Bucks Center Myles Turner Returns to Indiana and Is Booed in His First Game Against His Old Team
Myles Turner, signed to a $108 million deal with the Bucks, showed strong defense and leadership in a tight 117-115 Bucks win, capped by Giannis Antetokounmpo's buzzer-beater.
- Bucks center Myles Turner was booed by fans in his first game against his former team, the Indiana Pacers.
- Turner was surprised by his departure from the Pacers, saying "this league's a business" and he got his "first real taste" of that during the offseason.
- Turner spent 10 years with the Pacers and said it was "one of the best sports environments" to play in, looking forward to seeing fans he's known.
84 Articles
84 Articles
Antetokounmpo drills buzzer-beater as Bucks edge injury-riddled Pacers
Giannis Antetokounmpo capped his game-high 33-point performance on Monday (Tuesday, November 4, Manila time) with a buzzer-beating, turnaround fadeaway to lift the Milwaukee Bucks past the Indiana Pacers, 117-115, in Indianapolis. Backing down Aaron Nesmith in the closing seconds, Antetokounmpo pivoted at the left elbow just as a double-team from Isaiah Jackson came from the corner. Jackson leapt to block Antetokounmpo’s shot attempt, but the hi…
Giannis Antetokounmpo scored a suspended shot on the horn after a fabulous 'fade away' from about five and a half meters to certify the Bucks' extreme victory on the Pacers court (115-117). The Greek made the Gainbridge Fieldhouse of Indianapolis mute and provoked the madness among his companions after which it was undoubtedly the most spectacular basket of this start of course in the NBA.wf_cms.rss.read_more
The Bucks imposed themselves on the mermaid against the Pacers thanks to a basket of Giannis Antetokounmpo (115-117).
It's unfair for anyone who has given ten years of their life to a team, he said of his teammate who until last year played for Indiana.
Pacers fall on Bucks' buzzer-beater in Myles Turner's return to Indy
INDIANPOLIS (WISH) — The Pacers lost to the Bucks, 117-115, on Giannis Antetokounmpo’s buzzer beater fadeaway shot. The Pacers were down by as many as 12 points in the fourth quarter, and fought back to tie the game with an Aaron Nesmith layup with less than 15 seconds left. But it would be the Bucks that prevailed in the end. “This is all you can ask for,” Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle said. “We were down double digits again in the fourth qua…
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