No Harm, No Foul

What you’re about to read (or, more likely, stop reading about a quarter of the way through) is a word-for-word collection of text messages I sent out during the Milwaukee Bucks brief stay in the bubble.

Other than a brief statement here in my intro, I offer zero political or social justice commentary, and not one word on COVID 19.

I’m just a true-believer Bucks’ fan commenting, criticizing, and ultimately crying to my friends and brothers about meaningful Bucks’ basketball.

It’s unfiltered gut-wrenching heartbreak wrapped in another Wisconsin sports disappointment as it became painfully obvious Giannis and Co. weren’t raising the Larry O’Brien this year.

This is my annual Buck’s Obituary. You can read the other ones here:

Bellykingbelly.com

The other obits wrote themselves.

This one, for whatever reason, proved infinitely more difficult to write. (FYI, my writer’s block had nothing to do with their boycot of Game 5 against the Orlando Magic. My only hot take is they’re the only NBA team with true balls in this matter. They were willing to sacrifice a playoff loss for their statement. (I’m guessing they weren’t conferencing with David Silver before they walked out.) No matter your politics or opinions on our current state of affairs, that took some fucking balls.)

Ultimately, I decided to express my unfiltered broken heart by copying and pasting text messages addressed to some of my closest people.

It’s a super creative idea that involved very little creative juice to publish.

No harm. No foul.

Enjoy the ride.

(Circa early August, 2020):

“DJ Wilson actually doing something! Holy shit!”

“Big Ragu has been awful tonight.”

“Yeah, he (BLEDSOE) looks tired and confused.”

(Against MIAMI in the regular season):

“I took at nap at halftime. Woke up in the middle of the fourth. The fuck happened?”

“I saw the end of a 20 point run and Giannis spinning for a bunch of dunks. They finally start guarding Tyler Herro in the third?”

“Wearing the Midds jersey all weekend. HUGE WIN TODAY!”

(Regarding the national announcers fawning over Luka and the Bucks’ loss to the MAVS):

“It’s an insignificant game but I’ll still be pissed if they lose. Either way, they need to close games better.”

“It’s irritating.”

(Regarding the regular season loss to the Raptors when the Bucks were without Giannis due to last minute dental surgery):

“I hear you. I missed the highs but enjoyed not suffering through the lows. The Bucks game meant nothing, but I’m still pissed. I hate those Toronto fucks. And fuck Nick Nurse!”

(About a week or so later):

“Giannis just head-butted a guy. Great.”

“Bucks have one more regular season game. I think he absolutely sits out Game 1 of the playoffs.”

“One game for Giannis. No harm, no foul.”

(Before Game 1 against ORLANDO):

“Spoiler alert: DJ Wilson scores in double figures while playing the majority of the 4th quarter and the Bucks win by twenty.“

(After Game 1 against ORLANDO):

“Nightmare of a game. Classic Middleton and Lopez game. When they’re cold we’re done.”

“And apparently they forgot to pack their defense when they traveled to the bubble.”

“Remember when the Magic beat Toronto in Game 1 last year? Remember when VanVleet couldn’t hit a shot in last year’s playoffs and then couldn’t miss a shot against the Bucks? Some positive regression coming Milwaukee’s way starting Thursday.”

“Exactly my point. They’re due. At least they’re not peaking too early.”

“Let’s grade Middleton’s handle: C+ ?”

(A week before the Bucks vs. Heat series):

“Total pacifist over here but I really want to punch Duncan Robinson in the face.”

“Jazz need to get other people involved to keep up with the Nugs. Just like the Bucks. They need Midds and the bench mob to hit some shots.”

“Bledsoe seems awake today.”

(Game #1 against MIAMI):

“40 point quarter. Good start.”

“I’m holding on way too tightly with this.”

“And my emotional investment is peaking with the Bucks. Didn’t handle their Game 1 loss well and now this one. My entire body feels chemical rushes I shouldn’t be feeling. It’s a gross drug. I hate meaningful basketball.”

“The basketball is real. These dudes are trying hard to win the games. The whistles on every other fucking possession are what bothers me more than anything. These games may lack meaning to others (if this is your opinion and belief, more power to you) but not me. When they win I get a natural high. When they lose I feel extremely upset and sour.”

“Yeah, they might be getting tired, too. Playing every other night at max effort. Look at Harden. He couldn’t hit a shot to save his life last night.”

(After the ROCKETS defeated the THUNDER):

“Go Rockets? Is James Harden a little chubby?”

(Before Game 3 with the HEAT):

“Can Bledsoe just drive and at least try to score? Our offense needs someone else to ease the burden of Giannis and Midds. I think keeping Matthews on Butler works. Bledsoe can drive at will on theses fools.”

“And is Bledsoe high out there? Wouldn’t be surprised to learn he played this entire series on shrooms.”

“I’m just worried about Duncan Robinson. I fucking hate that dude. And he’s been quiet.”

“I wasn’t going to watch the last game and then ended up watching the whole thing. Bucks haven’t been their best basketball selves in The Bubble. Can they rise up and get their groove back? Will The Big Ragu ever hit another jump shot?”

(After the Game 3 loss when the Bucks shit the bed in the fourth quarter):

“I was more upset with the Games 1 and 2 losses for some reason. Ain’t about Coach Bud. It’s about GRABBING THE FUCKING BALL!!!!!!!”

“Celtics crush us anyway. This sucks.”

“No drastic changes. Just sign Giannis to the super max. That’s all I care about.”

“I’d rather watch him play and win zero titles than watch him go, even if we win this year or next.”

“Just hope Giannis stays. Don’t care if they ever win a title. Dude is fun to watch. Helps with the doldrums of winter. It’s pretty obvious ‘the journey’ is a hell of a lot better than the destination with these here Bucks.”

(Regarding Game 4 when Giannis left the game early to injury and Middleton and Co. ascended to a somewhat miraculous win):

“Didn’t watch a second. Was in the middle of a massive fence building project. Checked my phone a few times and then listened to the radio for the last minute of the game. Midds three point dagger choked me up a little bit. Not going to lie. Ain’t Coach Bud’s fault they can’t handle the fucking ball anymore. GRAB THE BALL!!!!”

(After very little little (if any) text chatter before Game 5, here was my only text after their season ended. Giannis didn’t play, the Bucks fought hard, but they just didn’t have enough):

“Starting the drum beat for CP3. He’s the fourth quarter alpha the Bucks need.”

THE END

P.S. I’ve since steered away from the low hanging fruit of the Chris Paul panacea.

P.P.S. Here’s a mid-bubble fantasy football take I wanted to put on the record for a good laugh. Definitely a ROJO truther over here:

“Spoiler alert: Fournette will NOT be the alpha unless Jones gets hurt. They’ll cut McCoy because he’s toast. Dude didn’t even dress for the Super Bowl. Fournette is their veteran backup because Brady is a little bitch and can’t handle a rookie as the main guy if Jones gets hurt.”

SPORTS

PART 1: (boredom)

For God knows what reason, Huey Lewis & The News named one of their albums SPORTS.

Sure it was popular, but what the hell were they thinking?

Did they think it offered some sort of double meaning?

“Hey, we’re just some good old sports who like sports!”

Maybe Huey Lewis & The News had an ill-advised advisor who thought the title would attract your average hard-working sports fan.

Either way, you’d think the album would have at least one song about sports, right? There’s a song about Vietnam, a song about wanting a new drug, and some others that don’t deserve another syllable from me. Not one damn song about sports!

It might be the worst album title of all-time (with Lionel Richie’s DANCING ON THE CEILING a very close second).

Enough with Huey and who the hell cares about The News because it’s time to celebrate! Somehow, we made it through the last 4.5 months without the luxury of our favorite sports, and, as we stand now, we’re on the precipice of what could be the greatest stretch of live sports in all of human history. (More on that later.)

Let’s start the sports talk by discussing some alternate realities, something most sports fans are used to anyway. Sports and the relentless analysis of its past/future/present is the ultimate distraction because there is literally no end to their multi-layered dimensions. Somehow, sports talk radio/TV has survived without months and months of fresh sports because of dissociative episodes such as exhaustive Mt. Rushmore discussions, Top 5/Bottom 5 Twitter polls, endless ‘what if’ scenarios, future projections, past speculations, crybaby laments, and, of course, the perpetual wishful thinking for brighter days ahead.

Obviously, had the space-time continuum not been forever altered by COVID-19, this essay and our current reality doesn’t exist.

SIDE NOTE: Let me be clear. In no way, shape or form am I trying to minimize the devastating effects of COVID-19. It’s most definitely for real, and no matter your politics, it has undoubtedly fucked things up: My father miraculously escaped a nursing home without contracting it, a friend in my oldest fantasy football league tested positive without symptoms, and several of my colleagues lost loved ones due to the virus. It’s the overwhelming frontrunner for story of the century, skewing and screwing with the daily fabric of everyone’s life in one way or another. This past April, I ended up playing the WE’RE ALL IN THIS TOGETHER drinking game while watching TV one night, and I passed-out before the 10 o’clock news ended. Didn’t even get through the weather.

Unmistakably, the degree to which this new virus has affected each and every one of us is not my focus here. Please don’t pretend to think this essay is about something that it’s not. I’m talking about Wisconsin sports here, and I won’t apologize for any of it!

Let’s narrow our focus even more to examine the woulda’s and coulda’s of what was supposed to be the current Wisconsin sports landscape. Here’s what I believe things would’ve looked like had Patient Zero kept the novel coronavirus to him or herself back in 2019.

My unaltered Wisconsin sports reality begins from a mid-July perch in the heart of Major League Baseball’s marathon regular season. The All-Star Game would’ve taken place about a week ago, and most of us would have already forgotten who won.

Well past the statistical half-way point of the season, the fourth place Brewers would only be 3.5 games behind the first place Reds and finishing up a six-game west coast swing with an important series against the league leading Dodgers.

For me, there’s definitely something special about mid-summer west coast Brewers baseball. During the dog days of July, I don’t have to wake up at the butt-crack of dawn to teach a roomful of fifth graders, and I’m blessed to be able to stay up well past midnight to watch Josh Hader strike out the side while Craig Counsell’s face nervously wonders how he’s going to manage tomorrow’s game without Josh Hader because he already used him yesterday. (By the way, I am a huge proponent of dedicating an entire cable channel to simulcasting live shots of Craig Counsell’s face during Brewer games. I think it would be a huge hit!)

The allure of Brewers west coast baseball can also be credited to their A+ local TV broadcasting team: Brian Anderson is a genuine treasure and truly one of the very best play-by-play talents in all of baseball. Trust me, Brewer fans are grateful to share him with the national stage, especially when we’re honored with the presence of Badgers icon Matt Lepay as BA’s fill-in. Lepay developed his baseball sea legs before our very eyes and ears, proving he’s a natural no matter the sport, and a verified Wisconsin broadcasting legend.

“Touchdown, Wisconsin!”

Their partner, Bill ‘Rock’ Schroeder, is the perfect compliment: He combines the intimate knowledge of an ex-MLB-catcher with the folksy grump of a lifelong Brewer, a beloved homer who is sick and tired of ending every season as the perpetual bridesmaid. He’s with us every night, and he hates Brewer losses as much as we do.

Finally, west coast games usually don’t end until after midnight central time. This is great, because when the Brewers blow a mid-game lead, I don’t have to suffer through the rest of my night with the agony of defeat killing my buzz.

Why didn’t Counsell keep in his starting ‘out getter’ just a little longer?

If only Keston Hiura didn’t botch that routine double play ball!

Will Arcia ever record another base on balls?

If the Brewers lose at twelve-thirty in the morning, I go to sleep at a somewhat reasonable hour. Great.

If they happen to win, I stay up until three and keep drinking!

Win win.

Let’s switch to the Bucks now. Had COVID-19 not spread to every continent sans Antarctica, Wisconsin sports fans might still be wondering why Coach Bud (and Giannis?) insisted on playing out the Bucks’ brutal March/April schedule at full tilt.

Giannis injured his left knee against the Lakers just before everything went haywire. Would the Bucks have rushed him back to play against Boston and Miami a week after the injury? Would Giannis have insisted on coming back early because he’s a ruthless competitor and one of the NBA’s ultimate warriors? We also have to factor in that, with his supermax extension right around the corner, there’s very little chance Coach Bud and the Bucks say no to Giannis if he insisted on playing.

The Bucks were unquestionably the best team in the NBA up until the shutdown. Would they have popped champagne with the Larry O’Brien in their midst had COVID-19 not spread?

Obviously, no one knows for sure. Last June, I wrote extensively (https://bellykingbelly.com/2020/07/23/60-wins-summit-fever-altitude-sickness/) lamenting the Bucks’ precipitous fall from their 2-0 lead against Toronto. I argued that they suffered from a fatal bout of altitude sickness due to the brutal every-other-night schedule dictated to teams in the Eastern Conference Finals. No doubt, the way Giannis gives 110% on both ends, he wears down over the course of the NBA’s ridiculously long regular season/playoffs. Last year, if December Giannis graded out at 99, late-May Giannis graded out at a 90. Some would even argue he slipped to an 81 during those last few games against Toronto.

Heading into March this year, I had a sinking feeling that, with the summit in plain view, the same bout of altitude sickness would strike again at a similar spot on the mountain, especially considering their likely ECF opponent had an A+ coach in Brad Stevens, an extremely valuable glue piece in Marcus Smart, a certified fourth quarter closer in Kemba Walker, and an ascending future MVP candidate in Jayson Tatum.

On the other hand, there’s a huge part of every Wisconsin sports fan (including myself) that believes the Bucks would’ve won the whole fucking thing. There was a beautiful day in mid-June blessed with picture perfect weather that screamed ‘parade day’. I can see and hear it now: Giannis Antetokounmpo, man of the people, holding up the Larry O’Brien, telling all of Wisconsin that he’s not going anywhere and there will be more championships to come.

None of what I just described happened. COVID-19 took over 2020, and it continues to rear its ugly head.

PART 2: (dreadful thoughts and wishful thinking)

So here we are. Late July, 2020. The space-time continuum is what it is, and we’re hoping everything doesn’t turn into a Biff’s Pleasure Paradise sort of world à la Back to the Future II. All of the woulda, coulda, and shoulda’s of the past 4.5 months have turned into the great promise yet uncertainty of the next 3+ months. Nobody, not even the 14th Dalai Lama himself, has any idea whether or not we are about to embark on the greatest stretch of live sports in the history of live sports, or if the pandemic will erase every dream for every diehard sports fan across the nation.

Let’s broaden our scope for a second.

What’s your prediction right now?

Will all four major North American sports leagues finish their respective seasons and crown champions?

I know. Tough question.

I believe the NFL is the least likely to finish their season with a legit champion. For starters, the NFL calendar stretches all the way into February, the height of the flu season. While Pizza Hut and Dominos pride themselves on contactless delivery these days, the NFL makes its billions as an unabashed contact sport. Shit, will they even make it past Thanksgiving? I remember the Packers endured a pretty intense flu outbreak before their NFC divisional round playoff game against Seattle last January.

Does anyone think, in our current state of affairs, they’d even take the field with a similar outbreak of COVID?

I’m a bit more hopeful the other major sports will crown champions, but I was also hopeful gyms in Wisconsin would open up by Easter Sunday.

I wasn’t even close with that one.

I was hopeful I’d be able to stand in front of my fifth graders for at least a few weeks to finish the school year.

Nope.

I was hopeful I’d be able to attend my nephew’s birthday party in June.

Sorry.

I thought for sure I’d be standing in front of my new batch of fifth graders on the first day of school this September.

Wrong again.

Every single one of my pandemic hopes and predictions thus far have turned out totally wrong. I stopped making predictions after the gyms didn’t open, and my hope for any legitimate, lasting joy derived from the sports world feels uneasy at best at this juncture.

Do I hope the Brewers start off strong and beat the Cubs on Opening Day?

Sure.

But what difference will it make when one-third of the New York Yankees test positive for COVID on Labor Day?

I can see the headline now: MLB shuts down out of ‘an abundance of caution’.

Do I hope a healthy and well-rested Bucks ascend to their rightful spot on top of the NBA world in October?

Absolutely, but when Giannis and Khris Middleton both test positive for COVID the night before Game 7 of the NBA Finals without any symptoms, and the title goes to LeBron and the Lakers, my already fragile Wisconsin sports heart will shatter and may never fully heal.

And what happens when COVID spreads through a large chunk of the Packers locker room before the NFC title game this January?

Does anyone honestly think the NFL cancels the season right then and there, or will Drew Brees and the Saints automatically graduate to the Super Bowl to face Lamar Jackson so everyone can fulfill their corporate obligations?

Nobody knows. Not even Jesus Christ himself knows.

“You tryin’ to say Jesus Christ can’t hit a curveball?”

Maybe my war-torn Wisconsin sports heart has reached peak battle fatigue. Maybe all Wisconsin sports fans are cursed with a lifetime of eternal pessimism because the Packers held and subsequently barfed up their 99% fourth quarter win percentage against Seattle in the 2014 season’s NFC Title game.

But, wait. With sports there’s always wishful thinking. Let’s flip the script and go big. What if this year is different because it’s already so goddamned different?

Maybe the novel coronavirus doesn’t penetrate the sports world with a fatal tumor. The English Premier League crowned a champion this year; that was a pretty big deal. I’ve watched several boxing and MMA fights in the past couple of months and they haven’t shut down yet. Shit, the KBO is still playing. And what about good old Travis Diener nailing a walk-off three for Marquette’s TBT championship?

That felt good as fuck, even without fans in the stands!

Maybe there is hope!

Maybe every league stays open for business and Wisconsin sports fans are saddled with first world problems like flipping between a Bucks playoff game and a Sunday night Packers game vs. the Saints. Can you imagine waking from an eight-month coma September 27 with this dilemma on your hands? You might stroke back out right then and there, or faint like Marty’s girlfriend when she runs into her future self in Back to the Future II.

At the very same time (circa late September), maybe the Brewers are fighting the Cardinals and Cubs for a playoff spot.

Heading into the year, the Brewers’ starting pitching was a clear weakness, and their ‘answers’ were all unproven. Now, with expanded rosters on top of built in depth (not to mention the DH rule, a 60 game sprint, and expanded playoffs), the Brewers could legitimately compete for a postseason birth.

Ask the 2019 Nationals. Once you’re invited to the dance, anything can happen . . . .

Like a Brewers World Series title, on top of a likely Bucks title, along with a pissed-off-as-all-fuck, single-as-all-fuck Aaron Rodgers going Michael Jordan on everyone’s asses.

Wisconsin sports 2020-2021.

Why not us? Why not now?

Could this be our finest moment?

Will Wisconsin sports erase our demons and achieve ultimate redemption?

Can we finally summit Everest?

Or will acute altitude sickness knock us back down the mountain?

Or will we fail to make it out of base camp?

Will we even make it to base camp in the first place?

Will COVID-19 regulate us back to mindless endeavors like spending 15 minutes searching for a new podcast while delaying yard work on what should be a glorious football Sunday?

Will we be forced back into inane hobbies like writing overly wordy sports blogs nobody reads anyway?

Shit.

No one knows.

Not even God knows.

THE END

Written by Joe Kovochich (07/23/2020)

60 wins, Summit Fever & Altitude Sickness

Despite 60 wins and other advanced metrics claiming historical greatness, the 2018-2019 Milwaukee Bucks stalled during the most critical of junctures. With the summit in plain view, and with the entire state of Wisconsin experiencing a serious bout of summit fever, the Milwaukee Bucks were forced back down to base camp with a severe case of altitude sickness.

It’s clear the Bucks needed an extra gear and a go-to offensive force to close out games and get to the top.

Maybe they find their answer in-house with Giannis Antetokounmpo, who has taken his game to the next level every year he’s been in the league.

Maybe he finally develops a consistent back-to-the-basket post game, or some sort of unstoppable pull-up jumper.

Maybe he revamps his deliberate free throw approach and evolves into an 80% shooter by simply dribbling three times and letting it rip.

Ultimately, I think his offensive game suffered in the playoffs because he worked with 110% effort on defense, and he was regularly smacked and hacked in the paint. Dude shot 55% from the line in the postseason (including two air-balls), he air-mailed a five-footer in Game 6, and he even missed a dunk in Game 5.

By having to play every other night in the ECF, I felt like he, along with the rest of the team, simply ran out of gas. They ran out of oxygen, and the ensuing altitude sickness became too much to overcome.

It’s obvious Giannis and the Bucks lost to a better team who clearly possessed a decisive extra gear when they needed it the most.

That being said, I hope the Bucks bring back Middleton and Lopez. Middleton gets trashed by the local media and know-it-all fans, but he’s been an instrumental part of the rebuild, and he’s the perfect #2 to Giannis. If he asserted himself to be more of an alpha in the fourth quarter, maybe the Bucks are playing tonight. Lopez was a huge part of the team’s “Let it Fly” philosophy by spacing the court for his teammates, and he was an imposing force on “D” by protecting the paint and crashing the boards. More importantly, the Bucks have no one on their current roster capable of replacing either player, making both Middleton and Lopez key pieces of the puzzle for next year.

With that being said, I think we should let Brogdon walk. He’ll command a ton of money in free agency, and his injury history is a definite concern. Also, we have young (cheap) players who can replace him with Sterling Brown, Donte Divincenzo, and, if we can somehow sign George Hill for another year (for around 10 million?), we’d be set.

Finally, I’m fine with the long term Bledsoe signing, but dude needs to find a way to step up in the playoffs, not take steps backward. My goodness, if he played even close to his offensive potential, we’d be playing tonight.

I firmly believe the fire is lit and the future is bright. I can envision a Coach Bud statue near Giannis’s somewhere in the Beer District. Still. Losing in the ECF continues to hurt bad. It feels worse than the Brewers losing Game 7 last year.

Maybe it’s the sight of Steph Curry jacking up threes in Canada. Maybe it’s because the wound is still fresh, and I can’t help picking at the scab. Maybe it’s because Wisconsin sports fans like myself are sick and tired of getting jarred awake just when we were convinced the dream was real.

Who knows where the next NBA super team will be and what it will look like. Either way, the East should be up for grabs next year, and with Giannis around, the Bucks will be competitive as hell and fun to watch.

Can’t wait to see what comes next.

Go Bucks!!!!!