The Province

Wizards, Celtics take series to the limit

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WASHINGTON — In the sullen visiting locker-room late Friday night, the Boston Celtics changed back into the black clothes they had worn into Verizon Center. Though they denied the obvious purpose, the collective wardrobe had a clear intent. The Celtics wanted to host the funeral for the Washington Wizards’ season, a nod to what the Wizards wore during a regular-season meeting between teams who share animus toward one another. The threads, when pulled back late at night, represente­d only missed opportunit­y.

“We let this one slip away,” Celtics forward Jae Crowder said. “We feel like we did everything to give ourselves a chance to win.”

The Celtics led Game 6 by five points with less than 90 seconds remaining. They led by two with less than five seconds left. And yet, after John Wall’s 3-pointer gave the Wizards a 92-91 season-saving victory, the Celtics and Wizards will meet one final time on Monday night in Boston for the right to advance to the Eastern Conference finals.

In the 72 hours between Wall standing on the scorer’s table and tip-off at TD Garden, the Wizards and Celtics will face disparate challenges. The Wizards must find a way to win on the road, which neither team has managed in the series or in any of their four regular season meetings. The Celtics must find a way not to let the bitterness of Game 6 trickle into Game 7.

“It’s a tough one to swallow,” Crowder said. “But you got to bounce back. You can’t dwell on it too long, or it can roll over into Game 7. You don’t want that to happen.”

The Celtics entered Game 6 with bravado. They marched through the Verizon Center sporting black clothing, expecting they would end the series Friday night and prepare for the Cleveland Cavaliers. Afterward, for some odd reason, the Celtics insisted the outfits had come together as pure coincidenc­e.

“It was kind of something that just happened,” guard Avery Bradley said. “Terry (Rozier) looked at me and said, ‘He’s got on black.’ We looked around the locker-room, and everybody had on black. We didn’t plan it. It just happened.”

Whatever the Celtics said, their sartorial statement backfired, especially when they had to look around their locker-room afterward and see a reminder of what could have been.

“It makes you want to go play Game 7 tomorrow,” Crowder said.

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