11-17-2009, 06:20 PM
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#93
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 2,208
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I love this article. Specially the first paragraph
Quote:
Heartbreak at the Bradley Center: Mavs 115 – Bucks 113
The Bucks got Dirk’d, that much is clear. You simply cannot allow the Dallas Mavericks to have the last shot. Dirk Nowitzki is too big and too good of a shooter to stop when the game is on the line. If he misses, it’s a fluke. His fade-away is indefensible.
So on one hand it’s a huge disappointment that the Bucks let this one slip away. Score one for being upset.
But on the other hand, they had no business being in the game anyway. Milwaukee was down 18 with eight minutes and 11 seconds to go in the third quarter. Plenty of time was left, but there were few signs of life from a group that followed their worst defensive game of the year with an equally putrid start.
So in some ways it was a minor victory to even have been in the game at the end. But that’s not the way successful teams look at these types of games. Successful teams say, “we never should have been in the position to lose this game and then when it was close we should have closed it out.” And that’s what the Bucks want to be, a successful team.
So this is no moral victory and little can be taken out of this from a team standpoint aside from the lessons learned in defeat. Lessons that could prove valuable going forward. Lessons like how quick is too quick to foul when the other team inbounds with 3.8 seconds left? Or for Brandon Jennings, can someone get a better shot than me on the last possession (his answer: “Ersan’s (Ilyasova) man had doubled me, he was wide open, it’s something I’ll learn from”)?
Ah, the lessons learned in defeat.
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Read further at http://www.bucksketball.com/2009/11/...115-bucks-113/
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"You look at your best players, and if they're not panicking then you have no reason to panic." -- Jason Kidd
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