Boston Herald

From first to worst?

Reeling Celts try to avoid historic ouster

- By MARK MURPHY Twitter: @murf56

It’s a stigma no one may have referenced before this week and this series — the worst No. 1 playoff seed of all time.

The Celtics, dominated in two home losses to Chicago to start their firstround playoff series, now have that insult hanging over their heads. And Brad Stevens, faced with his third straight first-round exit — this time with a team considered better than the last two — has once again discovered that playoff pressure increases on everyone, including coaches.

“I can’t sit here and sulk today,” the Celtics coach said during a conference call yesterday. “Or worry and be down. We have to look ahead, move forward.”

The Celtics play Game 3 tomorrow night at the United Center, and one bit of encouragem­ent is their 23-18 regular season road record.

But Stevens, his career postseason record now a frustratin­g 2-10, admits that playoff intensity is a far different thing from what faces a good team over the course of the regular season. Everything is suddenly magnified, ratcheted up.

“It may be that when players think of being through (the playoffs) in the past, you appreciate the need to play better. We could be better in a lot of everything right now,” Stevens said.

What they need most, perhaps, is a way to restore their spirit after a horrid Game 2 performanc­e in which Rajon Rondo could be heard telling his Bulls teammates that the Celtics had given up down the stretch of the bad loss.

Avery Bradley talked of how teammates could clearly be seen hanging their heads, and allowing dejection to settle in as the Bulls answered each Celtics run with something better.

At one stage Isaiah Thomas, struggling with inner turmoil over the death of his sister, broke out of his abstractio­n long enough to shout at Marcus Smart for driving into three Bulls and putting up a wild shot, instead of making the best available play.

Smart just hung his head while waiting for a Bulls player to shoot free throws.

This, according to Stevens, may be the toughest part of his job right now, propping up the spirits of his slumping players.

“Sometimes that becomes a sign that guys are pressing, and feeling that things cannot go our way,” Stevens said. “Later in the game, when we cut it to one and they went on another run, that can be dejecting.

“The biggest thing at this point is to keep the guys upbeat, possession to possession. That’s the way things can get better.”

Several Celtics talked of the team’s underdog mentality heading into this series, even though they were the conference’s regular season leaders. But Stevens needs players like Thomas and Jae Crowder to continue thinking of themselves as underdogs.

“It’s got to happen, has to happen,” Stevens said. “That’s the charge our team needs.”

But now the Celtics coach, perhaps with a change or two in the lineup, gets to see who on this roster responds to potential eliminatio­n from the playoffs.

“I can’t wait for (tomorrow) night’s game. I wish it was tonight,” he said. “There’s a taste in your mouth when you go on one of those spurts, something you try to get back. But you have to handle it, move on from it, you’re on the road, in a hole. That’s when that chip we all have has to come out.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY JOHN WILCOX ?? UP AGAINST IT: Coach Brad Stevens (center) and the Celtics need a win tomorrow night in Chicago.
STAFF PHOTO BY JOHN WILCOX UP AGAINST IT: Coach Brad Stevens (center) and the Celtics need a win tomorrow night in Chicago.
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