play. “He was yelling, ‘Ball! Ball! Ball! Ball!’ When a guy like that is yelling for the ball, you gotta give it to him.
“I saw him coming full speed and I just gave him the ball and … all-time great,” Antetokounmpo said with a shrug and a smile. “He did what he did, man. Tough off-balance shot, made it and gave us momentum. And I think from that play, we won the game. It won us the game.”
𝗜𝗧’𝗦 𝗗𝗔𝗠𝗘 𝗧𝗜𝗠𝗘!#Bucks #FearTheDeer #NBA pic.twitter.com/vIRI84CdPC
— Bally Sports Wisconsin (@BallySportWI) March 10, 2024
Lillard’s 3-pointer gave the Bucks a 10-point lead, their largest of the afternoon, and they eventually beat the Clippers 124-117 to end a two-game losing skid. Lillard was spectacular in the fourth quarter, scoring 16 of his 35 points. He also had seven rebounds and 11 assists. Antetokounmpo had a big game as well, ending up with 34 points, seven rebounds and 10 assists.
But it was more than the duo’s sheer numbers. It was more than them combining for 69 of their team’s 124 points or scoring 25 of its 33 points in the fourth quarter. It was more than Antetokounmpo and Lillard racking up 10 or more assists in the same game for the second consecutive game.
Giannis and Dame are the first duo in NBA HISTORY to have 20+ PTS and 10+ AST in back-to-back games.
— Milwaukee Bucks (@Bucks) March 10, 2024
For the first time all season, Antetokounmpo and Lillard appear to be in sync as playmakers. Rather than two heliocentric superstars taking turns, Antetokounmpo and Lillard are finally beginning to play like a duo, regularly complementing each other with the right decisions, passes and plays on the offensive end.
“I think it’s getting much better,” Lillard said. “To start the season, I think a lot of people wanted it to just click and happen right away. But I think anytime you put two guys together who’ve always been the decision maker, always had the ball in your hands for years and years and years, it’s going to take time for us to learn how to play with each other and learn how to play off of one another.”
“And I think we’re just, first of all, having a lot more dialogue about what I need from him and he’s telling me what he needs for me. And I think our understanding is getting much better. And because of that, I’m able to get to certain spots and I’m using him against the defense and vice versa. When we get the kind of attention that we’ve been getting, where it’s a guy guarding me and his guy is being aggressive and then the help is pulling over to guard whichever one of us ends up with the ball, then the next guy is getting a clean shot.”
It helps that the Bucks are doing a better job of spacing the floor around their two-man game and putting players in the right spots to take advantage of defenses. While the fourth quarter on Sunday stood out because of how many points the duo scored, there also have been smaller plays in which those principles are on display, like this corner 3 from Jae Crowder in the third quarter.
The two-man game has been an emphasis for the duo since head coach Doc Rivers took over in late January. In fact, Rivers has asked them to focus on it so much in practices and shootarounds that the whole team laughs about it in practice.
“I think it’s reached the point where we’re playing a game, but when it’s time to consider the next action, we’re doing the next action with each other in mind,” Lillard said. “We’ve laughed about it in practice. The team, sometimes they’ll laugh at shootaround, Doc will put us on one side of the floor and put…
This article was originally published by a theathletic.com . Read the Original article here. .