Milwaukee, WI
Analyzing the best-case scenarios for the Milwaukee Bucks in playoff seeding
Sometimes, in any sport, across all levels, certain teams just have your number. They can hit shots they don’t normally make, score goals they don’t normally score, or just get past whatever defense you try to play. For the Milwaukee Bucks, it has to be the Miami Heat.
Fans can still taste the bitterness of losing to Miami in round one of last year’s NBA Playoffs. The Heat right now are seeded sixth, but just barely. The 76ers and Pacers are also right there. If Milwaukee can avoid playing Miami, that would be a big positive for a run at the 2023-2024 NBA championship.
All time, the Heat have a 12-6 record vs. the Bucks in the NBA Playoffs. That has provided plenty of sour memories for Milwaukee Bucks fans.
With the playoffs inching closer, let us now look at some best-case seeding scenarios.
The best-case scenario for the Milwaukee Bucks would be to play the Chicago Bulls in a playoff series.
The Bulls, including all of those great Michael Jordan years and championship runs, still only have a 9-14 record against the Bucks in the playoffs.
The Bucks seem to have the Bulls number when it comes to playoff basketball.
However, for this to happen, quite a few “what-ifs” would have to come true.
Chicago at (31-32) appears to be a “lock” to make the play-in tournament. The Bulls would need to come out of that play-in game from the number eight versus nine game to take on the Bucks, who would have to cement their spot as the second seed. If all of this were to happen, then Milwaukee would have homecourt advantage. Is there any way that the series wouldn’t go 4-0 or 4-1 in Milwaukee’s favor? Feels like a lock.
Milwaukee was 3-1 in the regular season series against Chicago. The lone win the Bulls did have went to overtime. The game was played at the United Center. It felt like a “Super Bowl moment” for the Bulls.
A close second, another solid scenario would be to play the Orlando Magic. Orlando seems to be fading a little bit.
All time, Milwaukee is 7-2 vs Orlando in the postseason. This season, they are (1-1) so far, but the win looked good, while the loss felt “off.” All of this took place before Doc Rivers was even thought of.
For this season, save a “fluky” loss on November 11th, Milwaukee should want to play Orlando. Paolo Banchero and Franz Wagner are good, talented young players. However, the operative word there is “young.” The experience Giannis ANtetokounmpo, Brook Lopez and Khris Middleton would bring to that series would be a big advantage.
In the win on December 21st, Giannis looked as dominant against Orlando as he looked all season. The Bucks did not have a particularly strong shooting night in that game, but the homecourt advantage they had at the Fiserv was certainly in play.
The Bucks were able to play and win as a team. Six players accounted for more than eight points, with Giannis and Damian Lillard leading the way. The way the team was able to move and pass the ball was impressive. That tea leaf bodes well for a playoff series.
That series feels like a 4-1 first-round victory for sure.
This one feels kinda self-evident, but to be able to take on an “Embiid-less” 76ers team would be an excellent first-round pairing. In a good win on the 25th of February, the Bucks beat the shorthanded 76ers in Philadelphia (119-98).
So far, Milwaukee is 2-0 on the season vs. Philadelphia.
Embiid is currently sidelined with an injured lateral meniscus, and it’s unclear if he will be back on the court this season.
The worst-case scenario would be to somehow, someway, fall out of one of the top six seeds. But right now, that feels statistically unlikely. With 19 games remaining, Milwaukee would need to go through a horrendous stretch for the “pack” to catch them with flipped records.
Right now, even if Milwaukee was to just play .500 basketball, a top-four seed feels like a given.
Milwaukee, WI
What to know about Michael Lock as police execute warrant on his former home
Drone video shows dug‑up yard at former Michael Lock home
Drone video shows a dug‑up yard at a Milwaukee home once owned by Michael Lock, following a police search for possible homicide victims.
Milwaukee police on Monday, April 20, began digging up a home once owned by notorious Milwaukee drug dealer Michael Lock.
The dig marks another chapter in Lock’s long criminal history in Milwaukee, which has included convictions for homicide, drug dealing, kidnapping, torture and running a prostitution ring.
As of 6 p.m., April 20, police had partially dug up the concrete driveway and yard in Lock’s former home. Lock has been convicted of murders of other drug dealers whose bodies were found under concrete slabs at a different home he owned.
As the dig continues, here’s what to know about Lock:
Who is Michael Lock?
Lock was the head of a murderous criminal organization known as the “Body Snatchers” and one of the leading criminal operators in Milwaukee until his 2007 arrest.
Over the course of a decade, Lock’s organization sold large volumes of cocaine, tortured and killed other dealers, prostituted women across the Midwest and ran a mortgage fraud scheme.
A jury convicted Lock in July 2008 in the homicides of two drug dealers in 1999 and 2000, whose remains were found in 2005 under concrete slabs in the backyard of a home once owned by Lock at 4900 W. Fiebrantz Ave. He has also been found guilty of running a prostitution ring, various kidnapping and drug dealing charges and mortgage fraud.
Where is Michael Lock now?
Lock is is serving multiple terms of life in prison at Waupun Correctional Institution without the chance of parole.
Where are Milwaukee police digging on April 20?
Milwaukee police confirmed they are executing a search warrant at the home on 4343 N. 15th St. in Milwaukee’s north side. City tax records show the property is owned by Shalanda Roberts, formerly Shalanda Lock, Michael Lock’s former wife.
Why are police digging up the yard of Lock’s former home?
There has long been suspicion on the part of law enforcement that there are additional bodies buried under the yard. In 2011, police dug another Milwaukee yard looking for remains.
In that warrant 15 years ago, investigators said at least four victims are buried somewhere in Milwaukee. Before that, police had dug a half-dozen other yards. Police have found no remains in the other digs.
Who lives at the property now?
It is unclear if anyone currently lives at the North 15th Street property. Shalanda Roberts told the Journal Sentinel she owns the property where police are digging, but it is a rental and she lives out of state now.
She said she has no information on the dig and has not spoken to her former husband in years.
Read the Journal Sentinel’s past coverage on Michael Lock
The Journal Sentinel documented the case against Lock in a five-part investigative series, “The Preacher’s Mob,” published in 2009.
You can read the series below:
Milwaukee, WI
Marvin Bynum named to BizTimes Milwaukee’s Notable Leaders in Law | Marquette Today
Marvin Bynum, adjunct professor at Marquette University Law School, was named to BizTimes Milwaukee’s list of Notable Leaders in Law.
Bynum, shareholder and real estate attorney with Milwaukee-based Godfrey & Kahn, teaches a course on real estate transactions at Marquette. He has experience with a range of property types, from sports facilities to manufacturing plants and office spaces, and works to help clients navigate transactions including development, financing, leasing, acquisitions, dispositions and low-income housing tax credit-financed projects.
Notable Leaders in Law is part of BizTimes Milwaukee’s Notable series, which recognizes leaders in the southeastern Wisconsin business community.
Six alumni were also named to the list:
- Jim Brzezinski, managing partner and CEO of Tabak Law
- Adam R. Finkel, partner at Husch Blackwell
- Jeremy Guth, shareholder and attorney at O’Leary-Guth Law Office S.C.
- Keith Kopplin, shareholder at the Milwaukee office of Ogletree Deakins
- Isioma Nwabuzor, associate general counsel and assistant corporate secretary at Modine Manufacturing Co.
- Joe Pickart, partner at Husch Blackwell
Milwaukee, WI
Milwaukee Wave learns its opponent for MASL championship series
Milwaukee Wave coach Marcio Leite 2025-26 team’s evolution in MASL
See first-year Milwaukee Wave head coach Marcio Leite discuss the roles of younger players and veterans as the 2025-26 MASL season begins.
The Milwaukee Wave had been in the awkward position of trying to sell tickets to the MASL championship series without knowing when it would actually host a game.
The questions were answered late April 19, when the San Diego Sockers beat the St. Louis Ambush in the other semifinal in overtime. Their series didn’t even start until four days after the Wave eliminated the Baltimore Blast with victories in a regulation Game 2 and knockout Game 3 at the UWM Panther Arena.
Now the finals are set for two of the most decorated teams in arena soccer.
The Wave will host Game 1 at 6:35 p.m. Wednesday, April 22 and then the series will finish at the Frontwave Arena in Oceanside, California, with Game 2 at 9:30 p.m. April 24 and a potential Game 3 at 9 p.m. April 27.
Three versions of the Sockers have totaled 16 championships in various indoor league with the latest iteration founded in 2009 owning six of those. The Wave has seven.
First-year Wave head coach Marcio Leite has won titles with both franchises.
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