MILWAUKEE — Three weeks ago, a knee injury left Giannis Antetokounmpo looking 50/50 to return for the rest of the Bucks’ playoff run.
Look at him now.
The Greek Freak delivered perhaps the best performance of his career at the best possible moment and can now add a National Basketball Association (NBA) Finals Most Valuable Player (MVP) award to his two regular-season MVP trophies.
Antetokounmpo scored 50 points in a series-clinching 105-98 Game 6 victory that ended the Bucks’ 50-year title drought.
A half century ago, it was Lew Alcindor — before he was Kareem Abdul-Jabbar — earning the MVP honors for the Bucks by averaging 27 points and 18.5 rebounds in a four-game sweep of Baltimore. This time, it was another big man leading the way as Antetokounmpo became the first player to average 35.2 points, 13.2 rebounds and 5.0 assists per game while shooting 61.8%.
He followed that up by saying how his improbable rise to stardom should serve as a inspiration to others.
“Believe in your dreams,” Antetokounmpo said. “Whatever you feel, when you feel down, when things don’t look like it’s going to happen for you or you might not make it in your career – it might be basketball, it might be anything Just believe in what you’re doing and keep working. Don’t let nobody tell you who you can’t be or what you can’t do.”
Antetokounmpo was an easy choice for the MVP honor after also adding 14 rebounds and five blocks in Game 6. He had at least 40 points and 10 rebounds in three of the six games in this series.
He did all that while dealing with a hyperextended left knee that prevented him from playing in the last two games of the Eastern Conference finals against the Atlanta Hawks.
“It’s just completely awe-inspiring, his performance tonight, this whole series, this whole year,” Bucks center Brook Lopez said.
Antetokounmpo initially feared the injury was more serious and would keep him out of action for an entire year. He instead was back on the floor a week later for the start of the NBA Finals.
He collected 20 points and 17 rebounds in a Game 1 loss. He followed that up with at least 41 points and 12 rebounds in each of the next two games.
Then he played major roles in the two signature plays of this series.
First he blocked Deandre Ayton’s dunk attempt to prevent Phoenix from tying Game 4 with just over a minute left. And after Jrue Holiday made a steal with the Bucks protecting a one-point lead in the final minute of Game 5, the 6-foot-11 Antetokounmpo raced down the court and was on the receiving end of Holiday’s alley-oop that helped clinch the game.
He saved his finest outing for the championship clincher, scoring nearly half the Bucks’ points.
Antetokounmpo collected 20 points in the third quarter alone to help Milwaukee rally from a 47-42 halftime deficit, though the game was still tied 77-all heading into the final period.
He had 27 of the Bucks’ 48 total points through the game’s middle two quarters. And after making just 55.6% of his free throws in his first 20 games of this postseason, Antetokounmpo went 17 of 19 from the line Tuesday night.
“It’s hard to find more words to describe what Giannis does,” Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer said. “But the way he made his free throws, the way he did everything, stepped up, the poise, the confidence, the leadership. He has been working on it. We say we want Giannis to get to the free throw line. We believe. We talked about it this past summer. To win a championship, you’ve got to make free throws and you’ve got to make shots.”
Antetokounmpo’s rapid recovery to lead Milwaukee to it first title since 1971 represents the crowning achievement in Antetokounmpo’s remarkable rise to NBA stardom.
The 26-year-old Antetokounmpo noted this week he hadn’t even started playing basketball in 2007, when LeBron James made his first finals appearance. His rare blend of size and athleticism made him the No. 15 overall pick in the 2013 draft, and he made his first All-Star appearance four years later.
He earned back-to-back MVP honors in 2019 and 2020 while leading the Bucks to the league’s best regular-season record each of those years, but they kept falling short in the playoffs. The Bucks blew a 2-0 lead to Toronto in the 2019 Eastern Conference finals, then lost to Miami in the second round.
Antetokounmpo kept his faith in the Bucks by signing a supermax extension in December.
“There was a job that had to be finished,” Antetokounmpo said.
Antetokounmpo also decided to take a different mental approach.
He acknowledged getting too caught up in the emotional swings of each win and loss earlier in his career. He stayed more level-headed this year while also emerging as a more vocal leader.
That strategy allowed the Bucks to erase 2-0 deficits in the second round against Brooklyn and again in these finals. It helped Antetokounmpo deal with the uncertainty in the immediate aftermath of his injury.
And now it has him on the highest of highs as the MVP of a league championship series. AP

For Suns, Paul’s feel-good Finals story ends in frustration
As the final buzzer sounded, a stone-faced Chris Paul slowly walked off the court, down the tunnel, and into the locker room.
His feel-good story with the Phoenix Suns was denied the happy ending he craved.
“Great group of guys, hell of a season,” Paul said. “But this one’s gonna hurt for a while.”
One of the NBA’s most accomplished players finally got to the sport’s biggest stage in his 16th season at 36 years old. He’s an 11-time All-Star, 10-time All-NBA selection, nine-time All-Defensive selection and often referred to as the ‘Point God’ for his near-perfect profile as an elite point guard.
But he still lacks a championship.
Led by Giannis Antetokounmpo’s amazing performance with 50 points, 14 rebounds and five blocks, the Milwaukee Bucks beat the Suns 105-98 on Tuesday night to win the NBA Finals in six games.
The Suns won the first two games of the series only to lose four straight. It was a brutal collapse for a team led by Paul, who is regarded as one of the best leaders and point guards in NBA history.
Even though the pain of losing was fresh, coach Monty Williams said he hasn’t forgotten what the point guard’s presence meant to a franchise that had been among the NBA’s worst for the past several seasons.
“I just think it speaks to his greatness,” Williams said. “He’s a generational player. I said that 11 years ago when I coached him in New Orleans. Everywhere he’s gone, the team has won. They’ve improved.”
Paul’s performance against the Bucks ran the gamut: He was the hero in a Game 1 win with 32 points, then he was the goat in a Game 4 loss with five turnovers, including a particularly costly one in the final minute. In the decisive Game 6, he led the team with 26 points and added five assists.
It wasn’t enough.
With 40 seconds left and the Suns down 8, Paul’s desperation 3-pointer clanked off the rim. Any chance at a miracle comeback was done. The championship had slipped away.
“Everybody in that locker room knows we had enough,” Paul said. “But it wasn’t enough.”
Paul made the Finals run with an unlikely cast that included Devin Booker, Deandre Ayton and Mikal Bridges, young players making their first playoff appearances. He was traded to the Suns during the past offseason from the Oklahoma City Thunder, bringing instant star power to a franchise that hadn’t been to the playoffs in more than a decade and hadn’t made the Finals since 1993.
The trade paired Paul with Williams, his coach, close friend and mentor. The two had another chance to make it work and the climb to the Finals had Phoenix buzzing.
“We grew all season long,” Paul said. “Nobody expected us to be where we are except for us.”
It may be a tough ending to the season for Paul, but he remains one of the game’s most relatable players. He’s just 6-foot, which gives him an everyman feel that some of the NBA’s giants lack. He’s got the goofy State Farm commercials. He’s had a handful of bad breaks, like when he pulled his hamstring in Game 6 of the Western Conference finals in 2018.
That poor fortune looked like it would continue in the first round of these players when he suffered a shoulder injury in Game 1 against the Los Angeles Lakers. He was ineffective for the next several games but his teammates carried the load.
In the Western Conference finals, Paul missed the first two games against the Los Angeles Clippers in the league’s COVID-19 health and safety protocol. Again, his teammates were there for him, rallying to win both games.
He was superb in the game that clinched his first trip to Finals, scoring 41 points in the Game 6 series clincher.
It earned him the opportunity he always craved. It ended in disappointment.
“Right now, you’re just trying to figure out what you could have done more,” Paul said. “It’s tough.” AP
Image courtesy of Paul Sancya