The Bucks spent most of Game 3 breezing their way to 113 points against the best defense in the NBA with the simplicity of a weekend up north. That belies the exactitude with which the Bucks played, the kind necessary to dismantle a Brad Stevens team, if only for a night. But it was true, too.
Whichever kind of beauty you prefer, it was beauty that was all around.
It was up, way up above where anyone in the arena — most of all, Aron Baynes — could reach, when Giannis lifted, cut a pose that is one of seven or eight of his that could end up as a statue next door to the Bradley Center, and threw down.