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  Saturday, Feb. 19 8:30pm ET
Bucks: Five straight home losses
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE | GAME FLOW

MILWAUKEE (AP) -- Vancouver was the fifth straight opponent to show the Milwaukee Bucks that all the offense in the world doesn't matter if there's no D.

Michael Dickerson scored 26 points and Shareef Abdur-Rahim added 24 as the Vancouver Grizzlies beat Milwaukee 111-100 Saturday night.

The high-scoring Bucks lost their fifth in a row at home because of pathetic defense and immaturity, according to their frustrated coach.

"There were a lot of embarrassing moments tonight," George Karl said. "Tonight was as embarrassed as I can remember being this season."

Though the Grizzlies were playing one night after a 103-91 loss in Minnesota in the midst of a four-game Midwest road swing, Vancouver buried the Bucks with a stellar offensive performance. The Grizzlies knocked down nearly all of the open jumpers given them by the Bucks, shooting 60 percent in the second half.

"When you've got the shots this team gives you, you have to knock them down," Dickerson said. "We were open a lot, and we just hit."

Milwaukee's lack of defensive effort is no longer amusing for a team that might now find itself fighting for a playoff spot instead of homecourt advantage. The Bucks, who are 1½ games from falling out of the playoff picture, have allowed 105 points per game in their five home losses.

In particular, Karl singled out stars Glenn Robinson, Ray Allen and Sam Cassell as the reeling Bucks' biggest defensive problems.

"Sam, Ray and Glenn, they were sieves," said Karl. "They didn't stop anybody."

Karl again admitted he has thought about benching one or more of the trio.

"They deserve it, but I don't think I have the (depth) to do it," he said.

The Grizzlies made a 15-4 run to start the third quarter and then hit eight of their first nine shots -- all from the perimeter -- in the fourth. Dennis Scott, Brent Price and Doug West made big jumpers as Vancouver streaked to a 99-81 lead.

"We had a super effort tonight," coach Lionel Hollins said. "We shot the ball well, we attacked their press, we got a lead and didn't turn the ball over."

Vancouver, which shot 51.4 percent for the game, won for the third time in four games and continued to show improvement under Hollins, who coached the Grizzlies to an impressive victory with prospective new owner Michael Heisley watching. Vancouver is now 2-0 with Heisley in attendance.

Abdur-Rahim was 12-of-14 from the free-throw line, while Dickerson threw down a pair of fearsome dunks to go with his outside prowess. Michael Bibby had 13 points and 10 assists.

"When we share the ball, things go good for us," said Bibby.

Vancouver had 34 assists to Milwaukee's 20.

Allen led the Bucks with 32 points, while Cassell had 16 points and 10 assists. Robinson had 21 points, but gave away at least that many with bad defense as Abdur-Rahim decisively won their battle.

"That game was as frustrating a game as we've ever played," Allen said. "We had no defensive aggressiveness at all. George is too good of a coach, and we have a lot of veterans on this team. This shouldn't happen."

Milwaukee hasn't been the same since returning from a successful Western road swing, during which the Bucks beat Vancouver 92-87. Since then, the Bucks are 1-5.

The Bradley Center crowd booed the Bucks at nearly every second-half dead ball.

Most of the Grizzlies' shots were wide-open jumpers like the ones the Bucks surrendered with alarming frequency to Toronto, Portland, New York and Indiana in the first four games of their home losing streak.

Milwaukee's 14-12 home record is easily the worst among the league's 16 teams with winning records. Unfortunately for the Bucks, five of their next seven games are at home.

Game notes
Milwaukee spent the first half complaining about the officiating. Sixteen of the game's first 23 fouls were called against Milwaukee, and Scott Williams and Danny Manning picked up technical fouls for arguing. ... Heisley is the Chicago businessman in the process of buying the Grizzlies from Orca Bay Entertainment for $160 million. A vote of the NBA's owners is needed to confirm the sale, something that could happen by early March. ... The Bucks were so bad in the first half that foul trouble and inconsistency compelled Karl to put second-year forward Robert Traylor in the game for his first non-garbage time minutes since early December and his first action of any kind since Jan. 28.
 


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