Charlotte Hornets

Hornets play well early, but can’t close it vs. Bucks in Paris

Charlotte Hornets guard Nicolas Batum shoots a free-throw during NBA basketball game against Milwaukee Bucks in Paris, Friday, Jan. 24, 2020. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena)
Charlotte Hornets guard Nicolas Batum shoots a free-throw during NBA basketball game against Milwaukee Bucks in Paris, Friday, Jan. 24, 2020. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena) AP

A double-digit lead against the NBA’s top team could have made for an amazing flight across the Atlantic on Saturday for the Charlotte Hornets.

And then came Giannis.

Reigning NBA most valuable player Giannis Antetokounmpo led the comeback for the Milwaukee Bucks, then closed it out late, including a big drive with two minutes left in a 116-103 victory in Paris over the Hornets. Charlotte was down six when Antetokounmpo (30 points) drove the lane, pulled up from five feet, and put in the little bank shot that secured this one.

With owner Michael Jordan attending, the Hornets were far more competitive than their previous game against the Bucks, a 41-point blowout in Milwaukee.

Nice buzz

The slow starts that have plagued the Hornets all season weren’t there Friday. The Hornets built a first-quarter lead and had a solid first half. The Bucks didn’t take control until the fourth quarter.

Bee stings

You give yourself no chance against a team of the Bucks’ talent without making shots. Thirty-seven percent from the field doesn’t cut it.

Building blocks

A 31-point game by Hornets reserve guard Malik Monk is encouraging, particularly his making 10 of 17 from the field and getting to the foul line nine times. The more he drives, the more he gets fouled, and that changes his efficiency dramatically.

Beyond the numbers

This was good marketing for the NBA — the first regular-season game in France — and gave the Hornets some profile in an otherwise unremarkable season. Now they get three days off before a home game against the New York Knicks.

This story was originally published January 24, 2020 at 6:00 PM.

Rick Bonnell
The Charlotte Observer
Rick Bonnell has covered the Charlotte Hornets and the NBA for the Observer since the expansion franchise moved to the Queen City in 1988. A Syracuse grad and former president of the Pro Basketball Writers Association, Bonnell also writes occasionally on the NFL, college sports and the business of sports. Support my work with a digital subscription
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