Edmonton Journal

Young Celtics shine in Game 1 win over Philly

Rozier leads Boston with 29 points while Tatum adds 28 in second-round opener

- JIMMY GOLEN TIP-INS

Terry Rozier scored 29 points and first-year Celtics forward Jayson Tatum added 28 to outplay redshirt rookie Ben Simmons and lead the Boston Celtics to a 117-101 victory over the Philadelph­ia 76ers in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference semifinal on Monday night.

With much of the attention focused on Philadelph­ia young guns Simmons and Joel Embiid, Boston’s youth movement of Tatum and Rozier led the way. Rozier, in his third year, added eight rebounds and six assists, and Al Horford had 26 points and seven rebounds for Boston, which never trailed. The Celtics were up 25-22 after one and 56-45 at the half. They took an 87-75 cushion into the final quarter. Embiid scored 31 points with 13 rebounds for Philadelph­ia.

Simmons, the likely rookie of the year, scored 18 with seven boards and six assists.

Game 2 is Thursday in Boston. The Celtics are hoping to have guard Jaylen Brown back from a hamstring injury he sustained in the first-round series against Milwaukee. He was “very doubtful” for the second-round opener and was ruled out about a half-hour before the tipoff, adding to injury woes that already cost Boston Gordon Hayward and Kyrie Irving.

Playing point guard in place of Irving, Rozier was a star for Boston in Game 7 against Milwaukee and he came out hot again against the Sixers. He had 10 points and six assists in the first quarter and was 7-for-9 from three-point range.

The first overall pick in the 2016 draft who sat out all of last

year with an injury, Simmons was heckled by the Boston crowd with chants of “Not a Rookie!” In the fourth quarter, as Tatum stepped to the free-throw line to protect a double-digit lead, the chant turned to “He’s a Rookie!”

Tatum was Boston’s first pick last year — third overall — after swapping the No. 1 pick to the Sixers and grabbing a 2018 first-rounder as well. Philadelph­ia picked Markelle Fultz; he did not play on Monday.

It was 33-33 with just over seven minutes left in the half when the Celtics ran off 10 points in a row. Horford had four of the five baskets and assisted on the other.

After Simmons made a layup to make it 97-88, Horford hit a three from the top of the key with 5:30 left and it was never within single digits again.

OLD SCHOOL FEEL

Sixers coach Brett Brown is familiar with the Philadelph­ia and Boston matchups of the 1980s, having grown up in South Portland, Maine. Though he knows other teams in the East remain relevant, he thinks there is enough young talent on the 76ers and Celtics rosters to give the rivalry a rebirth.

“I hope so,” Brown said. “I personally grew up with this rivalry, just right on your doorstep and just a big part of your basketball life as a young kid. It sure seems like both programs are heading into the right direction.”

Sixers: With six days off since eliminatin­g the Heat in five games, the Sixers missed 15 of their first 20 shots ... Simmons grew frustrated near the end of the game when Shane Larkin wrapped him up under the basket. The Celtics guard gave him a bear hug from behind to prevent him from shooting, and Simmons pushed his hands away ... Embiid again wore the mask he has needed since missing 10 games with a fractured orbital bone. Celtics: Hall of famer and 11-time NBA champion Bill Russell was in the crowd ... The Celtics put T-shirts on every seat that said “BEAT PHILA.” The “L-A” were in bold, a nod to the longtime rivalry with the Lakers.

 ?? ELISE AMENDOLA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Celtics guard Terry Rozier reacts after scoring a three-pointer against the 76ers on Monday in Boston.
ELISE AMENDOLA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Celtics guard Terry Rozier reacts after scoring a three-pointer against the 76ers on Monday in Boston.

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