Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rookie shines in Celtics’ victory

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CELTICS 108, 76ERS 103

BOSTON — The youth movement is alive and thriving for the Boston Celtics.

And for the second consecutiv­e game it was enough to upend a Philadelph­ia 76ers team that still has much to figure out as it heads home trailing 2-0 in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

Rookie Jayson Tatum scored 21 points and hit a pair of free throws in the closing seconds, helping the Celtics rally from a 22-point deficit to beat the 76ers 108-103 on Thursday night.

Terry Rozier added 20 points, 9 assists and 7 rebounds, and Marcus Smart finished with 19 points and 5 rebounds as the Celtics improved to 6-0 at TD Garden this postseason.

They have never blown a 2-0 lead.

“Coach was saying whoever is the tougher team is going to win,” Rozier said. “They definitely punched us in the mouth at the beginning of the game. We just had to bounce back and get things together.”

Game 3 is today in Philadelph­ia.

J.J. Redick had 23 points for the 76ers, making five three-pointers.

Robert Covington added 22 points and nine rebounds. Joel Embiid finished with 20 points, 14 rebounds and 5 assists, but rookie star Ben Simmons missed all four of his shots and had just one point.

“Mentally, just thinking too much,” Simmons said of his tough night. “I’m going to have bad games. It happens. Obviously, it’s bad timing.”

Philadelph­ia recovered after squanderin­g its big lead to nudge back in front 93-88 midway through the fourth quarter.

But an 11-4 run put Boston back in the lead 99-95 with less than four minutes to play.

It was 101-97 when a missed Philadelph­ia jumper led to a 2-on-1 fast break and alley-oop dunk from Rozier to Tatum with 2:23 left.

A layup by Dario Saric cut it to 104-101. But Al Horford was able to drive past Embiid for a layup with 8.3 seconds left.

Saric scored out of a timeout to make it 106-103. The Sixers quickly fouled Tatum, who calmly hit a pair of free throws.

Following an anemic offensive effort in Game 1, the Sixers looked rejuvenate­d early in Game 2, using a 14-2 run to begin the second quarter on their way to building a 48-26 lead.

It didn’t last.

The Celtics responded by ending the half on a 25-8 run. It included three consecutiv­e three-pointers and a tip-dunk by Jaylen Brown, who returned to action after sitting out the series opener with a strained right hamstring.

He came off the bench and played 25 minutes, scoring 13 points and grabbing 4 rebounds.

The Sixers’ lead was completely erased midway through the third quarter,

when Aron Baynes got a three-pointer to bounce in and put Boston in front for the first time.

The lead grew to 76-68 on a baseline dunk by Tatum that capped a 50-20 Celtics run.

“Once we got on that run we never looked back,” Rozier said.

Brown entered the game for the first time at the 7:14 mark of first quarter. It took less than a minute to make an impact.

He missed his first shot attempt before chasing down a loose ball and sprinting ahead for a one-handed dunk.

Prior to Thursday, Brown had started every game he’d appeared in this season.

It was his first time off the bench since Game 5 of last season’s Eastern Conference Finals.

“They won two games at home and we have to reciprocat­e,” Sixers Coach Brett Brown said. “There’s not going to be a pity party.”

 ?? AP/ELISE AMENDOLA ?? Boston rookie Jayson Tatum drives to the basket Thursday night in the Celtics’ 108-103 victory over Philadelph­ia. Tatum finished the game with 21 points.
AP/ELISE AMENDOLA Boston rookie Jayson Tatum drives to the basket Thursday night in the Celtics’ 108-103 victory over Philadelph­ia. Tatum finished the game with 21 points.

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