The Record (Troy, NY)

Cavaliers, Celtics look to finish off East sweeps

- By Tim Reynolds

The unthinkabl­e has happened before.

Conference semifinals, 2010, Boston vs. Philadelph­ia: Boston wins the first two games at home, then goes into Philadelph­ia to capture Game 3 and take a commanding 3-0 series lead.

Undeterred, Philadelph­ia won in seven games to reach the Eastern Conference finals.

One small detail to note: That was in hockey.

If there’s one piece of solace for the Philadelph­ia 76ers and Toronto Raptors right now, it’s likely this — comebacks from 3-0 deficits are not completely unheard of in major sports. There’s been four of them in the NHL. Another happened in baseball, the Boston Red Sox rallying to oust the New York Yankees in the 2004 AL Championsh­ip Series. And even Cleveland has blown a 3-0 lead, albeit again in hockey, and that was of the minor league variety in 1960.

But in the NBA, never. NBA teams staring into the 0-3 abyss have never been saved: 129 have tried, 129 have failed. On Monday, the 76ers and the Raptors — both down 3-0 after down-to-the-wire defeats in their respective Game 3s of their Eastern Conference semifinal series — get their chance to be the ones who rewrite that ignominiou­s piece of basketball history.

Philadelph­ia plays host to Boston and Toronto is at Cleveland, with the 76ers and Raptors both trying to find ways to extend their seasons.

“There’s a breaking point we all have,” Philadelph­ia coach Brett Brown said. “And I believe that if we can maintain our spirit, why couldn’t we be the one? And I mean that. That’s my goal with us, is to fight. That’s all I know. I can’t see any other way to approach this that makes sense to me. So that’s

what we’re going to do.”

The odds are obviously overwhelmi­ngly in favor of the Celtics and Cavaliers, who seem destined to meet in the Eastern Conference finals for the second consecutiv­e year.

That’s hard to believe, given where those clubs were a week or so ago. Both needed to survive Game 7s just to get out of the first round.

The narrative around the Celtics, with no Kyrie Irving for the postseason, was that they would be the East high seed ripe for a playoff upset.

Oops. They’ve been unflappabl­e.

“I’ve never been around a group of guys, and I’ve been around some really special ones, that can just turn the page and they just play the next play the right way,” Celtics coach Brad Stevens said. “It’s a really unique group in that regard.”

The narrative around the Cavaliers was that LeBron James was being asked to do too much and his supporting cast was capable of too little.

Oops, again. And now James is five wins from an eighth consecutiv­e trip to the NBA Finals.

“We’re getting better,” Cavs forward Jeff Green said. “We’re getting better each game. Our defense is getting better. We’re playing together. Things are turning a corner for us at the right time.”

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