Bucks general manager Jon Horst says Giannis Antetokounmpo will be developing a 3-point shot over the next year. “I think the rest of the league is pretty scared about that,” Horst said.
All five Bucks starters scored in double figures, and four of them had 20 or more points in Milwaukee’s first victory at the Pepsi Center since 2010.
Giannis Antetokounmpo had 22 points, 9 rebounds and 8 assists. Khris Middleton had 21 points and Malcolm Brogdon added 20.
“We do not want to be a good team; We want to be a great team,” Antetokounmpo said after the Bucks withstood the Nuggets’ fourth-quarter comeback bid. “Great teams, no matter what, come back. You’ve got to keep fighting and keep playing within your game plan and you hope things work. You hope you can knock down shots. That’s what we did.”
Paul Millsap led the Nuggets with 25 points and Nikola Jokic added 20. Denver has lost three straight.
Lopez didn’t make a single 3-point shot in his first six NBA seasons, but he’s become a reliable threat from deep. He’s made at least six 3-pointers in three of his past four games and is shooting 38.8 percent from long range this season. He was 8-of-13 from beyond the arc Sunday.
Lopez said Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer and his staff have been telling their players to have faith in their shots and their shooting judgment.
“Bud and our entire coaching staff have done a great job instilling that confidence and giving us that belief that when we shoot, it’s going to go in,” Lopez said. “If you’re open and that’s your shot, let it fly.”
Up by four at the break, the Bucks stretched their lead to 99-88 going into the final quarter after Antetokounmpo connected on an 11-foot step-back jumper with just over a second remaining in the third quarter.
The Nuggets chipped away at the deficit and pulled into a 103-all tie on a 3-pointer by Jamal Murray with little more than 8 minutes remaining.
The game remained tight until Brogdon connected on a 3-pointer and Middleton hit a jumper around successive Nuggets’ turnovers to give the Bucks a 117-112 lead with 41.6 seconds remaining. Millsap answered by driving in for a dunk, but Middleton offset that with a pair of free throws. The Nuggets did not score again.
“I think turnovers are tough late to overcome, especially live-ball turnovers,” the Nuggets’ Mason Plumlee said. “We just have to take care of the ball and get good shots and then make or miss. We can live with the make or a miss.”
Plumlee added, “This is our first little bit of adversity, so we have respond. We have to come out and play really well our next home game.”
Nuggets coach Mike Malone lamented Denver’s lack of defensive intensity for much of the game.
“Give [the Bucks] credit. They made shots,” Malone said. “We had breakdown after breakdown after breakdown.”
Milwaukee scored 30 or more points in each of the first two quarters and led 63-59 at the half.
TIP-INS
Bucks: D.J. Wilson continues to mend from a right hamstring strain that has kept him on the sideline this season, but he is getting very close to a return. … Eighteen of Lopez’s points came in the third quarter, when he connected on six of his 3-pointers.
Nuggets: Will Barton, who underwent surgery Oct. 23 to repair hip and core muscles, has begun rehab work. There is no set timetable for his return. He was injured Oct. 20 against Phoenix.
UP NEXT
Bucks: Return home to host the Memphis Grizzlies on Wednesday night.
Nuggets: Continues their three-game homestand by hosting the Houston Rockets on Tuesday night.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
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