The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Celtics ready for next challenge

- By Andrew Seligman

CHICAGO » The Boston Celtics got hit with a devastatin­g emotional blow just as the playoffs were about to start. They dropped the first two games at home, too.

Just as things really were starting to look bleak, they began to show just why they earned the No. 1 seed in the Eastern Conference.

The Celtics rallied to knock off the Chicago Bulls in six games, and now they’re ready for a collision with John Wall and the Washington Wizards in the East semifinals.

“Sometimes, we lose sight of the important things in life,” Al Horford said after Boston knocked out Chicago 105-83 on Friday night. “You appreciate life at the same time when you don’t take for granted any of the moments. It was a rough couple of days for us to start the playoffs. The team wasn’t ready.”

Isaiah Thomas and his family were rocked by the death of his sister Chyna in a car accident the day before the playoff opener. The Celtics star played through tears at times. But he also got the support he needed from his teammates and gave the Celtics a big lift in the series.

Avery Bradley did what the Celtics needed him to do, whether he was sticking with Jimmy Butler or pouring in the points. He scored a career playoffhig­h 24 in Game 5 and almost matched that with 23 in the clincher.

The Celtics also benefited from a lineup switch after Game 2, going with Gerald Green over Amir Johnson. All he did was score 18 points in Game 4 and 16 in Game 6 to help Boston win a toughertha­n-expected series.

“The lineup change I thought really helped us,” Horford said. “Bringing Gerald Green in and moving me to the 5, I felt like we really were able to spread them out and take advantage of certain looks we haven’t gone to all year. I think that for us, that was the difference. Once we made that adjustment, we were harder to guard. We got it together, and we got it going.”

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