The Denver Post

Boston rides Horford, Rozier to Game 7 win over Milwaukee

- By Jimmy Golen

BOSTON» The Celtics’ Al Horford and Terry Rozier scored 26 points apiece — and even Bucks star Giannis Antetokoun­mpo tipped in a basket for Boston — on Saturday night to help Boston beat Milwaukee 112-96 in Game 7 of their first-round series and eliminate the Bucks and the Greek Freak from the playoffs.

Horford had eight rebounds, Rozier had nine assists and Jayson Tatum added 20 points for the Celtics, who rode the home-court advantage to win all four games in Boston and advance to the Eastern Conference semifinals for the second straight year.

They will meet the Philadelph­ia 76ers, with Game 1 in Boston on Monday night.

Khris Middleton scored 32, Eric Bledsoe had 23 and Antetokoun­mpo had 22 points and nine rebounds for the Bucks. Milwaukee has advanced from the first round of the playoffs just once since 1989, losing nine straight playoff series since Ray Allen, Glenn Robinson and Sam Cassell brought George Karl to the Eastern Conference finals in 2001.

Playing in their Nba-record 31st Game 7, the Celtics improved to 20-4 at home and 23-8 overall in best-of-seven clinchers. It was the second Game 7 at the TD Garden this week, with the Boston Bruins beating the Toronto Maple Leafs on Wednesday night to advance in the NHL playoffs.

Tatum had nine points in the first, when the Celtics scored 15 straight points — including a tip-in by Antetokoun­mpo into the Boston hoop — and 20 of the last 22 to end the quarter with a 30-17 lead. Milwaukee scored 11 in a row at the beginning of the second to make it a two-point game, but Boston answered with nine in a row to make it 41-30.

The Celtics led 50-42 at the half despite going 1-for-12 from 3-point range. Horford had 14 points and seven rebounds at the break, and Bledsoe had 12 points for the Bucks.

Milwaukee cut the deficit to three points early in the third, but Boston scored 11 of the last 15 points in the quarter.

Bledsoe and Bledsoe. Bledsoe has been unpopular in Boston this series because of a trash-talking back-and-forth with Celtics point guard Terry Rozier. Rozier mistakenly referred to him as “Drew

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Bledsoe” — confusing him with the former New England Patriots quarterbac­k — early in the series.

Since then, Bledsoe has pretended he doesn’t know who Rozier is. Celtics fans joined in by chanting “Who is Bledsoe!” in the first half. And during a fourth-quarter break, the scoreboard showed a video of Drew Bledsoe holding up one of his Patriots jerseys and proclaimin­g himself “the original Bledsoe.”

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Maddie Meyer, Getty Images

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