MILWAUKEE BUCKS

Notes: Veterans Terry, Dellavedova show teammates the way

Charles F. Gardner
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Bucks coach Jason Kidd reacts to an official's call during Game 3 of the first-round playoff series between Milwaukee and Toronto on April 20 at the BMO Harris Bradley Center.

Veterans Matthew Dellavedova and Jason Terry were on the floor for the entire fourth quarter as the Milwaukee Bucks tried to force a Game 7 in their hotly contested first-round series with Toronto.

And the Bucks nearly did it, rallying from a 25-point third-quarter deficit before losing a 92-89 heartbreaker in Game 6 on Thursday before a sold-out BMO Harris Bradley Center.

"We talked about it before the game, Delly and Jet have been in this position before and they're not scared," Bucks coach Jason Kidd said. "I thought they were everywhere causing havoc. I thought they were great leaders, not just in tonight's game but throughout the whole season.

"They understand how to fight to the end. That's who Delly is and that's who Jet is. Jet missed some threes early but for our younger guys to understand not to be scared. He stepped up to the plate and knocked down the shot that gave us the lead."

BOX SCORE: Raptors 92, Bucks 89

GAME STORY:   Frantic comeback falls short in Game 6

D'AMATO: Bucks close gap on future

NBA: Playoff scoreboard, box scores, recaps

Terry's three-pointer with 3:16 left gave the Bucks an 80-78 lead, and he hit another triple with 19.4 seconds to go to bring Milwaukee within 89-87 after the Raptors had surged ahead.

Terry finished with eight points and four rebounds in 18 minutes, and Dellavedova had 12 points, four assists and four rebounds in 34 minutes.

"I think both of them did a great job, not just in this game but all year long," Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo said. "I've never seen guys talk more than Jet and Delly. No matter if you're up or you're down, they always try to lead and they talk to us.

"I think they helped everybody this year; they helped Malcolm (Brogdon), they helped Thon (Maker), Tony (Snell), me, Khris (Middleton). It's always great to have them on the court, especially when the game is becoming tougher."

Before the game, Kidd said he remembered playing for Phoenix against Seattle in his third pro season. The seventh-seeded Suns had a 2-1 lead in the best-of-five series but lost the last two games.

“If you're lucky enough to play this game for 5 to 10 years, you can use these experiences,” Kidd said of an elimination game. “That's what we all have done when we're in this situation.

“For me, when I was in Phoenix playing Game 5 against Seattle, I had no idea what that meant but found out very quickly what that meant. We got blown out, but it was an experience I could use going forward.

“I was put in that situation a couple of times in my career and I was able to share that with my teammates, understanding the moment. This is about stars showing up. If you look around the league, the stars are showing up and it’s fun to watch.”

The Bucks had their own Game 6 embarrassment two years ago after rallying from a 3-0 deficit against the Chicago Bulls, winning at home and taking Game 5 at the United Center.

But the Bucks were pounded, 120-66, in Game 6 by the more experienced Bulls.

“I hope they still remember that,” Kidd said. “We have some new guys on our team, but we have a couple of guys left from that team and that's something we can learn from. They hit first and they kept hitting, we just couldn't respond."

This time the Bucks responded even though they could not finish the comeback.

"We felt for a second there we had broken them," Terry said. "We felt we had the momentum, but we didn't have enough to finish it off."

Fastball hitters: Kidd talked after Game 5 about how the Raptors were throwing fastballs around the court and beating the Bucks defense.

"I think when you're playing defense the more that you see height on the pass, it gives an opportunity for guys to make the rotations. If you're coming and closing out the fastballs you're dead.

“As much as hitters like the fastball, so do guys who want to catch threes just because it gives them more time to decide, do they shoot it or do they drive it.

“So we've got to get our length into the game. We didn't have that opportunity that last game. There were too many fastballs being thrown."

BUCKS-RAPTORS SCHEDULE (All times Central)

Eastern Conference first-round series (best of seven)

Saturday, April 15 Bucks 97, Raptors 83

Tuesday, April 18 Raptors 106, Bucks 100

Thursday, April 20 - Bucks 104, Raptors 77

Saturday, April 22 Raptors 87, Bucks 76

Monday, April 24 - Raptors 118, Bucks 93 

Thursday, April 27 - Raptors 92, Bucks 89 (Raptors win series, 4-2)