Lowry Stars As Toronto Raptors Thump Bucks To Level Series
22nd May 2019
They knotted the best-of-seven series at 2-2 with game five in Milwaukee on Thursday

- The Toronto Raptors closed ranks around hurting star Kawhi Leonard, turning in a total team effort in a 120-102 victory over the Milwaukee Bucks Tuesday to level the NBA Eastern Conference finals
- Kyle Lowry led the Raptors with 25 points and Toronto's bench out-scored Milwaukee's 48-23 as the Raptors followed up their double-overtime triumph in game three with a second straight home win
- The winner of the series will take on two-time defending champions Golden State, who completed a Western Conference finals sweep of Portland to reach their fifth straight NBA Finals
LOS ANGELES, United States- The Toronto Raptors closed ranks around hurting star Kawhi
Leonard, turning in a total team effort in a 120-102 victory over the Milwaukee
Bucks Tuesday to level the NBA Eastern Conference finals.
Kyle Lowry led the
Raptors with 25 points and Toronto's bench out-scored Milwaukee's 48-23 as the
Raptors followed up their double-overtime triumph in game three with a second
straight home win.
They knotted the
best-of-seven series at 2-2 with game five in Milwaukee on Thursday.
The winner of the
series will take on two-time defending champions Golden State, who completed a
Western Conference finals sweep of Portland to reach their fifth straight NBA
Finals.
Leonard, who
downplayed suggestions he was injured after the gritty game-three victory,
looked hobbled at times -- wincing noticeably after dunking on Bucks star
Giannis Antetokounmpo in the third quarter.
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Leonard grabbed a
pass from Spanish big man Marc Gasol and drove for the basket, Antetokounmpo's
move to stop him coming too late.
Leonard landed hard
and held his left leg -- although he would play on.
"I think he's
fine," Toronto coach Nick Nurse said. "He's logged a lot of minutes.
He's certainly tired, like a lot of guys in this series are.
"He looks OK to
me. I think there's a lot of guys out there that aren't 100 percent -- on both
sides of the ball."
But Lowry said
Raptors "understood" that Leonard wasn't going to be 100 percent and
knew going into the contest that "everybody has to step up and stay
focused on the game plan."
Lowry scored 18
points in the first half as the Raptors came back from an early seven-point
deficit to lead 32-31 after one quarter -- pushing the lead to 65-55 at halftime.
Norman Powell added
18 points off the bench. Serge Ibaka and Gasol scored 17 apiece, Ibaka also
pulling down 13 rebounds. Fred VanVleet chipped in 13 points.
VanVleet, who missed
16 of 20 shot attempts in the first three games of the series, connected on
five of six from the field, draining all three of his three-point attempts.
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"I think the
first two games they really brought the intensity to us. They came out and were
more physical were more active," Powell said. "We wanted to change
that narrative and protect home court. We wanted to come out with a lot of
juice, be more aggressive, be more physical and take the game to them. I think
we really did that."
Toronto extended
their lead to as many as 16 points in the third period and led by 13 going into
the final frame.
Khris Middleton led
the Bucks with 30 points, six rebounds and seven assists.
Milwaukee’s Most
Valuable Player finalist Antetokounmpo added 25 points and 10 rebounds, and
Nikola Mirotic scored 11.
But the Bucks lost
their second straight game, something they did just once during the regular
season.
- Hostile environment -
Two home wins gave
the Raptors some breathing room as they head back to Milwaukee, but Lowry said
they'd done nothing more than hold serve.
"They did what
they did at home and we did what we're supposed to do at home," he said.
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"Our back's
against the wall still," Lowry added. "We're going into a hostile
environment. They're going to be ready to go."
Antetokounmpo,
meanwhile, said there was no feeling of panic among the Bucks.
"The feeling is
not any different," he said. "We've still got to get better, stick
with our game plan. (We've) just got to play with more energy, execute better,
but our feeling is the same.
"They did their
job, they protected home, we've got to do our job now."