Bucks beat Hawks 115-107 for 60th win of season

The Milwaukee Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo drives to the basket against the Atlanta Hawks' Alex Len during the second half of Sunday's game in Milwaukee.
The Milwaukee Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo drives to the basket against the Atlanta Hawks' Alex Len during the second half of Sunday's game in Milwaukee.

MILWAUKEE - Giannis Antetokounmpo is in a perfect position to put the Milwaukee Bucks' 60-win season in perspective.

Antetokounmpo scored 30 points and Khris Middleton added 21 to send Milwaukee to a methodical 115-107 victory over the Atlanta Hawks on Sunday night, giving the franchise 60 wins for the first time since 1981.

"Six years ago, my first year here, we won 15 games," said Antetokounmpo, who was a 19-year-old rookie in the 2013-14 season. "Now, we have four times that amount. It's big. Our goal coming into the season was to get 60 wins. You definitely have to appreciate it because it's pretty special.

"Now, we have to refocus and look forward to the playoffs."

The Bucks, who have clinched the best record in the Eastern Conference heading into the NBA postseason, led from the outset as the Hawks rested John Collins and Trae Young, their leading scorers this season.

Milwaukee led 85-72 entering the final period, but Atlanta pulled to 101-98 on a drive by DeAndre' Bembry with 3:28 left. Middleton countered with consecutive 3-pointers, and Antetokounmpo connected from beyond the arc to put Milwaukee up 110-98.

"It was great for them to close it," said Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer, who coached Atlanta to 60 wins in 2014-15. "Khris has a knack for hitting those big shots, and it's great of Giannis to see a 3 go down to kind of finish the night. Those two guys are special. It makes a big difference."

Alex Len had a career-high 33 points for Atlanta, including a career-best six 3-pointers.

"I was wide open. I was surprised," Len said. "After I made like three or four, they were still letting me shoot. All the power to my teammates. They found me on open shots, and I knocked them down."

None of the Bucks' starters played more than 27 minutes, and 11 of 12 available players each logged at least 19 minutes.

"It's almost exactly what we wanted," Budenholzer said. "It was good. We have depth. We have a lot of guys that can play. A lot of guys stepped up."

Milwaukee led 28-21 after one quarter and pushed it to 46-30 before the Hawks trimmed it to 54-45 at halftime.

Vince Carter hit two free throws to cap a 10-point run that pulled Atlanta to 78-71, but the Bucks pushed the lead to 85-72 entering the fourth.

Milwaukee, which lost in the first round of the playoffs each of the past two seasons, has not advanced past the opening round since making the Eastern Conference finals in 2001.

The 1980-81 Bucks team that finished 60-22 under coach Don Nelson included Sidney Moncrief, Marques Johnson, Junior Bridgeman and Bob Lanier.

"It's a special season," Middleton said. "From the beginning of training camp until now. The ups and downs, the injuries, our guys stayed with it. It was a collective effort from everybody. It's definitely a special moment, but we want to do more."

Young (19.1 points per game), a rookie who had started all 80 games, and Collins (19.5) did not play due to load management.

"We figured today would be a good day to sit them and finish the season on a high note at home," first-year Atlanta coach Lloyd Pierce said. "That's really important for us as a team and with what we've been through this year."

The Hawks host the Indiana Pacers on Wednesday to close their season.

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