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Tim Bontemps, ESPN 3y

Milwaukee Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer calls disparity in free throws during Game 1 of NBA Finals 'frustrating'

NBA, Milwaukee Bucks

PHOENIX -- After the Suns had 26 free throws in Game 1 of the NBA Finals, Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer admitted the disparity at the line in the opening game -- a 118-105 Phoenix win -- was "frustrating" for Milwaukee.

"You trying to bait me?" Budenholzer said with a smile when asked about the Suns getting 10 more free throw attempts than his team in Game 1. "No, I mean, it's a huge part of the game. They had 25 points from the free throw line. We're a team that prides ourselves in defending and being able to be good defensively without fouling.

"I can't remember the last time a team got 25 free throws in a game against the Bucks. And then conversely, the way Giannis [Antetokounmpo] attacks, the way Khris [Middleton] attacks, as many opportunities as Khris has with the ball ... it's frustrating, but it's part of the sport. It's part of the game.

"We've got to be better defensively. We've got to keep them off the free throw line and we got to be more aggressive attacking and getting to the free throw line and getting to good offense."

Of the 16 games the Bucks have played in these playoffs, there was only one other time when Milwaukee's opponent shot as many as 26 free throws: Game 2 of Milwaukee's first-round series with the Heat, when Miami went 24 for 35 from the foul line in a Bucks win.

What made that gap all the more punishing in Game 1 for the Bucks, however, was how effective both teams were at the line. Phoenix went a remarkable 25-for-26 from the charity stripe, with the only miss coming from Jae Crowder with 24.8 seconds to go in the fourth quarter.

The Bucks, on the other hand, were only 9 for 16. And while Antetokounmpo went 7-for-12 from the foul line, only two other players -- Jrue Holiday (2-for-2) and Brook Lopez (0-for-2) -- went to the line at all.

Middleton, meanwhile, took 26 shots but didn't get a single free throw.

"It's tough, you know, teams have been getting up in me lately," Middleton said after Game 1. "Just got to try to play through it. Can't try to wait for the officials to bail me out. Just try to be strong with it. If they call a foul, they call a foul. But lately, they haven't, so I just have to play better, be stronger."

There was a similar message coming from Holiday on Wednesday. After he struggled offensively in Game 1, going 4 for 14 from the field, missing all four of his 3-point attempts and passing up some open shots to drive into worse opportunities, Holiday said he needs to be more aggressive -- but that the Bucks also have to be smart about finding the right chances to do so.

"Their defense does try to take that away," Holiday said of attacking the paint. "Again, like I said earlier, they pack the paint very, very well but we've got to be smart. Sell [contact] a little bit.

"But we have to be in the paint a lot more. I felt like every series that we played in, the games that we've won, we've been the best in the paint and scoring in the paint, so that's what we have to continue to do."

At the other end, though, the Bucks also are cognizant of the way both Chris Paul and Devin Booker can create contact with defenders and get to the line -- especially when they get Phoenix into the penalty. That's something Bucks guard Pat Connaughton said Milwaukee needs to focus on heading into Game 2 as it hopes to keep Phoenix from restarting the conveyor belt to and from the foul line.

"Yeah, that's a game-by-game basis, right?" Connaughton said of balancing aggression with discipline defensively against Milwaukee's guards. "But I also think it's not just the fouls from being physical but it's the fouls from being mentally locked in or knowing what they want to do. There were some fouls last night that were on shot fakes that we need to be aware that guys on their team love doing.

"There's also the idea of knowing how physical you can be before the bonus and after the bonus, and so to kind of understand that, understand when they are in the scoring area, understand when we can make them uncomfortable, when we can be physical and then just when we can be physical when we are in the right position. Being physical doesn't always mean pushing them off their spot. Being physical means being somewhere before they get there, being in a position to take a charge, being in a position to go vertical, being in a position to make the floor look really small when they are trying to look for driving lanes."

One thing will help the Bucks in their quest to get to the foul line more in Game 2 -- Antetokounmpo continuing to feel better after his return in Game 1 from a hyperextended left knee.

After Antetokounmpo was upgraded from doubtful to questionable, and then ultimately put into the starting lineup, one week after suffering a scary fall in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals in Atlanta, he finished with 20 points and 17 rebounds in 35 minutes.

More importantly for Milwaukee, Antetokounmpo came through the game without issue, saying Wednesday that he felt good after sleeping on the injury, and he would be ready to go for Game 2.

"Everything this morning has been positive and clean," Budenholzer said. "I think we'll move just a little bit and I think we'll get continued feedback in the next little bit, but so far all good.

"Looking at the film, he's like everybody else. There's some things that he can do better and there's some things that he did well, and same as our group. I think the thing about Giannis, he always gets better, if for whatever reason he's missed some days or some games. And again, not unlike probably a lot of players, he's going to get better as we go forward."

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