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Bucks avoid Game 1 repeat, dominate 3rd in win

MILWAUKEE -- Mike Budenholzer isn't a big speechmaker.

The Milwaukee Bucks went back to the locker room at halftime of Tuesday night's Game 2 against the Boston Celtics with a four-point lead. Budenholzer didn't lecture. Instead he reminded his team that this is where Game 1 of the Eastern Conference second-round series got away from them. The third quarter made all the difference on Sunday.

"He just said that's when we got punched in the mouth last game," Eric Bledsoe told ESPN. "And we don't want that to happen again. We knew what we needed to do."

The Bucks outscored the Celtics by 18 points in the third quarter on Tuesday, finishing the quarter on a 24-2 run. The Bucks went on to throttle the Celtics 123-102, evening the best-of-seven series.

In the first game, Giannis Antetokounmpo finished with 22 points on 7-of-21 shooting. On Tuesday, he had 29 points on 7-of-16 shooting. Bledsoe went from scoring six points in Game 1 to 21 points in Game 2. Khris Middleton, who scored 16 points on Sunday, had 28.

"We got an ass-whooping in Game 1," Antetokounmpo said during his on-court interview with TNT after the game. "We had to come out here and play harder in Game 2."

The Bucks didn't make drastic changes between Games 1 and 2. At practice on Monday, Budenholzer said the issue wasn't their space-and-pace game plan, it was the Bucks' execution of it. After watching Game 1 tape, Antetokounmpo, Bledsoe and Middleton all agreed: Effort was the problem. Budenholzer swapped out Sterling Brown for Nikola Mirotic in the starting lineup. Brown was suffering from back spasms, and Mirotic had provided a much-needed offensive spark during the first game. Mirotic finished with nine points.

Still, the beginning of the first quarter was eerily reminiscent of Sunday's game: The Bucks came out sluggish. Antetokounmpo was walled off by Boston's defense; Bledsoe turned over the ball one too many times.

By halftime, the Bucks had begun to find a rhythm. By the end of the third quarter, even Antetokounmpo was nailing 3-pointers. Early on, the Fiserv Forum crowd cheered tentatively, as if expecting the home team to release its lead at any moment. But as the third period came to a close, the hesitation had evaporated, and the building vibrated with anticipation.

Antetokounmpo had 13 points, four rebounds and an assist during the Bucks' third-quarter run.

"We felt we put ourselves in a better position to win in the first half and coming out of the third quarter," Middleton said.

With the series tied, the Bucks will head to Boston for Game 3. During last year's playoffs, the Bucks went 0-4 at TD Garden. The Boston crowd was relentless in its heckling of Bledsoe, who engaged in trash talk with Terry Rozier throughout the series.

"I know what is ahead," Bledsoe told ESPN. "I know the crowd don't forget nothing. I have to be way more focused going into Game 3. That's the most focused I'll need to be this entire series. That'll be our toughest game."