The Floor Picture
The easiest way to picture this rematch is as a second draft of the same possession map. The Clippers beat the Bucks 129-96 on March 24. They bring a four-game winning streak into the March 29 rematch. Fine. Useful context, not a verdict.
What matters is narrower than the streak talk. Milwaukee has already seen this version of the problem once. So the real question is not whether the first meeting proved the matchup is solved. It is whether the Clippers can drag the game back onto the same shot-math terms once the other side is actively trying to bend it somewhere else.
What Milwaukee Tries To Change
That is the whole scout lens. A rematch is a geometry test before it is a reputation test. The first result gives Milwaukee a shape to attack: fewer comfortable possessions for the Clippers, fewer chances for the game to be played on Los Angeles' preferred volume, and a better job scrambling the turnover equation. If that part shifts, the scoreboard can shift with it.
If it does not, then the Clippers have done something more interesting than extend a streak. They will have shown they can recreate the same favorable floor conditions after an opponent gets a second look. That is a much cleaner signal than treating one blowout as a full contender speech.